How things have changed

A lot of tv personalities have started making their own shows and releasing them to Youtube, especially former personalities of various Foodnetwork shows. Jay Leno's Garage has been on youtube for many years. I saw The Martin Bros have been putting some content out on youtube of their custom auto work now that Motor Trend ended all their shows too. So there is a lot of good content on Youtube and its not just amateur entrepreneurs. Richard Rawlings moved his Gas Monkey Garage content to youtube many years ago after arguments with Discovery on the direction of the show.

Michael Symon, Carla Hall and Clinton Kelly launched an updated version of The Chew called Chewed Up on Youtube about 6 months ago. Its been so successful that LG is sponsoring it now and moved them to the LG test kitchen and gave them their own 24/7 channel on the LG OS free streaming service.

It's success has led to Clinton Kelly and Stacey London launching a new show Why'd They Wear That as a spin on their old shows. Today Michael Symon launched Simply Symon as a new version of his Symons Dinners Cooking Out show after Foodnetwork cancelled it along with nearly all their other non competition food shows.


View: https://youtu.be/vkDY-jdOTQM?si=fYGf8AIpZFhaKxGp



View: https://youtu.be/XDoHhUTBMTE?si=ffCY0rblf6uk9bQ6



View: https://youtu.be/9-T5vIcZAsU?si=m4NvI8oYG9-V6bDR
 
I see a lot of that celeb stuff on YT. Honestly, that is not why I watch things there. I still gravitate mostly to original, long form stuff from people who aren't famous in the classical way. Of course, the app keeps recommending that celeb stuff to me no matter how much I tell it I am not interested.
 
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10 months in a row, streaming is ahead of Cable/Streaming combined, by 5.9% more-

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Once Streaming is dominant media source, then you will see people start cutting out streaming sources and go back to OTA and Free Tv stations, due to price increases. Will come back full circle to the 1950s with 3 or 4 ota stations to watch for free.

I can already see that with every merger they are just consolidating back to cable again. Paramount wants Warner/ Discovery and CNN and Hbo will go away as a stand alone and become merged with Paramount. Showtime is no longer a stand alone source. Now merged into Paramount. We will end up with all the extra sources consolidated to 3 or 4 sources and we will be back to cable with ever increasing prices.
 
Once Streaming is dominant media source, then you will see people start cutting out streaming sources and go back to OTA and Free Tv stations, due to price increases. Will come back full circle to the 1950s with 3 or 4 ota stations to watch for free.

I can already see that with every merger they are just consolidating back to cable again. Paramount wants Warner/ Discovery and CNN and Hbo will go away as a stand alone and become merged with Paramount. Showtime is no longer a stand alone source. Now merged into Paramount. We will end up with all the extra sources consolidated to 3 or 4 sources and we will be back to cable with ever increasing prices.

Subscribers are going to have to see value or they will cancel. This isn't the old days with contracts and having to wait around all day for a technician to install new boxes or a satellite on your house if you change services, people will click through and cancel, go for promos, binge watch and cancel, etc.
 
There are contracts on streaming services. If you want a cheaper price you have to sign up for a year and pay the full amount. If you want to cancel you can but you don't get any money back. They don't cancel it until that yearly subscription ends. So if you don't want a contract you have to pay the higher monthly fee. But at least now you have a choice which way to go.
 
And I don't think binge watching is as successful anymore. They don't always keep all episodes and seasons available. And some might just no longer be available.

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There are contracts on streaming services. If you want a cheaper price you have to sign up for a year and pay the full amount. If you want to cancel you can but you don't get any money back. They don't cancel it until that yearly subscription ends. So if you don't want a contract you have to pay the higher monthly fee. But at least now you have a choice which way to go.

That's not at all like the contracts the satellite companies have, that's a discount for prepaying for a year.
 
DiSH started out offering discounted annual subs but then in a few years stopped. So, why? It really ticked off some of my cx's, who liked both getting the discounting as well as not having to deal with a monthly bill. The reason was because a lot of the crooks they had attracted to sell DiSH had told people they would get lifetime free service (and charged exorbitantly for the system/install), bought them a year of basic, and then skipped town. Then after that DiSH started demanding SSNs and pushing autopay. All crookery-driven. Themselves as crooks, associating themselves with crooks.
 

Heartland, RetroTV, and Rev'N Streaming