And even toggling various services on and off...I pay more now than I ever did with a bundled cable service.
The hassle was calling ever 12/24 months and haggling with them. But I'd prefer that over the fragmented TV watching we have now.
AgGrad99 said:
Im not 'refusing to admit' any of those things, it's just not what I was discussing.
I preferred it, when it was easier. That completes my opinion. You disagree for other reasons...got it.
But it's obviously a concern in the industry, hence the discussion by execs about it.
AgGrad99 said:
All the content used to be on one platform. Just because we now have to subscribe to multiple platforms doesnt mean we're getting more bang for our buck. It just means we just have to to go more places to watch the content.
It was way easier before.
Yeah. VHS sucked. No one is referring to VHS days.superunknown said:
Was it really easier before when you had cable? Because even my broke ass family had several of those VHS tape cabinets full of movies (recorded in SLP mode off of basic cable of course) and fast-forwarding through one movie to get to the next one or accidentally recording over something because you left the tape in the VCR and your sister had Days of Our Lives set to automatically record wasn't really easier at all.
It's clear that many cable detractors haven't had the service in awhile.AgGrad99 said:Yeah. VHS sucked. No one is referring to VHS days.superunknown said:
Was it really easier before when you had cable? Because even my broke ass family had several of those VHS tape cabinets full of movies (recorded in SLP mode off of basic cable of course) and fast-forwarding through one movie to get to the next one or accidentally recording over something because you left the tape in the VCR and your sister had Days of Our Lives set to automatically record wasn't really easier at all.
Nothing wrong with DVR and On Demand though.
Ghost of Bisbee said:
So not sure where else to put this…
HBO's pipeline for the rest of the year…
We've got Righteous Gemstones set for June 18.
Why the hell does your Curb your Enthusiasm not have a date yet? Must be gunning for a late summer start after righteous gemstones?
White House Plumbers ain't doing it for me.
Streaming Shocker: Warner Bros. Discovery In Talks To License HBO Original Series To Netflix https://t.co/1LIE6YolLZ pic.twitter.com/0DQNW3MSsd
— Deadline Hollywood (@DEADLINE) June 21, 2023
Please read this thread about a catastrophic talent purge that is underway at Turner Classic Movies, one of the few undisputed jewels of the cable universe and a pillar of the preservation and celebration of film history. I'll have more to say tomorrow. For now, I'll just note... https://t.co/ushrSmAFGp
— Mark Harris (@MarkHarrisNYC) June 21, 2023
Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, and Paul Thomas Anderson have organized an emergency call to David Zaslav that will take place today to advocate for saving one of the greatest brands in cinephilia, TCM.https://t.co/gUqVemXJGH
— Cinephilia & Beyond (@CCinephilia) June 21, 2023
Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese and Paul Anderson released a statement about their discussions with David Zaslav about TCM: "We are committed to working together to ensure the continuation of this cultural touchstone that we all treasure.” https://t.co/5rX5RWBQPL
— Variety (@Variety) June 22, 2023
Say goodbye to ads & subscriptions. Say hello to limitless streaming with OFTV! Discover new creators and binge-watch your favorite shows for free on OFTV.
— OnlyFans (@OnlyFans) July 6, 2023
TCTTS said:Streaming Shocker: Warner Bros. Discovery In Talks To License HBO Original Series To Netflix https://t.co/1LIE6YolLZ pic.twitter.com/0DQNW3MSsd
— Deadline Hollywood (@DEADLINE) June 21, 2023
TCTTS said:
There's a bit more nuance to it all, and some economics I don't quite understand, but hopefully the overall gist is clear.
Basically, we're going back to the cable model, just digitally, across apps. Turns out, the model that worked perfectly for 50+ years, and made everyone tons of money, was a good idea and shouldn't have been broken.
superunknown said:TCTTS said:
There's a bit more nuance to it all, and some economics I don't quite understand, but hopefully the overall gist is clear.
Basically, we're going back to the cable model, just digitally, across apps. Turns out, the model that worked perfectly for 50+ years, and made everyone tons of money, was a good idea and shouldn't have been broken.
Honestly it's the funniest part of it all to me. I think in general people and industries fall back on what they know and innovation is always gonna happen but mostly from new upstarts and then the big money follows and tries to emulate the innovators. Eventually everyone's basically the same until the next disruption.
Any time I hear someone announce "the media" all acts the same, the implications are that we all have secret meetings and decide like we're OPEC or something and I laugh because I sit in on meetings every day and I can't even get people in my own damn company to all at least glance occasionally in the same direction, much less act in any sort of thing resembling synchronicity towards a common goal.
Disney accelerates the timeline to buy all of Hulu, a deal that will lead to the streaming service's ultimate demise. (AKA it will be folded into Disney+.)https://t.co/HP62aMqaaj
— Lucas Shaw (@Lucas_Shaw) September 6, 2023
Apple TV+ had the lowest cancellation rate of any streaming platform at just 4.9% between 2020 and Aug. 2023.
— Variety (@Variety) September 14, 2023
Max (formerly HBO Max) had the highest rate at 26.9%.https://t.co/z81jmXelDj
Yeah, like you would tell us you're all colluding.TCTTS said:superunknown said:TCTTS said:
There's a bit more nuance to it all, and some economics I don't quite understand, but hopefully the overall gist is clear.
Basically, we're going back to the cable model, just digitally, across apps. Turns out, the model that worked perfectly for 50+ years, and made everyone tons of money, was a good idea and shouldn't have been broken.
Honestly it's the funniest part of it all to me. I think in general people and industries fall back on what they know and innovation is always gonna happen but mostly from new upstarts and then the big money follows and tries to emulate the innovators. Eventually everyone's basically the same until the next disruption.
Any time I hear someone announce "the media" all acts the same, the implications are that we all have secret meetings and decide like we're OPEC or something and I laugh because I sit in on meetings every day and I can't even get people in my own damn company to all at least glance occasionally in the same direction, much less act in any sort of thing resembling synchronicity towards a common goal.
This x 1000. The sheer amount of selfishness, laziness, incompetence, and competing interests in Hollywood, in particular, absolutely insures that there could never be any kind of monolithic structure or cabal that acts as one, controls everything, pushes a unified narrative, etc. Contrary to what others might have us believe in a certain other thread on this board right now. I really wish people who insisted as much could realize how ridiculous they sound.