Summer Movie Draft, Legion (102), The Expanse (209), Justified (511).
00:42 – Summer Movie Draft
06:39 – Legion (102)
11:02 – The Expanse (209)
17:36 – Justified (511)
Summer Movie Draft, Legion (102), The Expanse (209), Justified (511).
00:42 – Summer Movie Draft
06:39 – Legion (102)
11:02 – The Expanse (209)
17:36 – Justified (511)
More evidence cord-cutting is not imaginary, AMC’s commercial-free service, Vudu’s disc-to-digital for phones, and the essential Expanse.
Winter Movie Draft, The Expanse (208), Legion (101), Justified (510).
00:56 – Winter Movie Draft
02:35 – The Expanse (208)
11:47 – Legion (101)
20:32 – Justified (510)
Netflix switches to thumbs and might edit shows for screen size. Plus, Tom actually watched Iron Fist.
CordKillers: Ep. 162 – Rusted Fist
Recorded: March 20 2017
Guest: none
Intro Video
Primary Target
How to Watch
What to Watch
What We’re Watching
Front Lines
Dispatches from the Front
Hey Cordkillers,
Just wanted to throw my 2 cents (or rather yen) in here. In the last episode, you were talking about flipping through channels on analogue cable TV before digital. A streaming service with a similar feature launched in Japan last year.
It’s called Ameba TV and the interface is designed to allow swiping through channels of content quickly and easily, There’s almost zero lag between channels & you can even see the edges of other channels as you browse. It does have a programme guide (which mostly seems to be for their paid premium DVR service) but the app & channels are totally free! 20+ channels of content, available on streaming devices & mobile. (Only in Japan… :P)
– Kaylee
Hey I absolutely LOVE the podcast and I did subscribe. Quick thought on Viacom and CBS. I couldn’t care less about anything on their channels. I don’t think they have anything like walking dead or game of thrones to give them much leverage so they’re probably hurting themselves. Also I was really let down by CBS all access. I tried it out but all the classic shows like star trek, cheers, and others have their entire back catalogue available on both Hulu and Netflix and I think some on prime. What I really wanted was Big Bang theory but didn’t even get the current season. Just the most recent 4 or so episodes and in my area I can’t even get live cbs stream so this is hot garbage as far as I’m concerned.
Thanks guys, love the show!
– Bill
Hey guys,
In response to Jon’s question a few weeks ago about pre-ordering a physical disc and getting the digital copy early there are a few options. The first is Vudu’s awesome Disc + Digital service where you can pre-order the Blu-ray on Vudu.com or even the mobile apps and you get instant access to the digital copy:
http://www.vudu.com/movies/#featured/14106/DVDs-Blu-Rays
Shipping is sometimes free, sometimes not (it has been for me but I often order within their promotional periods on new movies) and comes from Walmart.com usually very close to if not before the physical release date. The only major downsides to the service is they currently don’t work with UHD Blu-ray’s (sometimes you can pre-order the UHD Blu-ray from Walmart.com and get the digital copy, what they refer to as Instawatch, when it comes out but it’s a crapshoot at best) and neither Warner Brothers or Disney titles are available through the Disc + Digital program. Also the program has been riddled with some technical glitches as of late which never affected me by the way.
The other option is through Bestbuy.com which I am not as familiar with but if you pre-order select titles like Sing they will email you a digital copy code soon after then ship you the disc when it comes out.
Hope this information is helpful.
-Kenny
Hi Tom and Brian,
In your discussion of Britbox, I started thinking “How DO you create a successful back-catalog streaming service?” You mentioned Netflix’s lackluster initial offerings when it was called “Netflix Streaming”. But that was OK for them because they were a successful DVD-by-mail company. Amazon’s initial offerings did nothing to pique my interest, but I didn’t care because all I wanted was the 2-day shipping. Any other successful service that focuses on back-catalog falls into the category of being the owners of the content they’re making available: Hulu, CBS All-access, HBO Go/Now.
Can you think of any path to success for a streaming service that primarily offers back-catalog without either having some OTHER successful moneymaking venture or by being the content owners themselves?
Love the show,
– Tom
As a British ex-pat in US (there are 3/4 million of us). This was a huge promise and a total failure in execution. My biggest hate is no news except “the papers”. Question time, newsnight, panorama all missing. The classic comedy is just PBS left overs. No classic BBC shows like “Two Ronnies” & “Dave Allen”. So I’m going to be sticking with YouTube since it has a better selection of classic BBC TV than this services which should be called BritSoapBox.
– Mark
Links
Winter Movie Draft, The Expanse (207), Justified (509). With Amos Lemos from Ritual Misery.
