Tag Archives: netflix

Mark Malkoff’s Netflix Challenge

(YouTube link) Since you pay for Netflix by the month, how low can you bring the price-per-movie down by watching as many as you can? Mark Malkoff tried to find out, by devoting a month to the experiment. I don’t see how he did it, because I couldn’t find anywhere near that many movies I’d Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Neatorama Discovery Date : 05/06/2012 05:00 Number of articles : 2

http://www.youtube.com/v/eoMpEddA5Vo

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Mark Malkoff’s Netflix Challenge

BateFlix Offers SKINstant Gratification, But Is It Worth Your Time?

Looking for something nude to watch on Netflix Instant? So is the creator of a new website called BateFlix , which rather misleadingly bills itself as “the best porn on Netflix” (which doesn’t actually have any XXX titles, or what most of us would think of as “hardcore porn”). Technology blog VentureBeat describes BateFlix as ” a cross between Netflix recommendation search engine InstantWatcher and Mr. Skin ,” and indeed BateFlix’s nudity-ratings format and search categories will be, shall we say, familiar to Mr. Skin users. Bateflix does give users the opportunity to put in their 2 cents, including such insights as ” She gets railed and abused by some bigshot, eventually James Bond appears and sexes her too ” ( The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo , 2011) and ” That chick from saved by the bell dances does full frontal. The plot is not bad either .” ( Showgirls , 1995). However, unlike Mr. Skin, BateFlix does not provide specific “fast-forward to” information, nor does it provide pics and clips of the the 6,411 Netflix Instant titles in their database. So ‘bator, please. Mr. Skin has 31,360 titles in his nude database, and unlike BateFlix, we actually show you the good parts. So accept no substitutions…MrSkin.com, fast-forwarding to the good parts since 1999!

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BateFlix Offers SKINstant Gratification, But Is It Worth Your Time?

See One Blockbuster Store’s Sad, Final F— You to Netflix

” Screw Netflix !!!!!!” ” Don’t be stupid !!!!!!” And with one final missive taped to the shelf between copies of Syriana and Shoot ‘Em Up , another doomed Blockbuster store fell to the tyranny of Netflix ‘s superior business model. Might as well screw Netflix with three months’ free rental, eh Blockbuster loyalists? (What about those Redbox bastards, with their $1.20 rentals?) All is not lost, indeed. [ Reddit via Movies.com ]

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See One Blockbuster Store’s Sad, Final F— You to Netflix

So What’s Your Excuse For Avoiding the Multiplex?

Happy Friday! Everything’s terrible: “Perhaps, then, people are staying away from movie theaters not because the economy’s bad, but because movies cost too damn much. And because the movies being shown aren’t particularly good. And because paying an extra $5 for a mediocre film in 3D is a rip-off. And because most households are already paying around $100 a month for cable and movie channels at home, as well as another $9 or more for Netflix or some other service. And because a DVD rental at Redbox costs just a bit over $1. And… well, you get the picture.” And let’s not forget that scourge known as other moviegoers . [ Time ] [Photo: Shutterstock ]

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So What’s Your Excuse For Avoiding the Multiplex?

How Your DVD Rentals Are Changing Hollywood

Quick quiz: If you were made to wait two months in order to rent say, Final Destination 5 , are you going to be more likely to purchase the DVD, or is it more likely you will forget it was on the saturated home-video market? An easy enough answer, maybe, but not for some of Hollywood’s major studios. They continue banking on the former scenario, despite your continued insistence on renting movies at affordable rates. As it turns out, a number of Hollywood’s companies are trying to revitalize their revenues and expand their scope — but those plans are getting screwed up by your viewing and spending habits.

