Broadcast television paywalls: The real mature sex videosfinal frontier. This is my three-day mission, to seek out new entertainment and payment options and to boldly do what I have never done before.
You laugh, but this is the Khann!!!-level angst I’ve been going through, trying to justify paying $6 a month just so I can watch Star Trek: Discoveryon the new streaming service CBS All Access.
SEE ALSO: 'Star Trek: Discovery' announces companion show for fans who can't get enoughAs a life-long Star Trek fan, I’ve been anxiously awaiting the oft-delayed broadcast premier of the first new Star Trek series in a dozen years. I cleared my Sunday night schedule, waiting through an NFL overtime and Oprah Winfrey’s 60 Minutesdebut just so I could feel the wonder again. If you’ve never watched Star Trek in any form, you might not understand.
Through nearly half-a-dozen series and more than a dozen films, Star Trek has consistently tapped into the child-like wonder of space and its infinite possibilities. Star Trek is a franchise about hope, humanity, and the future.
How could I not watch this prequel?
Star Trek: Discovery’spremiere episode did press most of the series' buttons, with a few new twists and maybe just a little bit too much self-seriousness. I’ve read many reviews that promise more intensity, scene chewing, and, occasionally, a somewhat lighter tone.
This premiere, though, had to do something few, if any broadcast series (other than The Good Wifespin-off, The Good Fight) have done before: entice viewers to continue watching on a behind-the-paywall streaming service by airing just one free episode on broadcast TV.
I remember watching the first episode of NBC’s This is Uslast year. To be honest, I didn’t want to watch the show. I hated the maudlin, cloying promos that insisted we would feel something. No show could be that good or make me feel that way. Then I watched Episode 1, had that OMG moment of realization in the last five minutes, and I was hooked. My wife and I tuned in ever week thereafter.
Of course, it was easy to do so with This is Us. It's not behind a paywall -- at least not yet.
With Star Trek: Discovery, I’m hooked, which makes deciding whether to pay $5.99 a month (or $9.99 for commercial-free content – they must be joking) just so I can see this one weekly show, of which there might only be 15 episodes this year and nothing until 2019, more difficult.
I never envisioned myself cutting the cable cord or joining the a la carte TV world. I’m not one of those people who signed up for HBO when the new season of The Sopranoscame along and cancelled in between. That was too much work. I have HBO and Showtime and watch a handful of shows on them like Ray Donovan,Game of Thrones, and The Deuce. I’ve also used the subscriptions to binge past episodes (via cable video-on-demand or the companion apps on Apple TV) so I could catch up on series that I came to late (I’m still 5 seasons behind on Shameless).
I don’t pay for broadcast channels directly for TV and wasn’t planning on starting. I don’t have time to catch The CW’s The Flashduring the regular season, so I wait until the season is over to binge on Netflix. We don’t pay for Hulu, so I can’t catch up on, for instance, NBC series. This is all fine with me.
Now, however, I’m seeing the once simple experience of watching broadcast TV is now being fracturing in the same way as cable and the various streaming services (Netflix, Amazon) over the last few years. Even the broadcast network content that eventually makes its way to Netflix is being peeled off for branded services. Disney will eventually, I’m certain, pull all ABC shows off Netflix for its own pay service and who knows how long NBC will stick with Hulu.
To watch what I want to watch, when I want to watch it, I must join more and more services, which brings me back to CBS All Access.
Soon, other networks will premiere fresh shows on 'free' broadcast and then shift them behind their pays walls.
I want to see more of Star Trek: Discovery, and I can see that the writing and production values are a level above what you might get on broadcast TV. It’s supposed to look and feel more like episodic movies and I think the producers get close.
Still, am I ready to pay almost $72 a year to watch one incredibly well-produced show? Aside from CBS Sunday Morning, I don’t watch anything else on the network. We used to watch Madam Secretaryand then fell behind and didn’t want to pay for… oh, right.
Beyond my own personal quest, the CBS All Access Star Trek: Discoveryexperiment could be a tipping point in what has been a slow pivot to an à la carte, cable bundle-free TV-watching world. If CBS successfully attracts a big enough audience to not only offset production costs, but also make a profit, it will ensure a second season of Star Trek: Discoveryand provide a blueprint for future CBS event shows and get the attention of all the other networks. Soon, other broadcasters will premiere fresh shows on “free” broadcast and then shift them behind their pays walls. Eventually, the only stuff we’ll be able to watch for free will be news, home-shopping shows, and infomericals.
I get that this is the future of TV, but is it my near-term future? I’ve spent the past few days pondering this and now, as this mission ends, I know it’s time to stop and exploring and make a choice.
Postscript from the Star Trek fan inner child:Are you kidding me?! Of course, I’m going to pay to find out what happens to Michel Burnham, Captain Georgiou, and the Klingon warriors. This is Grade A+ Star Trek intrigue, drama and overall Trekiness. Please don’t tell the doofus above that I already paid for my CBS All Access subscription.
Topics Star Trek
The Art of the Signature Is in DeclineDating advice for singles: Don't get hung up on Dating Sunday‘It Lives Inside’ review: Meet the Pishach, your favorite new nightmare.Glass Delusions—Once a Common Form of Madness—On the RiseShould Ovid Come With a Trigger Warning?Twitter/X is killing CirclesHaving Trouble Sleeping? Read This.Top Indian actor wins landmark case against AIPegging: StrapZadie Smith, Dorothea Lasky & Jane Hirshfield Win PushcartsThe NorwegianMicrosoft pulling back on unorthodox Surface devicesWhat Jules Verne and John Quincy Adams Had in CommonMicrosoft Surface Laptop Studio 2 handsWhy Is Knausgaard Obsessed with Bowel Movements?Staff Picks: Mantel, Kleeman, BurchfieldTikTokker shares her creepy ‘driverless Uber’ experience. Here’s how it works step'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for September 22, 2023When You’re Arguing About Ogden Nash, No One WinsWagz Tagz is the new pet tech solution for keeping your dog off the couch Listen to Ariana Grande and John Legend sing 'Beauty and the Beast' and cry Charles Barkley has a very NSFW message for his haters A Syrian journalist's ordeal after Trump's travel ban This is how millennials are saving money YouTube is playing around with video thumbnails that move like GIFs Samsung Pay to launch in India in first half of 2017 Low Power FM radio stations hacked to play explicit anti Norwegian paper publishes spectacularly viral Donald Trump burn How to watch the Super Bowl on Sunday Prime Minister's Twitter circle generates debate in the Parliament Move over, Puppy Bowl: Bunny Bowl is here to out Europe is trolling the hell out of Trump one hilarious video at a time ELLE's new video challenging gender stereotypes is going viral for all the right reasons Budweiser turned a classic '90s Super Bowl ad into a Snapchat game Series of kick South Park are laying off Donald Trump, because they 'can't keep up' The OLED Burn Amazon's record holiday season wasn't good enough for Wall Street Just let Mariah Carey wear heels and diamonds to the gym, all right? PlayStation 4 is finally getting external hard drive support
1.7653s , 10519.5390625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【real mature sex videos】,Creation Information Network