- Aug 1, 2018
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I never said I was good at it. But how'd you get that picture of me?
On a side note, that's my favorite shirt and I wear it daily. Mom tries to take it off me once a week and we fight really good. She always wins though.
I never said I was good at it. But how'd you get that picture of me?
Get rid of it all. Read a book walk talk.
.................... , ....................Agree. I’m currently reading a book about comma usage. It’s fascinating.
Read the one on colons!Agree. I’m currently reading a book about comma usage. It’s fascinating.
I disagree but only once one leaves the promotional period, non-promotional costs for cable (and almost always internet/cable package) are astronomical.By the time you add up the cable, the Roku, the Netflix, Amazon Prime, Paramount+, Epix, etc. you don't save much versus paying for cable with premium channels.
My wife works from home, so high speed WWW access is a must.
Weird. ESPN+ solves that for meStreaming saves us about 500-700 per year. Used to have Dish Network. Used to have Direct TV. Used to have Comcast cable TV. Tried them all. As long as you have good internet, stream away is my advice. You can always go back to your legacy service (likely at a better price). Roku's devices are super cheap (that's the streaming hardware that connects to any TV for $50 one time cost). Roku has lots of free programming as well. Apple TV device (pricey) or Amazon fire sticks (super cheap) can stream all the services as well. So can most Smart TV's (have streaming built in to the TV). The only place that Streaming really hurts you is when you want to watch live sports on regular TV channels. A $35 dollar digital TV antenna from Walmart will get you super clear HD TV for free. We all mostly forgot about free over-the-airwaves TV.
Streaming tip: Only subscribe to two or three services at a time. Each service has 1000's of movies and shows. Switch between them often. There's no contract obligation beyond month-to-month.
Streaming negative: you will miss ESPN. There is no good way to acquire ESPN programming without paying through the nose (youtube.tv or Fubo.tv). Fuch commie ESPN. They get nothing.
Streaming saves us about 500-700 per year. Used to have Dish Network. Used to have Direct TV. Used to have Comcast cable TV. Tried them all. As long as you have good internet, stream away is my advice. You can always go back to your legacy service (likely at a better price). Roku's devices are super cheap (that's the streaming hardware that connects to any TV for $50 one time cost). Roku has lots of free programming as well. Apple TV device (pricey) or Amazon fire sticks (super cheap) can stream all the services as well. So can most Smart TV's (have streaming built in to the TV). The only place that Streaming really hurts you is when you want to watch live sports on regular TV channels. A $35 dollar digital TV antenna from Walmart will get you super clear HD TV for free. We all mostly forgot about free over-the-airwaves TV.
Streaming tip: Only subscribe to two or three services at a time. Each service has 1000's of movies and shows. Switch between them often. There's no contract obligation beyond month-to-month.
Streaming negative: you will miss ESPN. There is no good way to acquire ESPN programming without paying through the nose (youtube.tv or Fubo.tv). Fuch commie ESPN. They get nothing.
The only thing I don't know and need to find out is if I drop HULU Live but keep the Regular hulu/disney+/ESPN+, if it will maintain full access to ESPN+I get ESPN on Hulu.
Not gonna lie; big fan of the Oxford comma. I can’t wait to hear how the book ends.Agree. I’m currently reading a book about comma usage. It’s fascinating.
ESPN+ subscription alone doesn't give you access to their regular programing. I found out the hard way just this season. Signed up for a month only to find out regular ESPN not included without other subs.The only thing I don't know and need to find out is if I drop HULU Live but keep the Regular hulu/disney+/ESPN+, if it will maintain full access to ESPN+
I think it does but not sure
So currently I have it as part of the HULU Live/Disney+/ESPN+ bundle. Which is $81 a month because we added a $7.99 additional package for it to have certain channels the wife wanted.ESPN+ subscription alone doesn't give you access to their regular programing. I found out the hard way just this season. Signed up for a month only to find out regular ESPN not included without other subs.
URG - don't be dense. That's what I'm telling you specifically. That $60/mn cheaper is because of all the fees the networks and ESPN demand for live sports. When you drop Hulu Live, you will lose ESPN regular programming. Don't worry though ESPN+ still has Women's weightlifting and Jim Rome 360.So currently I have it as part of the HULU Live/Disney+/ESPN+ bundle. Which is $81 a month because we added a $7.99 additional package for it to have certain channels the wife wanted.
What I don't know is if I drop down to the regular Hulu/Disney+/ESPN+ bundle, which would be about $60 cheaper, if I'd lose viewing the live ESPN channels, which would defeat the entire purpose of ESPN+ and make it a worthless app.
I'll have to look into it on their site
No dude, through EPSN+ you can watch the channels, like literally select them by name. It's not right at the top but it's in there.URG - don't be dense. That's what I'm telling you specifically. That $60/mn cheaper is because of all the fees the networks and ESPN demand for live sports. When you drop Hulu Live, you will lose ESPN regular programming. Don't worry though ESPN+ still has Women's weightlifting and Jim Rome 360.
Ok I did find something on tvguide.com article that suggested that without HULU Live you wouldn't get ESPNthrough the ESPN app.URG - don't be dense. That's what I'm telling you specifically. That $60/mn cheaper is because of all the fees the networks and ESPN demand for live sports. When you drop Hulu Live, you will lose ESPN regular programming. Don't worry though ESPN+ still has Women's weightlifting and Jim Rome 360.