September 18, 2019 The Skanner Portland & Seattle Page 5 Arts & Entertainment Apple Takes on Netflix With a $5-a-Month Streaming Service The Tamron Hall Show Debuts By Nsenga K. Burton, Ph.D., NNPA Newswire Entertainment and Culture Editor Walt Disney will launch a $7-a-month competitor the same month A merica’s news sweetheart Tam- ron Hall is back with a self-titled daytime talk show The Tamron Hall Show. Fol- lowing Hall’s contro- versial yet celebrated 2017 exit from the Today Show after being curbed in favor of white su- premacist-y Megyn Kel- ly, Hall returns to televi- sion as a talk show host on her terms. In addition to Hall’s professional life, a lot has also changed in her personal life since the abrupt Today and MSN- BC exit. The award-win- ning journalist is now married and a mother of a son, which she dis- cussed at the “Journey to My Wildest Dreams” Toyota sponsored lun- cheon at the 2019 NABJ national convention held in Miami. Hall discussed how motherhood has changed her life, the confidence required to be in the news business and the challenges faced By Michael Liedtke AP Technology Writer The Tamron Hall Show debuted 9/9/19. Check local listings for channel and time information. by Blacks in general and Black women specifical- ly on the often-compli- cated journey to success. Hall reiterated the im- portance of having a seat at the table and being ready when the oppor- tunity presents itself. “There was a window, a sliver of opportunity and I took it,” says Hall. “I knew I had to shoot my shot,” says the Texas native. Indeed, Hall shot her shot, landing on her feet with a daytime talk show in a market that is crowded but ripe for a voice like Hall’s. Hall’s return to day- time pits her against an- other one of America’s sweethearts, Grammy award-winning singer Kelly Clarkson who is also launching a self-ti- tled talk show on the same day on NBC no less. Clarkson is the season one winner of American Idol and has served as a judge on the wildly pop- ular NBC reality show The Voice. Hall will also be wad- ing into territory cur- rently occupied by Wen- dy Williams, Rachel Ray, and the ladies of The View and The Talk among others. Hall cre- ated this talk show to bring people together and to give them an op- portunity to share their “authentic journey.” One of the ways Hall is shaping her show is by insisting the makeup of the crew reflect her audience. Despite hav- ing veteran executive producer Bill Geddie at the helm, Hall insisted that more women be hired because she wants to empower people like her — a self-described country girl from Lul- ing, Texas who has made it to the upper echelons of television and news. Although creating and See TAMRON on page 7 CUPERTINO, Calif. — Apple is finally taking on Netflix with its own streaming television ser- vice and, uncharacteris- tically for the company, offering it at a bargain price — $5 a month be- ginning on Nov. 1. Walt Disney Co. is launching its own as- sault on Netflix the same month, for just $7. It may be sheer coinci- dence that the cost of pay- ing for both Apple and Disney subscriptions will still be a dollar less than Netflix’s main plan, priced at $13 a month. But the intent to disrupt Netflix’s huge lead in the streaming business couldn’t be clearer. Apple delivered the news Tuesday while also unveiling three new iP- hones that won’t look much different than last year’s models other than boasting an additional camera for taking pic- tures from extra-wide angles. The aggressive pricing is unusual for Apple, which typically charges a premium for products and services to burnish its brand. Most analysts expected Apple to charge $8 to $10 per month for the service, which will be called Apple TV Plus. But Apple is entering a market that Netflix prac- tically created in 2007 — around the same time as the first iPhone came out. And Netflix has amassed more than 150 million subscribers, meaning that Apple needed to make a splash. “You have to expect they’re going to do some- thing, considering how hyper competitive the streaming video space is,” said Tim Hanlon, CEO of Vertere Group. Apple CEO Tim Cook See APPLE on page 7