Folks come for stranger things but stay for the office, friends, etc.
Wonder if the 90's X-Men and Spiderman cartoons will be on there? I know they aired on Fox channels I dunno who actually owns the rights to them.
Try having a 20 GB cap like me.
7000 episodes? As far as I know these shows are confirmed:
- Amazing Planet
- Andi Mack (seasons one-three)
- Boy Meets World
- Brain Games
- Dog Whisperer with Cesar Millan
- Dr. K's Exotic Animals
- Dr. Oakley Yukon Vet
- Drain the Ocean
- DuckTales (1987)
- DuckTales (2016, season one)
- Earth Live
- Goof Troop
- Great Migrations
- Howie Mandel's Animals Doing Things
- Kim Possible
- Malcolm in the Middle
- Mickey and the Roadster Racers (seasons one and two)
- Mickey Mouse Clubhouse
- Mickey Mouse Shorts
- One Strange Rock
- Raven's Home
- Rocky Mountain Animal Rescue
- That's So Raven
- The Incredible Dr. Pol
- The Simpsons
- Unlikely Animal Friends
- Wicked Tuna
+ all the new stuff like Mandalorian. The Marvel stuff won't be there at launch though.
I guess that adds up to 7000 unless there's way more shit in addition to this list.
So I'm guessing Disney+ will run ads to make up for only charging $7/month?
How many devices can be signed in simultaneously? Are there different tiers to their subscription plan similar to Netflix?
Also at the Disney+ presentation they said the content would be there permanently, meaning stuff won't rotate off like Netflix. Going to be an amazing archive soon.
I feel as if the Disney fans are maybe counting their chickens before they've hatched.
And honestly, it's sort of tragically dull when their entire things seems to be "We have Marvel and Star Wars!". At least Amazon and Netflix are finding more interesting stuff. (Witcher, WoT, Altered Carbon)
But sure, if they release a HD version of Gargoyles on their service and launch it in Europe I'll try it.
Out of all their stuff, Moon Knight is basically near the bottom for me. It's a hero I have never cared one iota for. Though as long as it's better than that abominable Moon Mutant show I'll be happily surprised.
Also at the Disney+ presentation they said the content would be there permanently, meaning stuff won't rotate off like Netflix. Going to be an amazing archive soon.
Also at the Disney+ presentation they said the content would be there permanently, meaning stuff won't rotate off like Netflix. Going to be an amazing archive soon.
Well yea, its their own catalog so of course they will say its there permanently (for now). If Disney doesnt double down on new original IPs spanning different genres, then only die hard Disney fans would stay subbed.
Do you know whether Disney is open to the idea of licensing family content from other companies? Or will the content at launch strictly only be Disney-owned content?
As an example, Sony doesn't have their own competing streaming service. So, Sony is willing to put their animated films (Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse, Hotel Transylvania) on any service than wants them. Also, I think Viacom would be another good company for Disney to license family content from, since Viacom owns all of the Nickelodeon properties. (Hulu is licensing Nickelodeon content like Doug, Hey Arnold, Rugrats.)
Please be the first who does the download function right....
This feature is just useless on any platform I tested it so far if you can't even download that shit in HD. Before I watch this in SD on any device, I rather wait until I have internet again....
Out of all their stuff, Moon Knight is basically near the bottom for me. It's a hero I have never cared one iota for. Though as long as it's better than that abominable Moon Mutant show I'll be happily surprised.
Since Viacom and CBS just re-merged, the Nick stuff probably ends up on CBS All-Access when everything is said and done. And they (Disney) have shown a willingness to buy new programs from other production companies, but I haven't really heard anything about them being willing to license back catalog stuff from others, probably because they don't want to end up in a situation where things have the ability to leave the platform because of contracts.
Edit: This also means that Homecoming and Far From Home may never end up on the service, even ignoring all the issues between the two companies at this particular moment.
Since Viacom and CBS just re-merged, the Nick stuff probably ends up on CBS All-Access when everything is said and done. And they (Disney) have shown a willingness to buy new programs from other production companies, but I haven't really heard anything about them being willing to license back catalog stuff from others, probably because they don't want to end up in a situation where things have the ability to leave the platform because of contracts.
Edit: This also means that Homecoming and Far From Home may never end up on the service, even ignoring all the issues between the two companies at this particular moment.
Judging from that panel? By not having read him since the 80's.
Just 2020
The National Geographic back catalog must be fucking gigantic at this point, maybe that makes up a good chunk of that 7000 episode figure?
Lots of Disney junior shows have 50-75 episodes each. I'm guessing Disney Jr shows account for 1-1500k of those episodes
Does they? I haven't used it in a long time, but every time I try Netflix it's not even 720p.
I know YouTube's paid service allows it but even them only 720p, like seriously?
Just wait a year or two, they'll raise their price like all other streaming service did.
Why is it hard to get into? Is it just the sheer amount of movies or do you mean something different?Do we know how much MCU will be on this service, and will it vary by region? I was going to sub for a month to finally watch all the Marvel stuff so I'm not out of the loop entirely (I have never seen a single MCU movie). It's annoying how hard they've made it to get into it as a new viewer.
All the movies split between streaming services, some not available for streaming at all. I was hoping that Disney+ would finally put them all in one place but I guess at least Spider-man is not happening.Why is it hard to get into? Is it just the sheer amount of movies or do you mean something different?
I can only assume that you will find the vast majority of the 22 films on Disney+All the movies split between streaming services, some not available for streaming at all. I was hoping that Disney+ would finally put them all in one place but I guess at least Spider-man is not happening.