Streaming service Max is changing its name back to HBO Max
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WBD CEO David Zaslav announced the move, with the company declaring, "no consumer today is saying they want more content, but better content."
All I’m saying is if HBO Max really wanted to play that card, they should have gotten Jude Law to reprise his character from The New Pope to announce the news. Then again, wouldn’t that news sound better coming from The White Lotus Season 3 cast members Carrie Coon, Leslie Bibb, and Michelle Monaghan?
A little more than two years after lopping “HBO” off of the streamer’s name to create the breezily-named Max streamer, Warner Bros. Discovery has decided to reverse course. Max — the unloved mononymous identity, too cool or too anxious to acknowledge its origins — is HBO Max once more .
We’re not quite there yet, but it sure feels imminent.
Warner Bros. Discovery's rebranding of HBO Max highlights the merger's failure to reach its original goal.
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Warner Bros. Discovery ignited a wave of social media reactions when it announced it was renaming its streaming service HBO Max.
HBO Max launched in 2020, but Warner Bros. Discovery relaunched the service three years later, filling it with content from its other properties, like Discovery, TLC, and HGTV. As part of the relaunch, it renamed the service to just “Max” to signal that it’s suitable for kids and families.
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Discovery announced during Wednesday's Upfront presentations that its big streaming app, Max, will be rebranded once again. And it's a name we're all familiar with. It's "the plot twist everyone's been waiting for,
HBO is synonymous with great television -- and now HBO Max, the re-rechristened name of Warner Bros. Discovery's linchpin streaming service, is synonymous with major corporate reversals. There is little doubt about that,