Initially, exec Bob Greenblatt said it will have around 10,000 hours of content to watch, which may be less than competitors like Netflix, but claimed it's going to lean on human recommendations rather than algorithms, and that a smaller catalog weeds out the "filler no one watches." Said Greenblatt, "We will never rely on algorithms to serve our customers the best programming."

Content announced during the presentation included a new Perry Mason series, a show from Fleabag creator Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Jellystone with Hanna-Barbera characters and an...Elmo-hosted late night talk show? I'm pretty sure that happened.

In terms of licensed content, next year HBO Max will have the last 40 years of Batman and Superman thanks to the ties between Warner and DC, including the new Joker movie since that will be on HBO. And of course, it's also the exclusive streaming home of Friends, The Big Bang Theory. Other deals will bring the net ten original CW series to HBO Max, starting with Batwoman. The second season of Doom Patrol will move from DC Universe to HBO Max.

Other big exclusives announced were the addition of South Park and its back catalog, as well as every episode of Rick & Morty.

HBO Max will have a "curated" offering of anime from Crunchyroll that will be updated every quarter, in addition to its previously-announced deal with Studio Ghibli.

As far as its push for human curation, execs finally showed what that looks like, with recommendations from real people, like the stars of the shows you're watching like Zac Efron, as well as additional content. In the example show, a fictional viewer watched the Chernobyl series, while also listening to a podcast about it, all within the various HBO Max apps, and saw recommendations from others who enjoyed the series. HBO is very clearly targeting Netflix, but also other streamers, that push a panel of tiles, and claiming its experience will be different.