Gore Porn

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Gore Porn
Number 42
Broadcast Date October 27, 2014
Episode Length 34:58
Hosts Brian Brushwood, Tom Merritt
Guests Scott Johnson

Amazon’s crazy cheap Firestick, Netflix made Coach Taylor do something bad, Roku wants some money.

Guest

Opening Video

Primary Target

Fire TV Stick coming Nov. 19th available for preorder. Ships Nov. 19
Coming to UK and Australia soon
For first two days of preorder $19 for Prime members
Free month of Prime for non-mebers
Dual-core processor, 1GB of RAM and 8GB of storage
Netflix, Hulu Plus, Plex, YouTube, TWitch, Spotify, Vevo A&E etc.
(Chromecast is $35/ Roku stick $50)

Signals Intelligence

Todd A. Kessler, Glenn Kessler and Daniel Zelman, who were the creators of Damages.
Coach Taylor says “We’re not bad people, but we did a bad thing.”
13-episode original, with the plot focusing around "a family of adult siblings whose secrets and scars are revealed when their black sheep brother returns home."
March 2015
  • F is for Family
Animated by Bill Burr, EP with Vince Vaughn set in the 1970s
Voices from Laura Dern and Justin Long
Burr will premiere his new stand-up special I'm Sorry You Feel That Way on Netflix December 5th, 2015

Gear Up

Roku planning to file for an IPO in the US - selected bankers
Companies with less than $1 billion annual gross revenues can keep confidential
Last month, the company announced the Roku Powered program, an initiative aimed at helping Roku strike up direct partnerships with pay-TV providers. (BBC, Dish etc)
The Information reported Roku pulled in $190 million in revenue in 2013.
Says it is near profitability
Could Roku be the box to unify two worlds?

Front Lines

A year ago Comcast lost 127,000 video customers. The company ALSO added 315,000 broadband subscribers bringing it close to parity with 22.38 million video subs and 21.59 million broadband subs. The company increased overall customers by 82,000.
This includes desktops, smartphones, tablets, game consoles and over-the-top boxes. The system will launch in 2015 with ESPN, Turner Broadcasting, Sony's Crackle, Viacom and Univision already signed up. It’s called Nielsen’s Digital Content Ratings, Powered by Adobe and uses Adobe Analytics and Adobe’s ‘Primetime’ TV delivery platform.

Under Surveillance

Dispatches From The Front

What do you mean by "all the spectrum" if you look at the swath of spectrum actually being used for OTA (uhf and vhf) there is very little actually being used when compared to other technologies like Lte, wimax and wifi.
I am looking at it from a wireless engineer / networking side as such that trying to reuse what is there for another purpose.
There is more spectrum that is licensed and used for the private sector than any other form. Direct TV, dish, xm radio, airline cell carriers just to name a few own more spectrum combined than those that are used for public OTA TV services.
So in a way yes I'm saying that for quality of service and sheer reach of consumption OTA is as good as it gets. Now sure we can transition to mpeg4 OTA and get better use of it but to say that we could replace the spectrum in favor of an on demand solution for everyone just could not happen with the limited bandwidth that uhf and vhf have combined.
Thanks for the reply,
Josh



If we end up paying a-la-carte for our programming, then our money will be going directly to the channels we care about instead of being divided across the hundreds of channels that we don't care about. I wonder if that will make better programming or less commercials. Thoughts?
David



YouTube

Links



Preceded by:
"You would steal a policeman's helmet"
Gore Porn
Followed by:
"Coming Soon"