Tag Netflix

Unbundle Me!

It’s been five years since Congress told cable companies that they needed to start offering programming in “a la carte” mode (in other words, letting subscribers buy the channels they want instead of the “tiers” of programming which have been the standard for years). At the time, the cable companies made some appropriate noises in front of a couple of committees and then went on their merry way ignoring the mandate.

But the one-two punch of technological innovation and economic collapse have caught up with cable companies. Video-on-demand services have gone from being something only a few nerds could use to being on the cusp of mainstream. Even as people were getting pissed off with Netflix’s unwelcome announcement last week about spinning off their DVD rentals, every industry analyst agreed that the move was necessary to allow them to focus on their far-more-valuable streaming video business and that DVDs are in their death throes. Plus none of those pissed off people were banging on Comcast’s door as an alternative to Netflix. “Cord-cutting” (cancelling cable TV and going all-Internet for TV) is still more niche and unlikely to result in mass defections any time soon, but it has taken a bite, too. My long-time blog buddy Solonor took the plunge a couple of months ago and wrote an excellent summary of the experience.

As more and more American households find that they have less and less disposable income, people are discovering that the can live without the Full Monty cable package, too. Though it’s one of the last things people will cut back on, things are getting so tough that the time of reckoning has come for cable, and it’s actually costing them more customers than cord-cutting. Our personal experience is illustrative: we were paying Comcast $189 a month for their phone-internet-TV bundle WITHOUT any pay channels or added tiers and switched to Verizon FiOS and reduced our monthly bill to $82/month for essentially the same service. Given that Verizon’s Internet-only FiOS package is about $60/month and that we would still end up paying for a slate of VOD services (Netflix, Hulu, iTunes, etc.), we’re pretty much getting the best possible deal.

So earlier this week, the industry made a huge about-face and said that they would develop a la carte offerings as a way to retain customers who can no longer afford such an expensive service. I remain suspicious; last week’s announcement from Comcast that they would offer a low-cost Internet package to people who couldn’t afford the service came with an awful lot of caveats, requirements, and other gotchas. My gut tells me that any initial a la carte offerings will fall under the same sort of weaselly bullshit, but it’s a start, and they may ultimately have no choice given the increased competition.

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Infographic Of The Day

The announcement on Monday that Netflix is going to spin off its DVD rental business does nothing to change the process, I’m afraid.

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Hooray For Hollywood

A few showbiz links for Oscar weekend:

With the Oscar telecast only a little more than 48 hours away, the question on everyone’s mind isn’t “who’s going to win Best Picture?” but “who’s going to be included in the annual death reel?”

Speaking of Oscar, who better than Oscar The Grouch to give his predictions on the winners.

And on that note, you might be amused to learn that one of the big premieres at this year’s Sundance Film Festival was a documentary about Elmo.

Switching from movies to television, you might enjoy this post from Splitsider.com about ’90s sitcom favorite “NewsRadio” and how the casting decisions made or broke career opportunities that still echo around the entertainment biz today.

I was also tickled to read that Netflix has acquired the streaming rights to every Star Trek series from TOS right up to “Enterprise”. The episodes will start being available in April, along with a whole slew of other Paramount-produced TV shows, but the Gizmodo article makes it sound as though perhaps not ALL episodes of all the Trek series will be available. Hulu had been the source for TOS for a while, and you can buy individual episodes from iTunes, but a single location for all ST shows is great news.

Though not related to anything about Star Trek itself, here’s a story from entertainment news site Starpulse.com that talks about Patrick Stewart’s new involvement with a right-to-assisted-death group campaigning for the introduction of those laws in the U.K.

On the other side of the political spectrum, BuzzFeed.com offers this helpful list of which Hollywood figures are Republican nutjobs. You might not be surprised by many of the obvious ones, such as Kelsey Grammer and Tom Selleck, but there were several on that list that made me raise an eyebrow.

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Like No Business I Know

Since we started using Netflix’s streaming service a few months ago, we’ve absolutely watched the hell out of it. For a while it seemed like it might not be worthwhile because it was hard to find something all three of us would sit and watch together on the Reisenferseher, but what wound up happening is that each of us watches something individually either on the TV or, more commonly, on our laptops. So, it’s not the “bring the family together” sort of experience that “movie night” used to mean, but on any given Friday or Saturday night you are likely to find all three of us watching something completely different in three different corners of the house. Make of that what you will; we still spend time all together watching our favorite “must-see” television programs (at the moment we are eagerly anticipating the return of “The Amazing Race” on the 20th and keeping fingers crossed that the return of “Dancing With The Stars” in March is an improvement over the last run), but we have very diverging tastes and the option to NOT have to share has its merits.

(I’m also impressed that all three of us can be streaming video simultaneously without any perceived impact on the video quality for any of us. However, it makes me all the more glad that metered bandwidth hasn’t replaced “all-you-can-eat” yet. Video still consumes a lot of bandwidth, and the cable companies are gunning for Netflix.)

Lately, I’ve been watching some showbiz documentaries. I am a hardcore documentary fan in the first place, but I am also a student of the history of the entertainment industries and a lover of stories about the Golden Days of vaudeville, Hollywood, radio, television, or what have you.
Read more

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Technobabbling

Early versions of mobile phones were consider too bulky to carry.

Wired does us all a favor this morning by explaining exactly WTF “4G” means. (HINT: it’s marketing bullshit)

This post at Maximum PC is a pretty good assessment of 6 technologies that have been rendered obsolete and a counter-list of 6 technologies that aren’t going away any time soon. The only one I think they’ve got wrong is keys.