 Let’s first reflect back to last fall, when Netflix announced the concept of Qwikster — the home-viewing giant’s infamous and short-lived plan to split the company into services (and prices) for DVD rentals and streaming video. The inspiration for that debacle was their forecast of dwindling DVD demand. The result? Vilification, ridicule, mass subscriber exodus, and a plummeting stock price. What a difference a few months makes. The company recently announced a surging final quarter , recovering swiftly from its folly and managing to replace a majority of those subscribers lost during the split-up proposal. More surprising was the news that Netflix’s main rival, the DVD-kiosk operator Redbox, took over as the number-one renter of DVDs and Blu-ray discs. Expect the company to maintain that top position, as this week it announced the purchase of 10,000 kiosk machines operating under the Blockbuster Express banner from rival company RCR. All of this is due to a simple market fact: Demand for affordable DVD rentals remains strong. Meanwhile, studios cling to the evaporating segment of DVD sales — and some are fiercely digging in under the delusion that if you have to wait longer to rent at low prices, then you will become motivated to purchase New Year’s Eve . Right. On the one hand, Hollywood is hardly wrong to anticipate movie fans’ demand-shift with content — and not just with the wait-to-rent audience that sat out the worst filmgoing year since 1992 . The popularity of streaming proves it to be the future of content delivery, but companies seem intent on leaving their customers behind. Anybody with a Netflix Instant subscription and a Roku box can attest to streaming’s fertile future, and from the studios’ own multi-platform content outlet Ultraviolet to Redbox’s just-announced streaming deal with Verizon, the major players are staking out their territory. On the other hand, all of this energy is channeled around the enduring demand to rent new DVDs at affordable rates. Redbox’s ascension speaks for itself, but the fiscal reality at Netflix is that even with twice the streaming subscribers, the DVD-by-mail division provides 50 percent of its gross (streaming thus far only manages 11 percent). “The discrepancy underscores an inconvenient truth for Netflix,” noted industry trade publication Home Media, “namely that while the future may belong to streaming, the present still is very much a disc-driven business, no matter how much management wants to spin it otherwise.”

 Yet as we drift from DVD purchases, the studios are reacting all too desperately to retain those sales numbers. Disney recently announced its intention to join Fox, Universal and Warner Bros. in invoking a 28-day waiting-period to rent new releases on DVD — news that followed Warners’ own decision last week to extend its own rental waiting period for new titles to 56 days. This despite the facts that these windows accompanied a continued plunge in DVD sales in 2011; in the fourth quarter of last year, more market revenue came in from DVD rentals than sales — the first time that has occurred since 1998. Those sales are likely to drop even further, in no small part due to the poorly received cinema titles of last year coming onto the home market. How have the rental companies responded to the call for longer delays? Mostly with a shrug: Netflix decided to simply go along with Warners’ new eight-week window. Redbox, meanwhile, pledged that if it cannot get titles from the studio, then it would seek alternative wholesale outlets for discs. It’s costlier, sure, but when the company raised its base rental price to $1.20 per title, up from 99 cents, it only went on to become number one in the marketplace. Consumers’ obvious preference for low-cost rentals means Redbox flourished as the one company with the continued confidence (or competence) to follow the money. In order to keep that strategy going, it needs to supply a diverse catalog one way or another. Predictably, Warner Bros. has become only more defensive, now leaning on wholesalers to restrict the number of copies sold to any vendor, hoping to limit the amount Redbox can acquire. And even when the studio gets its way — as when Netflix acquiesced to the extended waiting period — it remains unhappy. To wit, when these titles are not instantly on hand via DVD, Netflix subscribers wait it out by placing the titles in their rental queues until they are available. That’s not acceptable to Warners, which now forbids renters from so much as reserving one of its titles in their queues before the eventual rental date. Time Warner claimed last fall that this waiting-game strategy has been successful for them, but factoring in the continuing slide in disc sales would mean that Warner’s on-demand and brand new Ultraviolet titles would have to grow appreciably to compensate for both that drop and its widened rental window. We can reasonably call his bluff, however, especially with content providers like Warners remaining notoriously secretive about VOD numbers and applying persistent pressure upon discount renters in an effort to curtail their proven desires for affordable rates. The whole condition makes for a curious economic scenario: Studios looking back to an era of vibrant DVD sales, vendors looking forward to the streaming era and a majority of consumers left squarely in the middle. But one fundamental factor never changes: The companies need us more than we need them. And as long as we vote with our wallets, we’ll be heard. [Photo: Getty Images]

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How Your DVD Rentals Are Changing Hollywood

