• Rabbit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    One of my favorite past times is reading people freaking out about the rising costs, while I sit completely unaffected thanks to the high seas.

  • dangblingus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    Aside from the fact that your favorite shows/movies get deleted whenever licenses expire, or at the whim of Netflix’s profitability algorithm, for a hot minute, streaming was everything people wanted back in the 90s. No commercials, a total MSF of about half of what you might have spent on cable if you have every major streaming service, and a trove of shows and movies to watch. Now, they’re about to raise prices and shit out a bunch of bland mid content for dumb dumbs to watch. Forget the era of cheap streaming, I fear this is the beginning of the era of no more quality TV and movies.

    • GivingEuropeASpook@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I genuinely think that the best remedy to this is to give SAG and the WGA everything they want in negotiations. It would fundamentally alter the economics of streaming if they are subject to the same sort of residuals and writer’s room requirements as traditional media.

      If the media corporations have their way, they’re gonna break the strike by outlasting them until they “start losing their homes” from being out of work for so long that they’re forced to acquiesce. Then we’re gonna really get awful content as no one will be able to take any significant risks to write a weird TV pilot or make a unique movie.

  • JelloBrains@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    When all the big cable players started making their own streaming services, most of us knew they weren’t going to let their gravy train go. We know they want us to use the ad-tiers because Iger flat out said so because it makes them more money, and I’m still expecting contracts to be their next big idea, sign up for 2 years, get 1-year half-price. Meet new cable, same as the old cable. It’s following a similar playbook too with no ads to some ads and ever-increasing prices.

    • flipht@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      This. I was fine with streaming when it started. It’s literally what most people were asking for - a la carte pricing for specific channels you want, rather than having to pay a bloated fee for a bundle that you want less than a tenth of.

      I’ve enjoyed streaming over the last few years.

      But over the pandemic and now beyond, they’ve decided to start conglomerating, bundling up a bunch of content I don’t want, and charging me extra for the privilege. Which was the complaint about cable.

    • TheFogan@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      Yeah to me the obvious end days was when the “half priced but with ads” plans came out. It’s going the route of cable. the patern is so predictable.

      Year 1: Ad free - 5-10,

      Year 2: Ad free 10-15

      Year 3: ad free 10-15, low price ad tier 5-10

      Year 4: ad free 20-30, ad tier 10-15

      Year 5: ad tier 25-30, ad free 75

      Year 6: Due to low demand, ad free tier is removed. ad tier 40-50.

      That’s of course counting the shitification of their being 20 services, which are equally sharing shows of every genre so that no matter what type of shows you like, you’ll need to use 3-4 services to get the main shows you want.

    • Taleya@aussie.zone
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      1 year ago

      I mean anyone who didn’t see this coming is naive as fuck.

      No infrastructure overhead, server cost to be sure but the brunt of the delivery being born by the end consumer and the possibility of tracking and metrics in real time?

      The only reason it’s taken this long is the suits are luddites.

    • Okalaydokalay@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I only restarted when they started pulling all the shit off Netflix and making up their own. Everyone needs a + service now, even fucking Walmart. And the thought of paying for ads on Hulu was not going to happen. Fuck them all.

      But they’ve kind of made me enjoy piracy more as I rediscover it. I don’t have to worry about shit like a Community episode getting pulled because they’re scared of getting canceled or because a contract expired and the only downtimes I have now are my own, not because someone else decided to do surprise maintenance on a server I don’t own. I also don’t have to switch between 10 different apps to watch different shows/movies.

      • Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I also don’t have to switch between 10 different apps to watch different shows/movies.

        I paid for annual subscriptions for a couple streaming services, and get some when I buy other things from companies, but I still pirate the shows on those services and put them in Plex because everything is in one place

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    1 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The disruptive streaming model birthed by Netflix that dangled all-you-can-eat menus of films, shows, and endless entertainment without pesky advertisements for extraordinarily low prices came to an official close on Wednesday.

    Disney boss Bob Iger announced during the company’s quarterly earnings report that the Magic Kingdom will once again hike Disney+ prices for the second time in less than a year, increasing the monthly cost of its ad-free plan $3 to $13.99 in October.

    When Iger launched Disney+ in 2019, the chief executive said he had intentionally set the price of the service well below competitors “to reach as many people as possible with it.”

    But Wednesday’s move to significantly bump prices, marked an acknowledgment by Iger of the media giant’s intent to squeeze more revenue out of streaming by pushing consumers to the advertising-supported plans, which have proven to be more profitable.

    When Netflix first offered its pioneering service for only $8 a month, millions of people signed up, eager to have access to the company’s expansive catalog for just a fraction of the cost of the traditional cable bundle.

    That served as the genesis of the streaming era, with legacy entertainment companies such as Disney racing to launch their own direct-to-consumer products at unsustainably low costs.


    I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • YoMismo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    That’s the deal for this kind of corporations, they make it cheap until you’re addicted than they try to steal your money “legally”…

    • aSingularFemboyHooter@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Sometimes that’s a tactic, sometimes it’s wild optimism, and sometimes they seem content to make a loss every year and prop it up with investment.

      I don’t know about stealing, they stopped taking money when I unsubbed, now I’m watching shit that somebody else paid to make, while not giving them a penny back!

      • mihor@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I was worried for some time that piracy would wither in face of cheap streaming options. Luckily I was wrong, or at least the streaming companies didn’t have the stamina to win this war. Arr! 🏴‍☠️

  • Sagrotan@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Streaming will become like tv eventually, if it isn’t already: only old and/or simple people are interested in it. Almost all people I know don’t watch tv anymore. And let’s be honest: 99.99% of the streaming crap is the same boring assembly line writing that didn’t work in the 90s and doesn’t work now. And to search for the 0.01% - nah, I’ll rather be in my workshop.

    • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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      1 year ago

      (we’ll see if that changes when I get married)

      The spouse test is a bitch. As an old nerd I can navigate highly technical and finicky systems very easily, my spouse on the other hand needs a ROKU style interface in order to successfully use things. Almost all of us end up creating a home system that works for the least tech savvy in the home.

      With that said I’ve been told that Streamio + Real Debrid works quite well.

      • GivingEuropeASpook@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Almost all of us end up creating a home system that works for the least tech-savvy in the home.

        That’s where I started, as a kid still at home in the 2010s. I used plex, I’ve been getting progressively more frustrated with it, but not sure how I’d switch to something else.