|
Spatula City posted:Also, you will believe in the love story between an anthropomorphized computer and a dimwitted DJ from Jacksonville. "I wasn't a failed DJ! I was pre-successful!"
|
# ? Jan 21, 2017 20:03 |
|
|
# ? Jun 5, 2024 08:45 |
|
There's no real spoilers, but Ted Danson's smile in THE GOOD PLACE was a wonderful moment.
|
# ? Jan 21, 2017 20:34 |
|
Good Place spoiler : Yeah it was killer, the laugh too. Someone predicted the twist in the first page of the thread, real glad I didn't follow it until now .Some shows are just better off not reading the thread about it. EDIT: Just saw the warning to not discuss it. Put the post in a spoiler and will stop. Shageletic fucked around with this message at 23:47 on Jan 21, 2017 |
# ? Jan 21, 2017 23:44 |
|
Watched the first 3 eps of Sneaky Pete. Good, not great. Pretty much nothing stands out in any way, except maybe the cast.
|
# ? Jan 21, 2017 23:47 |
|
Escobarbarian posted:Watched the first 3 eps of Sneaky Pete. Good, not great. Pretty much nothing stands out in any way, except maybe the cast. The web of lies and cons gets better and better. And the cast is just phenomenal so that helps quite a bit.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 00:20 |
|
Shageletic posted:Good Place spoiler : Yeah it was killer, the laugh too. I never would have watched it without that spoiler though.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 01:42 |
|
If you want to see some similar themes check out the Black Mirror episode "Nosedive." It's a bit darker and it's also written by the creator of The Good Place.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 02:00 |
|
Less good though
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 02:01 |
|
Stop judging things on a point scale, dude.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 02:01 |
|
That's -50 for the sass-mouth.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 02:05 |
|
Not enough love for Jason's stick-figure rendition of the Kama Sutra
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 02:17 |
|
Next Sunday, Black Sails returns for it's 4th and final season. If you haven't watched this show, reevaluate your life choices and fix that. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R0UYpfzBFR8
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 03:20 |
|
precision posted:Not enough love for Jason's stick-figure rendition of the Kama Sutra I want to try the 'Webcrawler'
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 10:52 |
|
So it seems like over the last few months there's been a metric ton of new original content from Netflix and Amazon to the point that I can't even keep track. Which ones are worth watching?
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 11:08 |
|
*50 different people give you 50 different answers*
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 12:04 |
|
-Blackadder- posted:So it seems like over the last few months there's been a metric ton of new original content from Netflix and Amazon to the point that I can't even keep track. But not The OA.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 12:05 |
|
My personal preferred streaming debuts from last year include One Mississippi, Lady Dynamite, The Get Down, and Easy. The Crown was also good. Series of Unfortunate Events just dropped and is rad, while Sneaky Pete is fun if you like Justified.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 12:21 |
|
Josh Lyman posted:All of them.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 17:48 |
|
Goliath on AP is pretty rad so far. I'm 5 eps in.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 19:31 |
|
Escobarbarian posted:Sneaky Pete is fun if you like Justified. I've seen all the Sneaky Pete posts in the thread and skimmed over it mainly because I knew I had other stuff to watch, but I feel like that is the perfect sell for it.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 20:00 |
|
Stranger Things, Sneaky Pete, Sense8 Christmas Episode. Stay far the gently caress away from The OA unless you believe in the healing power of crappy interpretive dance...and hate yourself.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 20:07 |
|
Humbug Scoolbus posted:Stranger Things, Sneaky Pete, Sense8 Christmas Episode. Stay far the gently caress away from The OA unless you believe in the healing power of crappy interpretive dance...and hate yourself. The OA is a really, really great show! Seven episodes is a strange pick for number of episodes in a season, but whatever, I can't wait to see what next season brings!