00:51 – Winter Movie Draft
03:00 – The Expanse (207)
17:04 – Justified (509)
Some people get enough TV without cable. Whether Britbox is a failure or genius. What’s coming to Hulu’s live service. With special guests Amos Lemos and Kent Fellure from Ritual Misery.
CordKillers: Ep. 161 Bigger Than a Britbox
Recorded: March 13, 2017
Guest: Amos Lemos and Kent Fellure
Intro Video
Primary Target
How to Watch
What to Watch
What We’re Watching
Front Lines
Dispatches from the Front
Hey Tom, Brian and Bryce,
I am forwarding this link to an article that extols the virtues of the new ATSC 3.0 digital over the air broadcast standard. From what I see it could be very beneficial for cordkillers. The broadcast signal is going to be stronger and have adaptable frequencies that can travel farther from the source and penetrate deeper into the home for much better reception. You will also be able to get a receiver box for the signal that can be hooked up to your home network so you can distribute it throughout the house from one source. The new standard will also allow broadcasters to deliver their signal to targeted areas for specific purposes. Portable devices such as smartphones and or tablets will also be able to receive the signal.
– Cliff
Hello Cordkillers
Just wanted to drop a note saying we signed up for YouTube Red explicitly for no commercials and YouTube Red originals. We always use the YouTube Music app and I have a teenager so we had to get access to the Dan and Phil Live Tour content that is exclusively on Red. To be honest, I’m so used to YouTube not having commercials now I forget people get ads and get very angry when I see one because I forgot to login.
Thanks for the great show!
– Dominic
Brian,
I am one of those people that loves my YouTube Red subscription. How can you not love not seeing ads?
Some background: Our primary source of content for our Living Room TV is YouTube. Last summer, I was getting really annoyed with YouTube showing me ads for R-rated horror movies on the TV. While they were actually relevant to my interests, my 6 year old daughter was watching with me most of the time! And I really didn’t want a separate account for the TV. Right about then, YouTube offered me Red for the entire summer for $3, so I jumped on it, and just kept it after the three months were up. Can’t imagine going back to ad infested YouTube.
Amusingly my experience is opposite of Tom’s: I HATE GOOLE PLAY MUSIC! I used the Google Play Music App with my own (legit purchased) music before getting Red, and really liked it. Now the voice search is useless: There’s no way to tell it to play *my* music, and instead it’s bound and determined to stream! Meaning when I ask for a song by The Returners while driving home from work, suddenly I’m listening to Frank Sinatra! Even though the song I want is on my phone! Even if you tell it use downloaded songs only, it turns that feature off the moment you voice search.
Honestly if I could get Red without Google Play Music, I’d take that in a heartbeat.
– Chris
Long time listener, Ben, here. I’m a software engineer by profession and recently have heard more and more of my co-workers are using Android/Kodi boxes to access day-of movies and to stream any shows they want for free. We all know doing this is illegal (I’m not a lawyer of course) but I was wondering if you guys could lay down some facts for these wayward coworkers for me?
Their argument for doing this seems to hinge on 2 insane points:
1. It doesn’t say it’s illegal to do this like it does at the beginning of DVDs/Blurays.
2. Streaming isn’t the same as downloading, and is therefore legal.
I know I’ve read recent articles about some re-sellers of “fully loaded” Kodi boxes in the UK getting into trouble with the law, but I’d really appreciate it if you could scare straight the folks that think it’s Ok to steal.
Keep up the great work on the show, and thanks.
Your boss,
– Ben
“I was inspired by a recent emailer’s Chicken Challenge result with his DIRECTV account. I have the HD Genie DVR with two additional miniGenies and pay $150 a month.
I anticipated having no DIRECTV for the weekend but the chance of saving a good chunk of change outweighed the possibility of missing the next The Walking Dead, if I had to wait for customer retention to call back in a day or two.
I got a regular service rep and I explained that, based on my viewing habits, I could buy the shows I wanted to watch and it would be much cheaper than my $150 a month bill, so please cancel my account. Between you and me, I hadn’t looked at a single price comparison.
The rep offered to reduce my bill to $106 a month but I said that was still too high and to please cancel the account. He quickly came back to me with a price of $86 a month for the next year and could throw in a special they were running where I’d get HBO, Showtime, and Cinemax for 6 months with no need to cancel when the time was up. (I declined the free sportsball package as no one in our house watches sports.) I felt that was quite fair for the package and equipment and “”reluctantly”” accepted his offer, saving me about $65 a month.
Onward, Chicken Challengers!
Keep the great work!
