Skip to main content

Blockbuster putting itself up for auction

Video rental company Blockbuster has announced it will be carrying out a special auction to sell off its U.S. and international subsidies after a bidder, Cobalt Video Holdco, offered the company $290 million. Blockbuster plans to use the bid as a “stalking horse” offer, meaning the $290 million is a minimum bid it will accept—but if anyone comes along and offers more money, Blockbuster is interested.

The once-mighty Blockbuster declared bankruptcy back in September 2010, and has been looking for ways to shore up its bottom line and restructure the company has an ongoing enterprise. Part of that strategy appears to involve getting some new owners.

“By initiating a sale process at this time, we intend to accelerate our Chapter 11 proceedings and move the company forward,” said Blockbuster chairman and CEO Jim Keyes, in a statement. “An auction will allow the company to invite competing bids from both strategic and financial investors. This will also allow for the consolidation of ownership of the company to those with a clear and focused vision for Blockbuster’s future.”

Blockbuster will need approval from the bankruptcy court in the southern district of New York before it can carry out the auction; the court will have to be satisfied that the auction represents a prudent move likely to return the largest possible value to creditors. The company hopes to be sold to the highest bidder by late April.

Blockbuster has been struggling for years to maintain a high-cost base of retail stores in the face of competition from the like of Netflix’s DVD-by-mail and online streaming operations. Although Blockbuster has launched streaming services of its own, the company was forced to close 1,000 retail locations back in 2009, although the company has managed to keep its remaining retail operations running during bankruptcy, both in the United States and internationally.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Student? This deal gets you Hulu for $2, and it’s well worth it
Hulu app icon on Roku.

If you're a student, you're going to love the deal going on at Hulu right now. Sign up today and you can pay just $2 per month for the service instead of the usual $8 per month. For anyone who loves movies and TV shows, this is a deal not to be missed out on. All you need to do is be enrolled at a U.S. Title IV accredited college or university and be able to pass verification to confirm that. Here's why you'll want to sign up for Hulu.

Why you want to sign up for Hulu
Hulu is one of the most popular streaming services around for good reason. It has a ton of great content. Right now, for instance, it has the latest season of The Kardashians along with Power Book II: Ghost, Succession, and Yellowjackets. For lighter times, there's always Family Guy too. That's a pretty great start, right? It gets better.

Read more
Vimeo is killing off its TV apps in favor of casting
Vimeo app icon on Apple TV.

There's some bad news for those of you who use Vimeo on your TV — the YouTube alternative known for its flair for the dramatic and indie content is ending support for its existing television apps on June 27, 2023. The details (spotted by Engadget) were noted in a support page on the service's website, and apparently in some interstitial screens in the apps themselves (we haven't seen it on the Apple TV app, and it's no longer listed on Roku).

That doesn't mean Vimeo itself — or any of the content you might have purchased on the service — is going away. Far from it. It just means that you'll have to resort to Chromecast or AirPlay if you want to watch on your TV.

Read more
Your next car could have TiVo built-in
Powered by TiVo platform interface.

TiVo, the company that defined modern TV watching in the era before on-demand streaming services, has announced a partnership with BMW that will see the automaker add TiVo's video media platform to its vehicles. The addition of the Powered by TiVo platform will happen as an over-the-air update later in 2023 to BMW's 5-Series vehicles and then slowly roll out to some of its other models.

The TiVo platform will include linear and on-demand streaming services with news, movies, and access to media libraries. The announcement comes just days after Google used its annual I/O event to debut its plans to add YouTube video streaming to Android Auto and Android Automotive car platforms. BMW also supports Android Auto in many of its vehicles but the company didn't immediately describe how Android Auto and Powered by TiVo would coexist in the same interface.

Read more