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by matkoniecz 1808 days ago
I cancelled Netflix subscription because I was not finding anything worth watching.

I tried downvoting unwanted featured movies, they continued to be featured.

Once my listing was filled solely with already watched or downvoted movies I cancelled account.

I suspect that Netflix had some movies that I would gladly watch, but if they show what I explicitly marked as invented...

2 comments

They need to buy better old movies.

Their catalogue of award winning, or good movies is very low.

I think the problem is the studios figured why rent them to Netflix when we can put up our own OnDemand service?

So, Netflix was at a conundrum, "How do we get material so people won't leave, and we can raise our prices?"

Overpaid Netflix MBA, "I got it! Let's throw money at directors, and writers. The directors will make make our movies because we pay well. The writers will churn out cliched filled scripts, and put every plot twist into everything they write. The average viewer isn't here to watch quality, we will give them a huge bat of lousy material. It will be like feeding the hogs with slop?"

Amazon Prime video seems to have a better library for those that appreciate good movies.

I did like The Twillight Zone, and Star Trek, when I had Netflix though.

(Years ago Netflix offered every episode of the Zone, and Trek. I got every silgle episode through the mail, and copied to dvd using---dvd something? They come in handy if xfinity goes out.

Oh yea, Xfinity was charging a family member $260 a month. I painfully got. down to 130 a month. She was loosing $1390 a year for probally a decade--with pretty much the same plan.

Xfinity should be broken up, or better regulated by authorities. I literally gave up trying to rectify the situation talking to three people who could barely speak english. The last Ecuadorean guy's english was so bad, I gave up, and just picked the cheapest plan on Comcast, and prayed the bill would go down.

A Xfinity employee told me the current business plan is just "milk" long term customers with confusing bills, and deals. They don't care about cord cutters. They know they will always have a large percent of people who will just pay because their isn't a real option in their county, and many older people are not computer savvy.

Hell I'm computer savvy, but their application interface is purposely confusing. I could sware they are randomenly switching prices over the phone, and through their application. I hope someone outs them if my hunch is right.

> They need to buy better old movies.

I believe it's much more in their interest to buy old TV shows. A good movie will keep you occupied for what, two hours? Seinfeld: almost 19 days of watch time. Friends: over 5 days. Community was barely ever popular before Netflix bought it, now there's plenty of people that enjoyed it for 2 days and 7 hours of watch time (its subreddit went from 266k on April 2020 to 482k right now).

I believe it's also in their interest to spread out stories that are realistically one-movie-long into 5-6 slightly drawn out 40-50 min episodes.

I just wish they fucking stick to them instead of cancelling them after like two seasons. Orange Is The New Black is the only original of theirs I know of that goes above two days of airtime.

I watch good movies many times. I keep them on a loop while studying, or working. In college, I always had an Oliver Stone film on. At the time the duality between good, and evil, was always on my mind.

I must have watched Wall Street, and Platoon, a few hundred times.

I won't even estimate how many times I have watched Hictchcock films.

And the number of times I have watched Giant, or Citizen Cane, is embarrassing.

I have old movies playing all the time. I don't actually watch them, but I find them comforting in a weird way, esoecially black, and white films. I think the old, good movies take a part of my brain away from reality? I listen to them while working,

Yes--how can I find Platoon comforting? At that point in my life, Charlie Sheen's character, and his father's, reminded me there are moral people still left. Maybe only in fantasy though?

I get what you are saying though. I have The Andy Griffith show on all the time.

(fun murky fact, I think true, fact about the Andy Griffith show. They didn't bother to copyright the episodes. For years people could sell copies of the show without copyright concerns. I think it's copy written now though.)

> I suspect that Netflix had some movies that I would gladly watch

No so sure about that, in my experience they really don't have a deep licence pool any more, at least not for movies.