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On Twitter, users in the industry and regular people struggle to get the dang thing to work. Still, it’s nice to see that the rich and powerful have to use the same dumb streaming services as the rest of us. The market has determined that no one gets special treatment when trying to stream the Snyder Cut.
“It’s pretty hilarious that HBO Max broke their Apple TV app so badly,” Keith Calder, a producer on Starz’s
Blindspotting, tweeted two days ago. “No fast- forward or rewind? How did this ever make it through testing.”
He continued:
HBO Max Launches Ad-Supported Tier: It s Cheaper, But Is It Worth It?
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HBO Max Launches Ad-Supported Tier: It s Cheaper, But Is It Worth It?
HBO Max now offers subscribers the choice of paying only $9.99 a month, but with a few differences to the full $14.99 price.
It s safe to say that what used to be known as normal television has had its day, with streaming services now dominating people s viewing habits and the biggest new releases being exclusive to one streamer or another. However, as HBO Max launches a reduced cost ad-supported service today, and with many popular shows now arriving weekly rather than in one binge-watch dump, are we seeing an evolution taking place of what the future of television holds.