New Book Reveals the High-Risk Experiment That Almost Failed Spectacularly — Then Changed Everything

MAMARONECK, N.Y., Sept. 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- What if Netflix, Amazon Prime, and YouTube all traced back to a single moment in 1994 when engineers frantically worked through the night, knowing their live demo of on-demand movies could crash in front of the world's media?

That's exactly what happened with Time Warner's Full Service Network (FSN) in Orlando, FL — a revolutionary but unstable system that could have been a public relations nightmare. Instead, the FSN launch event in December 1994 marked the starting point for on-demand television, the end of appointment TV viewing, and the birthplace of today's $150 billion video streaming industry.

The Untold Story Behind Your Binge-Watching Habit
Business journalist Craig Leddy reveals this dramatic corporate thriller in Fast Forward: The Birth of Video Streaming, Media's Wild Child (Koehler Books, September 23). Having covered the original story as it unfolded, Leddy takes readers inside the high-stakes maneuvers and pressure-cooker labs as media titans battled to harness digital technology and invent the future of entertainment.

"Imagine trying to create Netflix in 1994 with technology less advanced than an early-version iPhone," said Leddy, founder of Interactive TV Works. "These pioneers were attempting video-on-demand movies, interactive shopping, and virtual gaming, all available on your television set before people even had dial-up internet. Driven by the late Time Warner CEO Jerry Levin, they staged a high-risk launch event before a global press corps of over 300 media. The fact that they pulled it off — barely — is one of business history's most audacious success stories."

Why This Story Matters Now
The book isn't just tech nostalgia. As streaming wars intensify and connected-device platforms proliferate, Fast Forward exposes the strategic mistakes and breakthrough innovations that still shape digital media today. Among the lessons:

  • Why ‘speed to market’ launch strategies resulted in billions of dollars in losses from failed interactive TV and on-demand video attempts
  • How hype, hubris and greed has shaped the race for digital dominance between cable giants, technology upstarts, Hollywood studios, and video streamers
  • How the early pioneers discovered the key requirements for successful interactive media – and how the big streamers are failing to fulfill them today

"Every time you hit 'play' on your streaming service, you’re reliving a moment that magically transformed television in 1994," Leddy noted. "The lessons from FSN's near-failures and triumphs are more relevant than ever as companies race to dominate the next wave of digital entertainment."

From Industry Insider to Business Blueprint
Leddy brings unique credibility to this story as both witness and analyst. In addition to his business journalism experience, his Interactive TV Works consultancy has advised major media companies through three decades of digital transformation, and his Interactive Case Competition has educated over 500 future industry leaders. As a leader in cable and broadband industry education, he has taught classes to more than 7,000 professionals.

Fast Forward delivers essential insights for executives navigating today's digital disruption, revealing how bold experimentation — even apparent failures — can create entire industries.

About the Book:Fast Forward: The Birth of Video Streaming, Media's Wild Child from Koehler Books releases September 23, 2025, available through major booksellers including:
Amazon Books: http://bit.ly/4o90VO6
Barnes & Noble: http://bit.ly/4gpzn3b
Media information: https://www.interactivetvworks.com/fastforwardbook.

Media Contact:
Bob Gold
Bob Gold & Associates
[email protected]
310-320-2010

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