You are, in fact, wrong.
You are, in fact, wrong.
No? Words mean things. Enshittification is a deliberately driven business model, you’re using it to describe random happenings.
Enshittification is a specific business model, not just “things becoming shit”.
“Enshittification” has an actual meaning, and this isn’t it.
It’s unambiguous that it’s not a person’s actual name.
Making double your budget is basically breaking even, once you account for marketing costs and the cinema’s cut of the take.
Video evidence is far more convincing than someone’s say-so.
Streaming doesn’t pay out per view, they just pay a lump sum up front to licence. If you’re not already a hit, that lump sum will be low, and if millions of people stream the film it makes the studio exactly zero dollars.
No it isn’t.
When I first saw the trailer on TV, I assumed it was a cat food ad spoofing movie trailers.
My understanding was that “millennial” was first coined to refer to those graduating in 2000.
None of the planes shown in the film ever left the ground.
Top Gun 2 was full of CGI…
Trailers have been full of spoilers since at least the 1930s.
In this particular case he’s married to one of the co-conspirators.
He’s already delayed it enough. Ruling in July. Three months of pretrial, trial begins October. Two months of trial, ends in December. That leaves less time before inauguration than the minimum time that must pass between conviction and sentencing.
By law, Trump cannot be sentenced before inauguration day.
There are still three months of pretrial.
If SCOTUS rules in late June, the trial cannot be finished before inauguration.
“Narrowly injuring”?
Which is meaningless.
This is false. Firstly, because people don’t subscribe to everything forever. But even in some Netflix utopia where everyone has a Netflix subscription, and they keep it forever, then what? Now you can’t make any more money, you’re making the maximum amount of money your business model can make. But you can keep people subscribed to your service by continuing to add new things, while also making extra money from those who would like to own physical copies.
Subscriptions detach income from titles, meaning all the service needs to do is exist and have things on it. There’s no budget to actually create anything special. Physical offers a way to reconnect those, making something that is more expensive and in return making more money.
The ad-based plans everyone is introducing run on the same logic. Subscriptions aren’t sustainable.