Every Star Wars, (Original Trilogy, Prequel Trilogy, Sequel Trilogy, animated shows, plus newly developed series') Every episode of Simpsons (the whole Fox library was understood but they had to secure a separate deal for Simpsons) Every Marvel program (except Netflix shows), plus new series' National Geographic Every Disney and Pixar film Downloading/offline viewing A bundle with Hulu and Espn+ is coming down the line for a reduced price than you'd pay for all three individually. Support for basically every streaming device imaginable more details coming, but this is a huge game changer
I'll fucks with it, the marvel shows are worth $7 a month. Hopefully they increase the price while growing like Netflix does
Also... Falcon and The Winter Soldier series. Vision and Scarlet Witch series. Loki series. Hawkeye series. Animated Marvel “What If?” series.
Analysts already predicting 100-150mm subscribers are within reach within a few years. 150mm subs x $7 a month = Just over a billion a month. my gosh
Plus the billions they’ll get from Endgame and Lion King god bless that Nazi racist misogynist that founded this company
If they’re giving me the content promised, then good for Disney. They can make a bajillion dollars a month for all I care.
Disney+ will launch in November with a robust library of theatrical and television content, and in its first year will release more than 25 original series and 10 original films, documentaries and specials by some of the industry’s most prolific and creative storytellers. New original titles for Disney+ announced today include: From Marvel Studios: The Falcon and The Winter Soldier, a live-action series with Anthony Mackie returning as Falcon and Sebastian Stan reprising his role as Winter Soldier WandaVision, a live-action series with Elizabeth Olsen returning as Wanda Maximoff and Paul Bettany reprising his role as The Vision Marvel’s What If…?, the first animated series from Marvel Studios and takes inspiration from the comic books of the same name. Each episode will explore a pivotal moment from the Marvel Cinematic Universe and turn it on its head, leading the audience into uncharted territory. From Walt Disney Animation Studios: Into the Unknown: Making Frozen 2, a documentary series showing the hard work and imagination that go into making one of the most highly anticipated Walt Disney Animation Studios features of all time From Pixar Animation Studios: Toy Story-based projects Forky Asks a Question, an animated short series, and the short film Lamp Life From National Geographic: The World According to Jeff Goldblum, a documentary series where Goldblum pulls back the curtain on a seemingly familiar object to reveal a world of astonishing connections, fascinating science and a whole lot of big ideas Magic of the Animal Kingdom, a documentary series which takes viewers behind the scenes with the highly respected animal-care experts, veterinarians and biologists at Disney’s Animal Kingdom and Epcot’s SeaBase aquarium From Disney Television Animation: The Phineas and Ferb Movie (working title), an animated film featuring many of the original voice cast Scripted originals previously announced for Disney+ include The Mandalorian, the world’s first scripted live-action Star Warsseries; the exclusive new season of Star Wars: The Clone Wars; High School Musical: The Musical: The Series; the untitled Cassian Andor series starring Diego Luna and Alan Tudyk; the Marvel Studios’ series Loki starring Tom Hiddleston; Monsters at Work, Diary of a Female President; and live-action films Lady and the Tramp, Noelle, Togo, Timmy Failure and Stargirl. Nonfiction series also announced earlier this week include Be Our Chef, Cinema Relics: Iconic Art of the Movies (working title), Earthkeepers(working title), Encore!, the untitled Walt Disney Imagineering documentary series, Marvel’s 616, Marvel’s Hero Project, (Re)Connect, Rogue Trip and Shop Class(working title). Additionally, Disney+ announced that all 30 seasons of The Simpsons will be available on the service on day one. In the service’s first year, audiences will also have access to family-friendly Fox titles like The Sound of Music, The Princess Bride and Malcolm in the Middle as part of an impressive collection of more than 7,500 television episodes and 500 films including blockbuster hits from 2019 and beyond.
Congrats to Disney for taking a decade to figure out streaming. Netflix has been preparing for this for years.
ISP + Streaming service + Netflix content + Disney content + Amazon content + Hulu content + etc. + etc. + etc. = Hello piracy Now sit back and wait for the ISP to throttle based on content...
As content becomes further subdivided and packaged into more and more competing premium services, piracy necessarily takes off.
My 65 year old father-in-law keeps asking me if they’ll have the “Treasures” classics and I have no idea. He’s been begging us to find this movie called Dr. Syn: The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh for, oh, the 16 years I’ve known him. Apparently, it’s like $100-$200 for the DVD now. He tried buying the cheaper versions, but got scammed out of money twice — apparently there’s a market for that?
Is this what you’re looking for? If so I can get a digital copy I’d just have to figure out how to get it to you. https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0055929/
Well shit. Now when Im watching The Mandelorian im going to be thinking "Dang, Houndster isnt gonna be watching this." What a bummer
Finally! That guy appears! I’ve been waiting semi-patiently. Took longer than expected by TMB standards.
Their movies are cookie cutter, they have shit for new TV shows, and they’re over half a decade late to the market. Unless you have kids, I don’t see the appeal.
Same, only thing that mildly interests me is The Simpsons. I don't really care at all about all the kids movies, superhero, and Star Wars junk. National Geographic is nice but I'd watch that stuff like once and never watch it again, and honestly most of that Nat Geo stuff would be buried on my priority list of stuff to watch.
Netflix = $10 a month Amazon Prime = $10 a month Disney+ = $7 a month YouTube TV = $40 a month $67 a month is basically half what I was paying for DirecTV (after all the fees and surcharges) before I cancelled a few years back.