– Chris
Links
Winter Movie Draft, Get Out, Logan, The Expanse (206), Justified (508). With special guest Owen JJ Stone (https://iqmz.com)
01:08- Winter Movie Draft
03:00 – Logan
17:28 – Get Out
33:50 – The Expanse (206)
38:44 – Justified (508)
People have broadcast but not TVs, YouTube has a TV service, and Amazon pilot season is back. With special guest Owen JJ Stone (https://iqmz.com)
Winter Movie Draft, Lego Batman, The Expanse (204-105) Justified (507)
00:45 – Winter Movie Draft
03:44 – Lego Batman
15:29 – The Expanse (204-205)
19:31 – Justified (507)
Why no one watches TV, Sling TV gets cheap, and how Allison got her TiVo MoJo back.
CordKillers: Ep. 159 – Tiers for Fears
Recorded: February 27 2017
Guest: Allison Sheridan
Intro Video
Primary Target
How to Watch
What to Watch
What We’re Watching
Front Lines
Dispatches from the Front
Hi Tom and Brian,
Just had some thoughts on the Caavo. I think the idea of Apple buying the company and applying it’s tech to the AppleTV is interesting, but to me the better fit would be Logitech. Imagine a Harmony remote that would control everything with voice and do it seamlessly. The advertising writes itself, “The new Harmony One, the remote you’ll never lose.” I’m sure someone else has thought of this but it seems like a good fit.
Keep up the good work guys on the podcast, loving it.
Thanks,
– Thomas from Missouri
Hi Tom and Brian,
I’ve amassed a large collection of DVDs and Blu-rays over the years and about two years ago decided all of my discs were collecting dust, as I was far more likely to watch a title I already owned on Netflix simply because it was accessible.
I decided to ‘roll my own’ solution and digitize my extensive 800+ movie collection using MakeMKV and Handbrake- and now have them on a Synology NAS.
Problem Solved- after many hours of encoding, I have access to all the titles I spent so much to acquire, streaming locally to my FireTV running Kodi.
Now- I’m hoping you or the CordKillers audience may be able to help. With new movies coming 3-4 week early to streaming prior to the DVD release, is there any service you know of that I can pay to order the disc but gain early steaming rights to the title?
I understand the studios are looking to encourage streaming titles, but this leaves me with limited access to the movie I have just paid $20 to ‘buy’ streaming rights to.
I’ve been enjoying your show since the Frame Rate days and also enjoy your joint and independent ventures, and wanted to thank you for the independent content you both create on a daily basis.
Keep up the great work!
–Jon
Hey guys. I just finished up listening to Cordkillers 158 (On… DEMAND!). Loved the discussion about the Caavo and the consolidation of all the devices and services. As I was enjoying Brian’s rant about wanting to be ignorant and being able to ask for a can of dog food and dog food appearing, it occurred to me that perhaps the Google Home device (w/help from Google Assistant) is actually moving (albeit slowly) in the direction of what I think he is asking for. Even though the Home device is still relatively new, it already supports me saying “Hey Google. Play Stranger Things on the family room TV” and it will find Stranger Things on Netflix and cast it to the chromecast named Family Room TV. On the contrast if I say “Hey Google. Play DTNS on family room TV.” It goes out and finds the latest episode of DTNS on YouTube and starts casting it to the Family Room TV. In neither scenario did I have to specify the service where to play the content from, it just played it. It also does a pretty good job supporting natural language speaking, allowing different derivatives of the same sentence so, “Ok Google, Cast DTNS to the family room tv” would have the same effect. Me watching another fine episode of DTNS on the TV in the family room.
Of course where this currently falls short however is that it’s only working for a VERY small number of services that I know of, those being Netflix and YouTube. But I’m hopeful the list of services will increase quickly. This would make sense, as the Google Home App on my phone already has “universal search” capabilities that support searching across a much wider list of services, including but not limited to Netflix, YouTube, Google Play Movies, HBO GO, Watch ESPN, Vudu, and I’m sure many others (Note: I believe the service’s app has to be installed on the device which is probably how they are searching the data of those services). Of course who knows if Amazon Video would ever be supported. I also find it confusing and rather annoying that I can cast music from Google Play Music to my chromecast’s via Google Home by talking to it, but I can’t play a movie from Google Play Movies & TV this way. I’m sure over the next year or two a lot these issues will get worked out, at least I hope they do.
Anyways, I just wanted to share my experience with the Google Home device with you guys in case you weren’t aware.
Thanks,
– Levi
How do you pick where to buy shows? I want to cut the cord and I want to just buy shows i want to watch (this looks like it would be cheaper). But I’m having a lot of problems picking where to spend my money. My wife and I have iphones, but I don’t want to use iTunes because I don’t want to lose access to my shows if i get a new phone. Amazon, Google and Vudu look like good alternatives, but again I would hate to get locked down. Currently I use a TiVo and an Nvidia Shield TV to watch all my shows. I really wish these providers would all participate in UltraViolet or act like Disney and let me buy it once and watch on everything.
– Andrew
Links