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Snapchat is collaborating with Hollywood producers and writers to add scripted shows to the app amid user decline (SNAP)

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  • Snapchat announced new scripted shows for its photo messaging app Snapchat which will launch this fall in collaboration with Hollywood producers and writers. 
  • The move is meant to reverse the trend of Snapchat's declining userbase. 
  • Shares of Snap have fallen 52% since the beginning of the year as Snapchat has struggled to attract new users as rivals Facebook and Instagram introduced Snapchat-like features on its own apps.
  • Snap said the episodes will be fast-paced for mobile viewing and as short as five minutes long, with each show having a profile page where viewers can easily find each episode.

(Reuters) - Snap Inc. on Wednesday announced new scripted shows for its photo messaging app Snapchat which will launch this fall and struck partnerships with Hollywood production companies and writers in hopes of reversing its decline in users.

Shares of Snap have fallen 52% since the beginning of the year as Snapchat has struggled to attract new users as rivals Facebook and Instagram introduced Snapchat-like features on their own apps.

The serialized shows will have new episodes daily, and include a documentary series called “Growing Up is a Drag,” about the coming-of-age of teenage drag stars, produced by Bunim/Murray, the production company behind the hit reality television show “Keeping Up with the Kardashians.”

Snap said the episodes will be fast-paced for mobile viewing and as short as five minutes long, with each show having a profile page where viewers can easily find each episode.

That could address criticism from users and advertisers that Snapchat’s recent app redesigns have made it confusing to use.

The episodes, like Snapchat’s existing shows, will include six-seconds of advertising that are unskippable.

Last week, a leaked memo from Snap chief executive Evan Spiegel laid out goals to reach full-year profitability in 2019 by attracting more older users and redesigning its Android app to better serve emerging markets.

Michael Nathanson, an analyst with MoffettNathanson, said in a note on Tuesday that Snap was falling “woefully short” of its goal to be profitable, estimating the company will lose more than $1.5 billion next year.

Snap shares declined almost 3.0% on Tuesday after Nathanson’s note.

The company has also seen high turnover among its executives, and said in September its chief strategy officer Imran Khan would step down.

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