Amazon
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C7P6X2BK has Star Trek: Picard the Complete Series on Bluray on Sale for 47.99.
Patrick Stewart reprises his role as legendary Starfleet officer Jean-Luc Picard in this exciting sci-fi adventure series that aired on Paramount+ (originally CBS All Access) from 2020-2023. Picard is joined by friends both new and old as he heads back out among the stars on a series of dangerous missions while coming to terms with his own life and legacy. Jeri Ryan and Michelle Hurd co-star, with appearances by several familiar faces.30 episodes on 9 discs. 25 hrs. Widescreen; Soundtracks: English DTS HD 5.1 Master Audio, French Dolby Digital 5.1, Spanish Dolby Digital 5.1, German Dolby Digital 5.1, Italian Dolby Digital 5.1, Japanese Dolby Digital 5.1; Subtitles: English (SDH), French, Spanish, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, German, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian, Swedish; deleted scenes; gag reel; more.
Great for those of us who still maintain physical media libraries!
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Yes, there are cheaper ways to watch it. Blu-ray is the best way to actually *own* it.
Yes, there are cheaper ways to watch it. Blu-ray is the best way to actually *own* it.
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Yes, there are cheaper ways to watch it. Blu-ray is the best way to actually *own* it.
$50 doesn't seem like a great value proposition when you realize the only unique thing you're buying is a disk, which itself is virtually obsolete technology in the marketplace, at least as a form of non-archival storage. You're not even getting an experience to go with it, as you would at a movie theater -- where $50 would go pretty far.
$50 doesn't seem like a great value proposition when you realize the only unique thing you're buying is a disk, which itself is virtually obsolete technology in the marketplace, at least as a form of non-archival storage. You're not even getting an experience to go with it, as you would at a movie theater -- where $50 would go pretty far.
Great advice. 🙄
Great advice. 🙄
People have been saying for decades that p2p will destroy the music/movie/etc industries, which today sounds like a farce, given the massive expansion of forms and formats, and the ubiquity of entertainment in our lives today compared to previous generations. $50 Blu-rays are in the category of niche, luxury products today, the same as $30 vinyl records. They were never popular or practical products for any person with an average income who wanted to have a reasonably diverse collection, which is why they have been supplanted by alternatives that deliver better value for the consumer. The few people who still use the Blu-ray format are older, wealthier than younger people, have gotten used to paying these kinds of prices for decades, and are probably less interested in or even able to find new ways to get content.
I guarantee you this kind of thing is not a significant source of revenue for studios, not when the vast majority choose the $5.99/month streaming option. Streaming audio and video is much more practical and convenient than downloading all the stuff you want to listen to and watch. There are so many benefits to streaming that p2p is completely unable to provide. That's why I pay for some streaming services and only bother to download the stuff I watch over and over again.
Again, people have predicted the demise of industries bc of p2p for decades, and here I am, someone who uses p2p, and I still pay $20+ a month for Spotify and Netflix. What I never wanted to pay for is a $15 CD (or $50 Blu-ray). Most people never wanted that. That's why those options didn't last as the mainstream way to consume content. And yet, I think we can agree there are more opportunities for actors today than ever before, and musicians can get their music to literally billions of people on Spotify, YouTube and hundreds of other outlets, and they have more ways to make money than ever before. Are they suffering bc I'm not buying a CD? Well neither is Patrick Stewart suffering bc I'm not buying a Blu-ray disc.
People have been saying for decades that p2p will destroy the music/movie/etc industries, which today sounds like a farce, given the massive expansion of forms and formats, and the ubiquity of entertainment in our lives today compared to previous generations. $50 Blu-rays are in the category of niche, luxury products today, the same as $30 vinyl records. They were never popular or practical products for any person with an average income who wanted to have a reasonably diverse collection, which is why they have been supplanted by alternatives that deliver better value for the consumer. The few people who still use the Blu-ray format are older, wealthier than younger people, have gotten used to paying these kinds of prices for decades, and are probably less interested in or even able to find new ways to get content.
I guarantee you this kind of thing is not a significant source of revenue for studios, not when the vast majority choose the $5.99/month streaming option. Streaming audio and video is much more practical and convenient than downloading all the stuff you want to listen to and watch. There are so many benefits to streaming that p2p is completely unable to provide. That's why I pay for some streaming services and only bother to download the stuff I watch over and over again.
Again, people have predicted the demise of industries bc of p2p for decades, and here I am, someone who uses p2p, and I still pay $20+ a month for Spotify and Netflix. What I never wanted to pay for is a $15 CD (or $50 Blu-ray). Most people never wanted that. That's why those options didn't last as the mainstream way to consume content. And yet, I think we can agree there are more opportunities for actors today than ever before, and musicians can get their music to literally billions of people on Spotify, YouTube and hundreds of other outlets, and they have more ways to make money than ever before. Are they suffering bc I'm not buying a CD? Well neither is Patrick Stewart suffering bc I'm not buying a Blu-ray disc.
For someone so seemingly that educated on these issues you completely failed to mention how streaming music has eviscerated payouts for musicians. "Are they suffering bc I'm not buying a CD?" Yes! Those payouts are literally 1000 times worse.
You're not ruining the industry (the heads of the studios have that handled) , but you're sure not helping artists make a living by stealing their work.
Take your horseshoe theory of moral consumerism someplace besides *checks notes* the slickdeals comment section.
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