Until I started dating my future wife, I did not use or subscribe to any
streaming service. Well, I did use Hulu when it first came out, but that
was years ago. As I’ve stated previously, I spent literally years
digitizing my VHS and DVD collection onto an external drive. It is
organized in two main folders, movies and television, and subdivided into
genres (drama, sitcom, talk shows, etc). The shows themselves are each in
their own folder, numbered according to season and episode sequence with
the episode title if it has one (“West Wing 101 Pilot”). If I buy new media
(either on DVD or iTunes), it gets added to the external drive in the same
way (and yes I have a backup drive). It is, in my opinion, absolutely
perfect organization.

That said, my fiancée and I watch a lot of stuff at her house. She
subscribes to nearly all the streaming services (as well as
cable/satellite... don’t ask me why). I also now get Disney+ free for a
year through my Verizon phone service, and I paid for the CBS streaming
service because Susan wanted to watch the Picard series. So I’ve had
several months learning to use each of the streaming services... I despise
them. I despise them so, so very much.

I despise their recommendations. I despise that the same movies and shows
can be classified as comedies, action, drama, trending, popular, things you
(I) might like, etc. I despise the previews that play when you scroll
through the menus. I despise that the older shows and films rarely if ever
appear unless you search for them by the exact title using an always clunky
typing mechanism. I despise the auto-play-next-episode feature built into
most services. I despise that shows that still have commercials only seem
to have one single sponsor and one single ad for that sponsor played over
and over and over again. I despise the “are you still watching?” pop-up
that basically judges you for binge watching. I despise them all, each and
every one, with a fervor that borders on excessive.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m a longtime believer that what we used to call “a la
carte” would be better, and that we’d all be better off directing money
only into shows or networks or studios that we actually wanted to support,
instead of cable sending our money to entities we don’t like and punishing
us with channels we don’t want. And I should be grateful that we seem to be
committed to heading that direction. But as each service tries to brand
itself and tries to create an engaging user experience, I’m left just
wanting my external drive that has the media I like in a simple
(alphabetized!) order. If I want to know more about a series or an episode
or a cast member, I can go to IMDB. I don’t need pomp and circumstance. I
just want to watch what I want to watch.

On Thu, May 7, 2020 at 8:59 AM PGage <[email protected]> wrote:

> For a couple of reasons I subscribe to almost all of the streaming
> services. I am interested in an analysis and comparative evaluation of the
> functionality and friendliness of the various options. I have my own
> subjective sense, but I am having trouble systematically explaining to
> myself what it is I like and don’t like about them.
>
> I’m not even sure what the most important categories are, but they include
> something like: ease of searching for and selecting programs, ease of
> getting back to previously viewed series (I particularly dislike Hulu for
> this), moving forward and backward with a program, and continuing to the
> next program (including option of skipping closing credits of current
> episode and opening credits of next).
>
> My subjective sense is that I still like the feel of Netflix the best
> (though I don’t really like the current menu system, which I feel makes it
> harder for me to look through older films) and really dislike CBS Access
> and Hulu, but not sure if that would hold up to a systematic review.
>
> Does anyone either have their own analysis of this, or familiar with a
> good review of these kinds of things available on the internet?
>
> On Thu, May 7, 2020 at 8:22 AM 'Bob Jersey' via TVorNotTV <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> 'Cause the company has far more content under a lot more brands than just
>> The Eye...
>>
>> Till then, the service celebrates getting onto xfinity!
>>
>>
>> https://variety.com/2020/tv/news/viacomcbs-cbs-all-access-rebrand-summer-1234600528/
>> (link)
>>
>> B
>>
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>>
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>
-- 
Kevin M. (RPCV)

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