Remember MoviePass?
It’s the now-defunct startup that offered unlimited theater movies for a cheap monthly subscription price of $9.95.
Many were skeptical of the business model, which seemed to go against the laws of… math. Well, as The New York Times reports, the startup used shady tactics to survive.
… that MoviePass — which started its wild all-you-can-watch experiment in 2017 — turned into a slow-burning dumpster fire.
Turns out when your costs (full movie ticket price) are significantly higher than your revenue (cheap monthly subscription), business not good.
It culminated in MoviePass’ parent company Helios and Matheson Analytics shutting down the company in 2019 and declaring bankruptcy early last year.
Details of the company’s shady tactics come from a Federal Trade Commission investigation.
To stop people from watching (and slow its cash burn):
As if this wasn’t enough, MoviePass grossly mishandled customer data. An FTC settlement with the company’s execs is meant to prevent any future business tomfoolery.