Jakarta Globe – AFP, Feb 10, 2015
Washington.
The political backstabbing of “House of Cards” and global adventures of “Marco
Polo” are now available in communist-ruled Cuba, with the launch announced
Monday by streaming US television giant Netflix.
Netflix
said “a curated selection of popular movies and TV shows” would be available to
the estimated one quarter of Cubans who have access to the Internet.
The move
coincides with a thaw in US-Cuban relations following a decades-old embargo by
Washington that limited trade between the two countries.
Although
some US programs are shown on state-owned television, Netflix is likely to
vastly expand the offerings available on the island where media and Internet
are tightly controlled by the government.
Full
details of the programming were not announced, but Netflix said it would offer
Cubans its original series such as “House of Cards,” about political intrigue
in Washington and “Orange is the New Black” about life in a US prison, along
with its new global series “Marco Polo.”
In a
statement, Netflix said the service is available “starting today,” for “people
in Cuba with Internet connections and access to international payment methods.”
The Netflix
website was already online in Cuba on Monday although it required an
international credit card to open an account. Pricing was between $7.99 and $12
a month, depending on options.
“We are
delighted to finally be able to offer Netflix to the people of Cuba, connecting
them with stories they will love from all over the world,” said Netflix
co-founder and chief executive Reed Hastings.
“Cuba has
great filmmakers and a robust arts culture and one day we hope to be able to
bring their work to our global audience of over 57 million members.”
The Netflix
audience could be limited in Cuba however because of the relatively small
number of people with high-speed Internet and a lack of access to hard
currency.
Only about
one-fourth of Cubans have Internet access, and most online access is filtered
by the government, according to a December report by the human rights group
Freedom House.
Only 3.4 percent
of Cuban homes have Internet access, according to the International
Telecommunications Union. Most of those with private online access are
journalists, doctors, researchers or others approved by the government.
Many Cubans
do get access to foreign television by black market trades of USB sticks loaded
with Hollywood blockbusters, pop music or European football.
US
President Barack Obama and Cuban leader Raul Castro surprised the world in
December when they simultaneously announced plans to normalize relations
following months of secret negotiations.
The raising
of the US and Cuban flags in each other’s capitals would send powerful signals
of the new era the two nations want to enter, though no timeline has been given
for the reopening of embassies.
Cubans have
voiced hope that the warming ties will translate into improvements in their
daily lives in a country where supermarket shelves are bare and people make
around $20 a month.
Netflix
announced last week it would start operating in Japan, on the heels of planned
expansion in Australia and New Zealand.
Netflix
subscribers can stream video content using smart TVs, tablet computers,
smartphones, computers, and Internet-linked game consoles and set-top boxes.
The
expansion comes amid an increasing shift to Internet-based on-demand
television, with offerings from rivals such as Amazon, Time Warner’s HBO and
CBS, among others.
Netflix
announced in January that it boosted membership to more than 57 million users
at the end of 2014.
A 2014
study released by Cuba’s Commission on Culture and Media urged the Havana
government to create television and film programming not under government
control, among other proposed reforms.
There
currently are five national television channels available in Cuba, many fewer
than most other countries.
The paucity
of choice is “a far cry from the cultural, information and entertainment
offerings needed for our people,” the report said.
Agence France-Presse

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