Netflix has a lot of great original content, but as the streaming services begin to operate more like television networks - exclusively airing their own original content - Netflix may find itself weakening, limited to only their own content.
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I used to believe that Netflix would be the most dominant player in the streaming wars, but I’m beginning to see a future where it can be weakened.
#LEAVE IT TO BEAVER STREAMING SERIES#
Netflix, meanwhile, has begun shedding series that it does not produce originally, but it clearly sees the value of hanging on to Friends as it competes with new streaming networks from Disney and Apple, both of which will roll out next year. AT&T, which now owns Warner, wasn’t going to let Friends go cheaply, and they may choose to become the exclusive provider of Friends when their streaming service launches. In either respect, the $100 million is not only huge for Friends but another sign that the streaming wars are upon us. I like both sitcoms a lot, but if I’m watching reruns for nostalgic value, I’m more likely to choose the goofy one over the misanthropic one while I’m hungover on the couch, and I know anecdotally that Friends is huge among teenagers, the same way that Leave it to Beaver was more popular than Father Knows Best in reruns in the ’70s, The Munsters more popular than The Addams Family in ’80s syndication, and Brady Bunch more popular than, I dunno, Gilligan’s Island in the ’90s. That is to say, if money is the ultimate arbiter, 20 years later, Friends holds up much better than Seinfeld in the streaming era.
#LEAVE IT TO BEAVER STREAMING LICENSE#
In other words, the streaming rights to Friends cost triple what it cost Hulu to license Seinfeld. Meanwhile, three years ago, Hulu paid $160 million for streaming rights to Seinfeld for five years, through 2020. However, Friends has clearly stepped ahead in the streaming era, as Netflix just ponied up $100 million to keep the series on their service for 2019, which is roughly triple what Netflix paid for the sitcom this year. I think that Seinfeld clearly held the edge during its original run and in syndication, where it was the higher rated show on NBC and subsequently generated the most syndication royalties.
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However, Freud did receive the Goethe prize - given in the honor of the German poet, Goethe - in 1930.It’s been 15 and 20 years, respectively, since the last two sitcoms, Friends and Seinfeld, capable of generating 20 million viewers on a weekly basis have stopped producing new episodes. Freud described the scene, as he was stepping off the platform, as the "realization of a daydream".īetween 19, Sigmund Freud was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Medicine 12 times but never won the award. In 1909, Freud delivered a series of five lectures at Clark University on the development of psychoanalysis. However, his system of 'Talk Therapy' has endured and is widely practiced by therapists to this day. Many of Freud's theories are criticized by psychologists today. These informal meetings would eventually develop into the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society.
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In 1899, Freud published his acclaimed but controversial book 'The Interpretations of Dreams', which provided the foundation for his psychoanalytic ideas and theories in the field of psychology.īy 1902, Freud was already holding weekly discussions at his residence while he was living in Vienna, Austria. This is absolutely the case with psychology, which owes much of its framework of thought to Sigmund Freud. It is rare for an entire school of thought to be traced down to a single individual.