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Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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I really don’t know why Virgin have to take such a long time negotiating these deals, but I’m sure we will get the service eventually. ---------- Post added at 11:48 ---------- Previous post was at 11:39 ---------- Quote:
It’s just what I think. You may disagree, but no need to get in a state about it. |
Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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Let’s hope the D+ does mean ‘Disney+ and not Discovery+, although both would be nice! Incidentally, is the ‘VM,BT,YV’ all part of the D+ code or are they codes for separate services? It sounds curious to me - are we getting something from BT? YV could be ‘You View’ but I don’t know how we would benefit from that. Very strange. |
Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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Yeah vm= virgin, bt=bt, yv=youview. What it means is D+ is relevant to those 3 platforms at the moment nothing from BT to VM as of yet. Also noted Origintv has officially launched now full, this is a tv service from Origin Broadband a company i'd steer well clear off. |
Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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Disney + launched in the UK on 31 March 2020. Six months' as a Sky exclusive would have seen it available on other pay TV platforms this month which as you say would have been a smooth handover when the linear channels closed. However, I suspect Disney are quite happy for customers to sign up directly without paying any sign-up commission to VM. My thinking is next year now and possibly on 31 March again for a launch on VM. |
Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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However that doesn't suit your narrative to seek out objective facts. |
Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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Back then, to my recollection, the BBC said it cost £80m to run the channel and £50m would be saved by going online only. I never believed that figure given it shared transmission space with CBBC and that was continuing. |
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Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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As others have pointed out content left the channel as part of the savings. And they filled BBC 1 and 2 with some of the leftover content. Another spreadsheet wheeze for the BBC but nothing to do with the cost of maintaining a linear presence. As you’ve correctly pointed out they are reversing the decision. Clearly, because little of this online content had the reach of the linear channel. I could give the BBC a way to save billions by - closing down. It’s hardly a like for like comparison. |
Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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Your analogy is off the wall. BBC3 is returning as a conventional channel because it was far too early to close it down. In good time, all the Beeb’s channels will close down together and the content made available on a streamer. |
Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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If there was you'd perhaps have a point. However it's simply not true. The fact the BBC are going in reverse suggests you may be getting further away from, not closer to, your 2035 vision. You're forgetting (as you always do) is that the BBC get ratings for simply being top of the EPG. A prized position they simply will not give up. The same content on BBC 1 rates higher than BBC 2. Same goes for ITV for major news coverage (when ITV did such a thing) and simulcasts of the World Cup final or major England games. |
Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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As I said, the Beeb closed BBC3 prematurely, and I did say that at the time. That has been proved true. Yes, being top of the EPG is worth a great deal.But that is now. If most of the other channels have already closed down and most people have abandoned the system we have now, what then? Your mistake is in believing there will not be a big shift in viewing patterns over the next decade or so. If that doesn’t happen, I will be the first to say I was wrong. But can you put your hand on your heart and say you really don’t believe that a viewer shift of this kind will never happen under any circumstances? What makes you so sure? |
Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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There’s been plenty of opportunities for this viewing shift that have never come to pass. I’ve explained before, multiple times, that you have never explained how consumer behaviour changes “to zero” without Government intervention. Internet hasn’t even got 100% penetration let alone the superfast speeds needed for HD broadcasts and not everyone wants to subscribe to an expensive broadband solution for television. Your view that most other channels closing down is bad for channels left on EPGs is a bad thing. On the contrary it’s a good thing. It is greater prominence for those that remain. Let’s take it to an extreme and there’s ONE linear channel. Only one. You switch your TV on and it’s there. Are you telling me that Amazon, Netflix, Sky or anyone else wouldn’t fall over themselves to showcase their content there for the paltry sums it costs to broadcast? A 24 hour TV channel beamed into every household in the country. The only one? It’d be Sky Sports News on steroids. |
Re: Netflix/Streaming Services
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The point I am making is that there will come a tipping point. We have not reached it yet, but give it another 5 years, and you will be ignorant or a flat earther not to notice a sea change in viewer habits. Your scenario of one channel left...what if no-one even bothers with this mode of transmission anymore? This is a concept you seem to be unable to grasp. If you take your blinkers off, you will start to understand that people will migrate to where the best content is. People will follow the herd. But I know you have a problem with all things ‘herd’! |
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