Startup

MoviePass is known for a pricing model that sounds too good to be true in exchange for paying $9.95 per month, subscribers get up to one movie ticket per day.At least, they used to: If you try to sign up now, that isnt quite what youre offered.
Instead, theres a bundle that combines a three-month trial for iHeartRadio All Access with four tickets per month on MoviePass still a pretty good deal (especially since MoviePass says 88 percent of users see fewer than two movies per month), but not quite as irresistible as the old plan.Does this represent a permanent change in the MoviePass business model Well, the company has experimented with bundling before, but when The Hollywood Reporter asked CEO Mitch Lowe whether the movie-per-day-plan might return, he replied, I dont know.We just always try different things, Lowe said.
Every time we try a new promotion, we never put a deadline on it.We reached out to a MoviePass spokesperson who confirmed that The Hollywood Reporter story is accurate.
They also said that this doesnt affect any of the subscribers who signed up under the old plan.MoviePass parent company Helios and Matheson Analytics sold additional stock last week in what seemed like a move to raise money for the service.
(TechCrunchs own parent company Verizon/Oath recently sold Moviefone for a stake in MoviePass.) At the same time, filings revealed that an independent auditor had raised substantial doubt about whether MoviePass would be able to continue operating as a going concern.





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