On this week's show we have an essay from one of our listeners on why he wants to stick with his DVR over streaming. We also take a deep dive into Automatic Content Recognition and how to turn it off on your smart TVs. As usual we also read your emails and take a look at the week's news.
News:
Movember Raffle — Bright Side Home Theater
Swimming against the Stream - An essay from Jorge BeltranI know I will sound old and swimming against current, but I would like to go back to my world where we had our cable subscriptions, DVR and Netflix. Simple, vs having to manage 5-7 subscriptions to watch what we want at a cost we can pay.
The proliferation of streaming services is turning out to be a way for content owners to extract more value from customers and significantly increase the amount of work customers have to do to find and track the content we want to watch. Even sports. Furthermore, it has backfired to content producers, with less opportunity to monetize content, driving them to look for economies of scale again.
I follow or used to follow La Liga, Premier League Soccer, ski, college football, and formula 1 racing. Back in the day I knew what channel carried all of these sports on my cable line up, would set it to record on my DVR and done. I could watch it when I wanted and where I wanted since I could access my DVR from anywhere but the plane.
Netflix was just growing and buying "older" content from the major networks and allowed us to binge watch old series we had missed. Some new exclusive content was coming out and that made paying the 10 - 12 $/mo a good value.
Fast forward to today:
The best games of Premier League have been taken off the over the air or regular cable channels are now behind a Paramount or someone else's paywall. Why am I going to pay for access to content that is mostly CBS that I can get over the air?. Worst of all, you can not skip commercials when you stream this content nowadays. You can't DVR the content and skip the commercials. I have lost track of who is now airing La Liga, but last time I checked was behind some other streamer. Fubo has a lot of soccer but is now super expensive too.
Conclusion: I have stopped following La Liga and Premier League. My enthusiasm for good Futbol has gone down tremendously. I turned my eyes to college football and Formula 1.
The worst part is that now I fear the same is going to happen with College Football, moving from free over the air or in basic cable channels to some exclusive need-to-pay streaming service. You guys praised Formula 1 going to Apple. I dread it!!! I do not pay for Apple TV(plus or not plus) and I catch Formula 1 over ESPN. Does it mean I will have to drop ESPN, that gives me other content and add AppleTV? If I were an NFL fan I would have lost it. Some content is on Amazon, other in the different networks or streamers. I do not know how much you have to pay to be able to watch the NFL consistently.
Call me old school. I still have a cable service that gives me the right to HBO, ESPN, Fox, and the likes. I can watch and record all the related content in Hulu from the major networks.
I only keep paying for Netflix that I see as a premium channel (like paying for HBO back in the day). Rationale - we get a lot of exclusiv
Published on 14 hours ago
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