Critically Acclaimed

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Critically Acclaimed
Number 59
Broadcast Date February, 23 2015
Episode Length 1:05:53
Hosts Brian Brushwood, Tom Merritt

Amazon green lights all our favorite pilots, why we don’t need a universal remote, and how cable can actually be for Cordkillers.

Guest

  • None

Opening Video

Primary Target

Amazon Green Lights 5 out of 13 pilots
Later this year and in 2016
Man in the High Castle (Most watched so far)
Mad Dogs
The New Yorker Presents
  • Young adult shows
Just Add Magic (based on book by Cindy Callaghan)
The Stinky & Dirty Show (Based on I Stink series by Jate & Jim McMullan)
Woody Allen produced show not in pilot slate
Alpha House and Trasnparent returning for new series.

Signals Intelligence

Family-friendly version of YouTube for iOS and Android 9coming soon to Kurio and nabi)
Simpler bigger brighter interface
Curated to select videos “appropriate for the whole family”
4 categories: Shows, Music, Learning and Explore
Supports voice search
  • Parental Controls:
A Timer
Sound settings (turn off bg music and sfx)
Turn off search
Feedback section for parental opinions

Gear Up

Ray Enterprises - new universal remote called “Ray Super Remote”
Showed at Code/Media summit last week
Controlled via apps. Not every devices has an app. Deal with Dish but not all cablecos. (Can still work standalone)
$199
4.8-inch touchscreen
Mute, volume, sleep physical buttons. All else touchscreen
Works w/ Bluetooth, WiFi, ZigBee
Switches inputs when app for device is tapped
Get to know what shows you like and suggest them
10 hours on a charge w/cradle

Front Lines

Hulu has a couple notes to tell you about. A new feature called Watchlist replaces the Queue, favorites, and shows you watch sections. Now when you click the plus button on a show (or add to watchlist) it gets added to the watchlist. Shows are ordered based on viewing behavior. Also Hulu got exclusive streaming rights to all 15 seasons of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. If you’re into that.
For 2014 DirecTV ended with 20.35 million subscribers up 5% from 2013. That’s an addition of 99,000 subscribers which is smaller than the 169,000 the company added in 2013. However Q4 saw an increase of 149,000 subs up from 93,000 in Q4 2013. And just in time to take an advantage away from SlingTV. DirecTV announced its customers now have access to Disney streaming apps, including Watch ESPN, WatchDisney and Watch ABC.
Comcast also announced it has doubled the number of channels available on the Xfinity Go app since it launched last year. It now has 70 channels. Some of those channels allow for on demand viewing of shows and even downloading for offline viewing.
A study from Media Technology Monitor found that 29% of respondents admitted to using a US IP address to access Netflix. 40 percent said they were spoofing their IP to access other, non-Netflix U.S. media content online.

Under Surveillance

Dispatches From The Front

Hey Brian and Tom,
Thanks for splitting up the show into two feeds. I picked the Cordkillers only Audio Feed. as you guys spoil shows I haven't seen yet.
anyway,
Thanks for doing that.
Tim, Minneapolis, MN Patreon member.




As a Cordkillers fan from day zero (Frame Rate days), I always find it interesting that Brian sometimes feels guilty for having cable, even for the duration of his Hacking the System show. I have no intention of getting rid of my cable at this time or in the near future. In fact, I've just upgraded my FiOS bundle with a 2 year contract. I've gotten so used to the combination of having so many channels at my fingertips to adapt to my variable viewing tastes throughout the year and the time-shifting convenience of the DVR service. Then there's not having to worry about what service has the show I want. There's no shame in paying for what you want, albeit on only some of the devices you want (no Amazon Fire TV FiOS app just yet).
Here are the details of my service:
I have FiOS TV Quantum service, which has a new cable box with 1TB of storage and records 6 shows at once (no more DVR conflicts on those heavy primetime evenings). The service includes the highest tier of TV packages (Ultimate HD). It's particularly useful because it includes the sports channels like (beIN, Universal Sports, etc.). They've also given me a 3 year price guarantee (no price hikes) and 2 years of all premium channels free.
The bundle includes the FiOS 75/75 Internet service, which almost always gives me the total bandwidth whenever I need it. I can even downgrade that back to the 50/50, if needed, to save another $5/mo without breaking the bundle.
My bill comes out to about $158 after taxes and government fees, which is about as much as I was paying before the upgrade, and that price is guaranteed (minus the free programming expiring) for 3 years, even after my contract expires.
Hope that wasn't too long-winded for you, but I thought I'd share my service info in response to the email you guys read on episode 58.
One of your many bosses,
Curtis from MD




Man guys,
It sounds to me like you guys spend a ton of dough on TV/Entertainment. This is my set up, I'm using a knockoff leaf antenna I got on Amazon for $39. That gets me all the broadcast networks. I have TWC internet access 50mps down that I get for $29.99 plus tax (I recently got them to get me another 12 months promotional rate by calling them up and telling them I wanted to cancel my service. I told them Earthlink was gonna get me 30mps for $29.99 then the TWC rep was all like well we can get you 50mps for $29.99.) Anyways then I pay $7.99 a month for Hulu, I basically use Hulu as my catch up service. Instead of paying the cable company $10 to record a bunch of stuff, I can watch whatever I want and don't have to worry about setting up a recording. I watch The Walking Dead for $1.99 an episode on Vudu though that expense is going to be getting wrapped into one of my new favorite services. Finally I now pay $20 a month for Sling TV and every few months I sub to Netflix when House of Cards comes back and now Marco Polo. So anyways all in all I spend about $60 a month to watch exactly want I wanna watch when I wanna watch it. I feel like I'm doing pretty good after hearing you guys are spending hundreds of bucks a month.
One of your 2000 bosses,
Ken




First: thank you for making a Cordkillers only feed.
Secondly: we don't pay anything for TV, apart from the mandatory £12.12 per month ($18.61 aprox.) for the TV License as I watch live TV *
For Internet/Phone calls, our bills come to about £30 ($46.06 aprox.) but I did a little chicken challenge a couple of times with Virgin Media, and have managed to get a £10 discount and a secondary £5 discount, so we are actually only paying about £15 per month ($23.03 aprox.) at the moment for UP TO 50Mpbs down** and a standard landline with free weekend calls.
So in total, we pay about £27.12 / $41.65 per month for decent quality internet and the chance to watch live TV.
Anonymous




Thought I would share what I pay for Internet and TV.
I live in Northwest Indiana 20 miles away from Chicago. I pay 29.99 a month for 25mbps down 5mbps up from Comcast. Have an OTA antenna with a channel master + dvr. I also have Prime and Netflix. If there is a cable show that I want, I get a season pass on Amazon.
Basically less than $50 a month for TV and Internet.
Jeff



YouTube

Links



Preceded by:
"Sony’s Doing it with Marvel"
Critically Acclaimed
Followed by:
"Crying Over Buffering"