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Netflix Raising Price to $9.99
Netflix raising US price for most popular video plan by $1
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This might have something to do with it:
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/hulu-f...110531294.html So might this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pw7lAFlCSlY It's market pricing. They're still a good deal. Plus, they're spending on original, exclusive content. They see themselves as an HBO competitor so they figure they can charge as much as them. |
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Me, I want to see how they handle Jessica Jones so I'll hang around a while longer. |
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As to Hulu, they have a lot of nerve to show ads on a paid subscription. That's the sole reason why I never signed up. |
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(Ads are just another way we pay for products.) |
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I'm still in at $10.
And ads on my premium Hulu don't bother me a bit. Not when I get to watch shows that first aired on network TV the previous night. Neither of the other two can claim the same. I tend to drop it during the offseason, but I gladly pick it back up (ads and all) when the new fall season starts. Hell ... Netflix, Hulu, Prime and Sling together are still cheaper than what I was paying for Satellite each month. |
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I'm locked in to the lower price for a while longer, but $10 is ok. My whole family gets a lot of value from Netflix, and their content keeps getting better.
I have a problem with Hulu's ads, too. Historically, cable and Satellite companies didn't produce content. You were never paying for the content, you were paying for the delivery of channels you would not otherwise not be able to pluck out of the air, and, hopefully, with image quality you would not otherwise see, and they had to pay th econtent owners for the right to show the stuff. But Hulu is owned by the studios, they already got their sponsor money and it's their content. The ads are just a degraded viewer experience. |
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And Prime makes money off the stuff we buy. Plus the services are all different enough to have different cost structures. They don't map one-to-one. And as the three keep on adding exclusives they will keep on differentiating. Netflix is raising prices because the figure that if Hulu can charge more for their day after TV ad-free service, they too can charge more even if they're not direct competitors. It's, ahem, a monkey see, monkey do thing. :cool: |
In just upgraded my Hulu to the "without ads" for $12. Worth every penny imho. I don't have an issue with the $10 for Netflix either.
The satellite bill..... Now that's another story, I only keep it because the Wif likes it. |
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As a consumer, I don't care how the companies are structured or who has the advantage. If company A delivers a service similar to company B, and at a cheaper price, then I'll go with A. If A does so because it's partially subsidizing this service from other divisions of its company and B can't do that, then B's up a creek and I don't care (monkey see and monkey no can do). ;) Bottom line - we all have different priorities and place value on different services. What works for me doesn't work for most people and I'm quite content with that. Companies need to play to the majority if they wish to remain profitable. If that affects me in a negative manor, then I'll move on. There's always something else out there; always. :) |
I hate exclusivity.
I watch network tv ad-free either on the station's website or Xfinity on-demand. They usually have the last 4 episodes available. |
Considering the cable company charges $10 a MONTH for a hd stb, Netflix is still a damn good deal
Btw, what does this have to do with mobileread? |
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