The Imagineering show is really good, and remarkably honest and fair-handed about Disney's mistakes through the years
Robin Hood and Little Jon walkin' through the forest. Ew-dah-la-lee, ew-dah-la-lee, golly what a day.
Togo was awesome. Highly recommend. It feels overly sentimental at times, but a lot of the story is legit true (per wiki anyway).
Just found shipwrecked the 1990 version on Disney + used to watch this all the time on VHS as a kid, currently watching with my son
The browsing for titles is kind of frustrating to me on there It's like you go to the category of "big screen classics " or whatever it is, and it shows you 10 movies Then if you click on one of those 10, it will suggest 10 more that are the same category but totally different movies It's like the only way to find something it to search for ot by name, but shit most of these old movies I watched once or twice growing up, I have no idea what the title of them is
They need to fix the kids profiles. I set one up for my nephew and the Incredibles movies didn’t show up on there so I had to change it to adults.
my daughter is absolutely obsessed with Fancy Nancy right now. I think I’ve seen 20 episodes in the last two days.
It's pretty wild how Screenslaver's societal critique is 100% correct. Makes it very tough to root against her.
Disney+ may be the ticket to me dropping Hulu Live and moving to YTTV. I couldn't take away Miles From Tomorrowland and Mickey Mouse Clubhouse from my kids, but this gives me that option.
Some facts for you. Could Togo talk? Did Togo have a talking Eastern European Goose as a mentor? Did Togo have to deal with bigotry because he was part wolf? Did Togo have to complete his leg without a musher because the musher was injured and knocked unconscious? and finally, Did Togo know the secret to creating the Aurora Borealis by manipulating broken bottles and bottle caps? It’s pretty clear. #TeamBalto
Sounds like they put everything they could on the service for the first 90 days and now are slowly shuffling some things from D+ to Hulu in the hopes of keeping Hulu a viable service. Everything moved is a FOX property, right? I know Home Alone is but I don't recall who produced The Sandlot. Fox stuff might just end up on Hulu only to move back to D+ during special occasions, like Home Alone during the holidays.
I cancelled for now. I watched everything I wanted to watch, so there’s no point in keeping a paid subscription for me.
More people need to do this. Get Disney+ for a month or two, watch everything, unsub. Get Netflix for a month or two, watch everything, unsub. And so on. These companies want your subscriptions every month and they're banking on you not having the energy or memory to cancel, while only releasing a handful of quality shows a year. Cancel and they'll start paying for more and more quality original content to spread out over the year, which is good for viewers. (or they'll start implementing policies meant to stop you from resubscribing after so many times in a year)
In college I had a friend who worked for Cox Cable and he would hook is up with the best promotions every month or 3 months or whatever they cycled at by just cancelling our service and restarting it with the new promotion They finally put a policy in place that you couldn't resubscribe after cancelling service for like 6 months, so it put a stop to our deal
Netflix has a pretty huge library, so I consistently use it to watch different things (plus now T-Mobile picks up my tab). Prime video is included with my subscription, so there is added value. D+ is so limited in scope right now. Honestly I would have no idea if I was +\- $7 in a given month, but knowing I’m paying for something I don’t have use for is what bugged me.
They need more original content and soon. The nostalgia is really nice, but you can only nostalgia on so much Disney Channel stuff from your childhood before it all starts to feel like watching the same show.
Definitely my least fav of the sports movies. After the GOAT, Remember the Titans, my next 2 favs remain Iron Will and MacFarland, USA
They need variety. It feels like everything is either a family sitcom or a classic animated movie. Togo was a good add. Need a movie like that every other month IMO.