If it wasn’t bad enough that Twitter has already turned a significant portion of the world’s population into drooling half-wits by reducing messages to 140 characters, the Japanese are here to make sure we go the Full Moron by creating this animatronic panda that will read your incoming tweets out loud to you, so you don’t even have to read about the next time Ashton Kutcher takes a shit or Sarah Palin says something inane.

You’ve undoubtedly heard the factoid that Netflix streaming video now accounts for nearly 20% of Internet traffic between 8:00-10:00 p.m. Eastern Time. You probably also know that Netflix is cited as Reason #1 for the death of Blockbuster Video (see the infographic above). And now, according to Fast Company, Netflix boasts more subscribers than the premium cable channels Showtime and Starz. In that article, FC wonders when Netflix will start producing their own content, the way that the premium cable networks finally started doing in the ’90s, but given the less-than-subtle efforts of the cable/telco industry to end net neutrality as a way to jack up bandwidth pricing to Netflix, I have to wonder if what they really need to do is buy their way into a service provider. If Comcast can own NBC-Universal, maybe Netflix could buy out a struggling cable company or help take FiOS off of Verizon’s hands.

Oh, if this only worked.

My inner 12-year-old was deeply amused to see this in my referrer log recently.

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Can I Get A Credit For Watching Every Episode Of “Meerkat Manor”?

Internet smartypants guy Tim Carmody has come up with a really cool idea: he developed a sort of “intro to film” viewing list of classic films from titles available on Netflix’s instant streaming service. As he says in the post, he wasn’t trying to make an exhaustive list, nor was he aiming for any sort of “best of” list; instead, he took the challenge as though he were putting together a course syllabus, picking films that were significant to the evolution of film from the earliest narrative films up through the “Silver Age” of the 1970s. It’s not a groundbreaking list of movies, it’s very much the stuff you’d find in any undergrad intro to film class: all the way from “Battleship Potemkin” to “Scarface”. Nevertheless, it’s a good demonstration of how to use the power of having a massive library of films instantly available via the Internet. Several of the commenters in the post point out that an unintended side effect of this list is to demonstrate the weaknesses of Netflix’s library, namely the absence of huge swaths of films like classic musicals, Hitchcock, or film noir, but if you compare Netflix to the anemic catalogs of the on-demand services from the cable providers, it’s still pretty deep.

You could do a lot worse than to work your way through the films on his list if you wanted to develop a better appreciation for cinema, and you could undoubtedly find other titles that would be just as illustrative if you chose — he deliberately limited himself to seeing what he could throw together in half an hour’s worth of searching.

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Cutting The Cord

Making the rounds this week is a report from media analyst consulting firm Yankee Group that says 1 in 8 cable TV customers will cancel or downgrade their service in 2010 due to the increasing availability of video content online and/or the seemingly endless increases in cable service prices.

Here’s a little poll for those of you stopping by. Please feel free to add your vote. Poll remains active until midnight of May 15:


The idea that someday people would be able to get all of their television programming completely on demand from some video service in the ether has been talked about for the last fifteen years, but has really only been viable for the last couple of years, since it took most of that time for all of the necessary elements to converge — bandwidth, service providers, ubiquity of network access, quality of video streaming, etc. Like a lot of other disruptive technologies, it needed some sort of Gladwellian “tipping point” to cross over from something only being done by a small niche market of early adopters to being “the next big thing”, and it seems that the tipping point isn’t so much the tech as it is the economy. Who wants to pay a couple of hundred dollars a month for a bajillion channels they never watch, when they can get almost anything they want free or for a lot less? That appeals to just about everyone, not just me and my web-savvy buddies.

I had been fence-sitting about going cable-free for a long time. I’ve followed the development of the various online content services and the associated developments like set-top boxes for several years, but every time I thought I might be ready to pull the trigger, my inner geezer convinced me that sticking with things the way they were was just fine. However, a few weeks ago we started using Netflix’s instant streaming using our Nintendo Wii, and the experience has been so positive that it may be the necessary shove I needed. To be sure, there are still just enough hoops to jump through that I think the 1-in-8 rate isn’t going to go much higher, but that’s still a pretty remarkable number.

I know that most of my friends and family are a lot further behind on the adoption curve than I am, so I am interested to see what you all might have to say. Thanks in advance for taking a moment to answer the poll.

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We Demand…A Shrubbery!

nii.jpg

One that looks nice and is not too expensive…or we shall say “Nii!” again!!!

It’s an on-demand world these days, and the next two businesses to be sacrificed on the altar of J-I-T production are big-box bookstores and anyone still in the video rental business, including NetFlix.

You’ve heard it before, right? Well, yes, you have. I have been hearing it for a dozen years at least, but I think this time the predictions may have more than wishful thinking behind them.

This Fortune article from last month
says it’s the “next little thing”, but books-on-demand from a stand-alone kiosk are making their debut in 2007, offering over 2 million public domain titles, and they expect to work out deals with publishers to be able to offer virtually any book in print within the next five years.

Of course, these days big-box bookstores like to sell you a lot more than just books. The also like to sell you DVDs, but, gosh, wouldn’t you know it, Sonic Solutions has just announced a DVD-on-demand system that will let people download movies and burn them to their own DVDs — and they’ve already signed on all of the major studios so that you won’t have to pirate anything in the process (as long as you’re okay with whatever copy protection and DRM they build into the system). The resulting multi-fold increase of the number of titles legitimately available for download (whether limited-use or permanent purchase) should be the final nail in the coffin for small video stores, a serious thorn in the side of big-box bookstores, and will probably cause NetFlix to have to completely overhaul their business just to survive.

Along those lines, do take time to read David Denby’s piece in this week’s New Yorker where he considers the effect of recent technological innovations on the entire film industry. He does have a few decent counter-arguments to the current conventional wisdom, but overall he ends up having to agree with the prognosticators.

Nii! Nii!

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