Starting a film club seems straightforward: choose a movie, invite some friends, and discuss it. However, clubs that last more than three meetings have some structure to them. Not a rigorous structure, but enough so that participants know what to anticipate, feel comfortable contributing, and continue to turn up. Deciding on Size and Format Before …
Hour-long episodes can feel like a commitment. Sometimes you want the satisfaction of finishing a chapter without signing up for a novel. Shows with episodes under 30 minutes hit a sweet spot: they’re long enough to tell a real story but short enough that you can knock out a few during lunch or wind down …
There are more streaming services available right now than most people have time to evaluate properly. Netflix, Disney+, Max, Apple TV+, Peacock, Paramount+, Tubi, Pluto TV — and that’s before you get into niche platforms for anime, horror, documentaries, or live sports. The options aren’t the problem. The problem is that most people sign up …
The days of just “plugging in a box” are passed. When you choose between Roku, Amazon Fire TV, and Google TV, you are not just purchasing hardware; you are also committing to a software ecosystem that will determine how you discover content, how much data is collected from your living room, and how well your …
There’s a meaningful difference between a group of people watching something together and an actual watch party. The first happens by accident. The second takes two hours of planning and pays off every time someone texts you the next morning, saying that was the most fun they’ve had in months. Themed watch parties work because …
The weekend ritual of choosing a series on which the entire family can agree feels like a high-stakes negotiation. Between a seven-year-old’s erratic attention span and a teenager’s critical skepticism, the “infinite scroll” of streaming sites can easily devour the time you intended to spend viewing. True family-friendly viewing is more than just “safe” content …
Disney+ receives a lot of attention for its iconic brands, like Marvel series, the Star Wars universe, and vintage animated flicks. However, beneath those headline names is a legitimately interesting catalog of movies and programs that most customers go over entirely. Some of the acquisitions are not well-marketed. Others are legacy content from before the …
The majority of investors do not have trouble coming up with concepts. They struggle to take action on them. The real issue isn’t a lack of chances; it’s coming up to a screen full of 200 tickers with no structure, priority, or notion of where to begin. This is decision fatigue before the market even …
As a critic who has spent the last decade tracking the shift from “appointment TV” to the era of the all-at-once drop, I’ve seen the landscape of streaming evolve from a novelty into a complex ecosystem. In 2026, the “binge-watch” is no longer just about volume; it’s about narrative momentum. Choosing a series to commit …








