
National Streaming Day is celebrated on May 20 every year. On this day, the revolutionary movement of streaming services and how it introduced a whole new wave of watching movies and TV shows are highlighted. From Netflix, Disney+, and Apple T.V.+, to Paramount+, the insurmountable number of films, series, documentaries, and reality T.V. shows accessible for streaming in the comfort of your home is fascinating.
It’s a fun holiday that gives you the excuse to grab a bucket of popcorn, relax on the couch, grab the remote, and enjoy a day watching some good shows.
- 1993 – Engineers on the experimental MBone network transmitted a live multicast of the Xerox PARC research seminar, demonstrating one of the first publicized live video streams over the Internet.
- 1995 – RealNetworks introduces the first live streaming service, powered by the RealPlayer.
- 1995 – A baseball match between the New York Yankees and the Seattle Mariners is live-streamed by E.S.P.N. to a thousand subscribers.
- 1997 – Netflix was founded in California as a DVD‑by‑mail rental company, laying the groundwork for its later shift to on‑demand video streaming that would transform home entertainment.
- 1999 – A company by the name of Excite@Home Network casts the first webcast for the Democratic Leadership Council.
- 2005 – Chad Hurley, Steve Chen, and Jawed Karim launch YouTube.
- 2007 – Netflix added its “Watch Now” feature, allowing subscribers to instantly stream movies and TV shows over the Internet instead of waiting for physical DVDs, marking a major shift toward subscription video-on-demand.
- 2008 – YouTube holds its first live event called YouTube Live.
- 2008 – Hulu, Microsoft, and Netflix all launch their streaming beta platforms.
- 2011 – Twitch. tv introduces a new streaming platform for video games nabbing 45 million users per month.
- 2013 – Netflix pioneers original T.V. series as streaming content.
- 2014 – Roku founded National Streaming Day to celebrate their 10th Anniversary.
- 2014-2016 – Restream.io, Twitter and Facebook/Instagram introduce live streaming services for social media platforms.
- 2018 – Facebook dominates the live-streaming market with over 3.5 million views.
- 2019 – Facebook dominates live streaming with nearly 1.1 billion hours of live videos available for viewing.
- 2022 – Every platform uses streaming options as a way to share information
- 2022 – Disney+ spent about $33 billion on producing content.
- 2022 – YouTube currently has two billion active users.
- Apple T.V.+’s “CODA” is the first streaming film to win the Oscar for ‘Best Picture.’
- Netflix is currently the most-subscribed streaming platform, with over 221.6 million subscribers.
- 99% of all U.S. households pay for at least one or more streaming services.
- Americans pay an average of $46 a month for streaming services.
- 45% have canceled a streaming subscription within the last year because costs were too high
- On average, Americans pay for 2.9 streaming subscriptions every month.
- 50% of streaming users pay for a streaming service without ads.
- Twitch has 30 million daily visitors or 210 million visitors per week or 900 million visitors per month.
- As you’re reading this statistic, over 2.5 million people are watching Twitch streams.
- 70% of Twitch viewers are aged 16 to 34.
- 65% of Twitch viewers are male
- Over 3 billion people play video games worldwide.
- 27% of gamers spend 1 to 5 hours streaming video games per week.
- 23% of global viewing time is spent watching live content; the other 77% goes to on-demand content.
- 24% of internet users in the US report watching more live streams since the pandemic.
- One in five Facebook videos is a live video.
- 80% of people would rather watch a brand’s live video than read their blog…and 82% prefer live video from brands to their social posts.
- 44% of viewers say they watch less TV as a result of live streaming. (Source: IAB)
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