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 20:54 |
|
Frontier is wacky and fun. Is no one else watching Frontier? *only seen two episodes
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 21:06 |
|
-Blackadder- posted:So it seems like over the last few months there's been a metric ton of new original content from Netflix and Amazon to the point that I can't even keep track. I've felt like that for close to a year now.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 21:16 |
|
Well, Netflix is spending $6,000,000,000 on original programming this year, so it's only going to get harder to keep up. That number is not a typo.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 21:40 |
|
Their goal is to premiere one new season of programming every week, eventually it is going to be functionally impossible for a person with a full-time job and a life to watch everything they make. And that is OK.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 21:42 |
|
I think they're just trying to build up a huge catalog of their own shows so they can stop licensing other stuff. They've already drastically reduced the amount of licensed content they have the last few years. In five years or so I can imagine Netflix being just Netflix original programming.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 21:43 |
|
Which sucks because that's still the main reason people pay for their subscription. Netflix make good poo poo, but their content isn't worth any kind of streaming service price by itself.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 21:45 |
|
X-O posted:I think they're just trying to build up a huge catalog of their own shows so they can stop licensing other stuff. They've already drastically reduced the amount of licensed content they have the last few years. In five years or so I can imagine Netflix being just Netflix original programming. That would probably get me to cancel my sub since it's so freaking hard to figure out what of their new stuff is worth watching outside the handful I already watch. It's already way harder to find docs I haven't seen on netflix lately.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 21:52 |
|
A part of it is that also these giant media companies want more of the share on their old stuff and many are pulling things in order to start their own individual services. Soon if you want to watch a CBS or NBC or FOX show you'll have to sub to their own service. It'll be the a la carte cable service people have been asking for the last decade and now that they're getting it they won't be happy.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 22:01 |
|
Now six episodes in, and Sneaky Pete is hooking me a lot more. Ep 4 is probably the turning point. It's so fun to watch the screws turn. And I'd update my description to "Justified x Banshee in Connecticut".
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 22:17 |
|
X-O posted:A part of it is that also these giant media companies want more of the share on their old stuff and many are pulling things in order to start their own individual services. Soon if you want to watch a CBS or NBC or FOX show you'll have to sub to their own service. It'll be the a la carte cable service people have been asking for the last decade and now that they're getting it they won't be happy. That's already starting to fall flat on it's face. CBS is backing off their rhetoric and have entered into licensing agreements with Hulu. They also backed off BIG time on CW content and made the deal with Netflix even more favorable rather than launching their own streaming service. Keep in mind that Netflix licenses all their stuff, even Netflix Originals. For example, A Series of Unfortunate Events is a Paramount Television production ultimately. Netflix is just the first run and OTT distributor. What may be more accurate to say is Netflix wants to license more first run exclusive distribution content rather than back catalog OTT licensing. Ultimately, I see this as bouncing at some point in time. OTT streaming of past seasons may be withdrawn and used as an attempt to launch network paid services, but it's destined to fail. The networks will see that this lowers the value of their brand and come crawling back to Netflix and Amazon to license their content, now at lower rates. In the meantime, viewership continues to fall, networks take fewer advertising dollars in, and Netflix will have all the money to outbid on quality content. At the end of the day, there may not be much WORTH watching on traditional networks in 10 years. The big thing to ponder here is that Netflix manages to turn a profit while investing back into licensing original content and paying out money to the likes of CBS, ABC, and NBC. All while charging $10 /month. This complex arrangement of carriage fees and advertising tracking to figure out rates is outmoded when you can deliver direct to the customer and have direct metrics on what maintains your subscription rates. We are eventually going to see a collapse of the TV advertising industry because it's going to become more costly to administer than they get back in dollars. IRQ posted:That would probably get me to cancel my sub since it's so freaking hard to figure out what of their new stuff is worth watching outside the handful I already watch. How is that different from any other TV show out there though?
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 22:24 |
|
less laughter posted:Well, Netflix is spending $6,000,000,000 on original programming this year, so it's only going to get harder to keep up. lm-loving-ao thats cartoonish, and impossible to counter. All you need is a single hit to erase like 10 flops, and flops are hard to come by when your demographics are so laser focused you can produce a show to target a group of like ~5000 people in a small village in mexico because the algorithm noticed numbers were slumping there.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 22:56 |
|
bring back old gbs posted:lm-loving-ao thats cartoonish, and impossible to counter. All you need is a single hit to erase like 10 flops, and flops are hard to come by when your demographics are so laser focused you can produce a show to target a group of like ~5000 people in a small village in mexico because the algorithm noticed numbers were slumping there. I believe Netflix have said before that not every series needs to be a home run. I believe they said they were fine with a bunt single and home run every now and then. I'm also pretty sure they used that exact baseball metaphor to say it as well.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 23:09 |
|
Yeah, much like HBO their goal is getting subscribers rather than sheer viewer numbers for ad revenue, so making something that has a tiny viewership is a net good if it brings people on board or convinces them to stay subscribed.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 23:20 |
|
What are the chief metrics of TV success in the post-Netflix landscape? I can't imagine ratings are necessarily worth what they used to be.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 23:20 |
|
Wheat Loaf posted:What are the chief metrics of TV success in the post-Netflix landscape? For late night talk shows they now care more about a segment going viral than actual ratings.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 23:33 |
|
James Corden is insufferable because every interview turns into a segment about himself.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 23:43 |
|
I for one welcome our Netflix overlords. They've done really well with original/exclusive content so far.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 23:51 |
|
|
# ? Jun 5, 2024 08:45 |
|
Amazon has the HBO back library so I think I like them more. Also Hannibal.
|
# ? Jan 22, 2017 23:56 |