WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

474

The more greedy they get and the harder they make things or the more they make it like how cable is.. The less I will participate. The rule is simple. Make the cost reasonable, make it easy to get the content I want and I will pay for it. Force me into tons of advertising, high prices and needing to be on 4 different services to get the content I want? You can all fuck yourselves and ill find some other way to get content or just not watch it at all.

Archive: https://archive.today/9zbBM

From the post:

>We're at a transitional moment in streaming -- user growth is slowing and major players are looking to consolidate, but the long-promised dream of profitability finally seems within reach (especially if you're Netflix). The perfect time, then, for The New York Times to interview many of the industry's big names -- including Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos, Amazon's Prime Video head Mike Hopkins, and IAC chairman Barry Diller -- about what they think comes next.

The more greedy they get and the harder they make things or the more they make it like how cable is.. The less I will participate. The rule is simple. Make the cost reasonable, make it easy to get the content I want and I will pay for it. Force me into tons of advertising, high prices and needing to be on 4 different services to get the content I want? You can all fuck yourselves and ill find some other way to get content or just not watch it at all. Archive: https://archive.today/9zbBM From the post: >>We're at a transitional moment in streaming -- user growth is slowing and major players are looking to consolidate, but the long-promised dream of profitability finally seems within reach (especially if you're Netflix). The perfect time, then, for The New York Times to interview many of the industry's big names -- including Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos, Amazon's Prime Video head Mike Hopkins, and IAC chairman Barry Diller -- about what they think comes next.

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt

I tried to watch Jeremiah Johnson on regular tv last night, and the amount of advertising was very frustrating. Honestly I don't know why I try, when I can just pirate the ad-free, uncut version so easily. There's just something about the shared experience about broadcast tv, even when the others are far away.