Talk about bass-ackward!so maybe back off and crawl back into your hole.
Talk about bass-ackward!so maybe back off and crawl back into your hole.
When I was employed by them, they were making plans to offload Hulu Live, losing money, they knew it had no future.Attempting to get us back on topic, I wonder how long it's going to take Disney to totally kill off Hulu now. They can eventually offload the Hulu Live TV customers to Fubo, and integrate the rest of Hulu's content with Disney Plus which will kill Hulu completely.
If "inaccurate, poorly worded, grammatically incorrect posts and responses" bothers you maybe the internet isn't the place for you.but I do wonder why you make inaccurate, poorly worded, grammatically incorrect posts and responses.
I thought there was a way to dictate posts here, but I sure can’t find it.
your point is taken, but I fail to see how this is a problem. Netflix is one service and is able to successfully serve content globally based on where they have the rights to that content. Disney can easily do the same.The problem with regular Hulu, is a lot of it’s content is only licensed to be shown in the United States, not easy to merge with Disney+, which is a global service, majority of content, owned by Disney of course.
Netflix owns ( or partially owns) the vast majority of original content on their service, the stuff they do not, some is licensed globally, some for certain countries.your point is taken, but I fail to see how this is a problem. Netflix is one service and is able to successfully serve content globally based on where they have the rights to that content. Disney can easily do the same.
I would think the bigger issue is that the content is presently licensed to Hulu and not Disney+.
You said the content is not easy to merge with Disney+ because of the issue between global vs US-only licenses. My point was that this is not an issue because, as you said, Netflix has no problem showing WWE catalog overseas, but not in the US, even though all content resides on the same platform. If Netlfix can do it, Disney+ should be able to do it.Netflix owns ( or partially owns) the vast majority of original content on their service, the stuff they do not, some is licensed globally, some for certain countries.
You're not even responding to what I said. What I said was that content licensed to Hulu in the US cannot be shown on Disney+ in the US. That is because license agreements need to be updated. A big reason Hulu launched in beta on Disney+ was because they needed to get agreements in place for that content to be shown. So even where Hulu has the rights to content IN THIS REGION, it cannot be shown on Disney+ IN THIS REGION unless the content provider agrees to it.Nope, for a few examples, the Handmaid’s Tale is owned by MGM, Hulu is licensed to show it here, but in the UK, it is on Amazon Prime.
Even content Disney owns, like FX shows, while on Hulu and Disney+ here, it is licensed to Sky Go in the UK, cannot be on Disney+ there.
Doctor Who is on Disney+ here, BBC in the UK.