A$AP Rocky Having A ‘Good Time’ On Debut Mixtape

‘I just want people to have fun again,’ Harlem’s newly crowned prince tells Mixtape Daily of Live.Love.A$AP. By Rob Markman, with reporting by Steven Roberts A$AP Rocky Photo: Polo Grounds Main Pick Headliner : A$AP Rocky Representing : Harlem, New York Mixtape : Live.Love.A$AP Real Spit : A$AP Rocky is having the time of his life, and he wants you to join him. “I just want people to have fun again; people don’t know how to have fun,” the Harlem, New York, rapper recently told Mixtape Daily. “It’s all about mean-mugging and ballin’ and bottle poppin,’ and sh–. I feel like we can just have brew, cigarettes and some bad bitches and have a good time,” he theorized about the current hip-hop landscape. “We don’t really need all that other fancy sh– because that doesn’t happen every day in real life.” And with that notion, Rocky’s first mixtape, Live.Love.A$AP, was birthed. Noted for his Southern approach to hip-hop, the NYC-bred Rocky sets the record straight on the tape’s opener, “Palace.” On the operatic slow-roller, Rocky pays homage to rap from other regions while looking to carve his own identity. “Don’t remember me as a wannabe, New Orleans n—a/ Slash lean sipper, Tennessee n—a/ Nah, influenced by Houston, hear it in my music/ A trill n—a to the truest, show you how to do this.” His breakout single, “Peso,” appears on his debut tape, but Rock’s fan-favorite “Purple Swag” has been replaced with a remix that features producer/rapper Spaceghost Purrp and A$AP Nast adding verses. The Clams Casino-produced “Wassup,” melodic and menacing at once, is a sleepy track with a rolling bass, and it finds the newly crowned N.Y. prince putting it down for his hometown. “I be that pretty mother—-er, Harlem’s what I’m reppin’,” he spits, recycling the quotable line from “Peso.” The A$AP circle is tight-knit, so features from outsiders are kept to a minimum, though Schoolboy Q’s contribution on “Brand New Guy” is clearly welcome. The Black Hippy MC steals the show, spitting murder and watching Netflix on the couch with his rival’s girlfriend. It’s quite the comedy. A$AP Rocky’s out-of-town influence is present throughout: “Trilla” is a bluesy, Deep South affair with a hint of Midwestern Bone Thugs-style vocals, while “Get Lit” is a perfectly chopped and screwed Texas throwback. It may not be New York, but it most certainly is fun. Joints to Check For

Which 3 Movies Are the Most Pirated Films of All Time?

Earlier this month, Netflix released a list of their ten most-rented movies ever. It was a strange selection that shocked and saddened us — Sandra Bullock’s films The Blind Side and Crash ranked first and second, while the abominable, Jack Nicholson-Morgan Freeman terminal illness buddy comedy The Bucket List finished third. But weep for America’s horrendous taste no more — TorrentFreak has ranked the most pirated titles of all time and they are much more respectable selections. Can you guess what they are?

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Which 3 Movies Are the Most Pirated Films of All Time?

Shame Trailer: Michael Fassbender Battles Sex Addiction For an Oscar

For the past few weeks, Movieline’s own S.T. VanAirsdale has been listing Michael Fassbender as one of the top five front runners for next year’s Best Actor Oscar for his work in Steve McQueen’s* upcoming erotic drama Shame . Finally, a trailer for the acclaimed film has surfaced, giving evidence again for why Fassbender — who played X-Men: First Class ‘s Magneto — is so worthy of your crushes, why he ran away with the Best Actor Award at this year’s Venice Film Festival and why all of those early rave reviews for Shame were warranted.

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Shame Trailer: Michael Fassbender Battles Sex Addiction For an Oscar

9 Milestones in the Evolution of Steve Martin

In this weekend’s The Big Year , Steve Martin stars as a wealthy retiree who spends his free time spanning the globe in search of rare bird species — a passion that gives way to a competition against his similarly “birding” enthused friends played by Jack Black and Owen Wilson. So just how does a Texas-born stand-up transform himself into the only successful actor/comedian/author/playwright/banjo player/Emmy winner/onscreen bird watcher in Hollywood history?

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9 Milestones in the Evolution of Steve Martin

Week in Review: Stranger Than Fiction

Whew! It’s been quite the eventful week here at Movieline, what with Netflix’s Qwikster dying on the vine, indie theater owners giving Universal and VOD what for, and the crazy real life developments you couldn’t have dreamed up. (Random Task, we’re looking at you… in fear.) Hit your Friday Week in Review and come tomorrow for the weekend stylings of Louis Virtel.

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Week in Review: Stranger Than Fiction