Ihave a Peacock subscription, but it is treating me like I only have a free subscription, most of the shows and movies have a "subscribe to watch" button on it, but if I click on it it says an error has occurred. I have a premium subscription, but I can only watch a limited amount of shows and movies.
In this instance, since you have mentioned that you have a paid subscription directly from the app, it is highly recommended that this will be raised to the channel provider themselves as they are the ones who provided, maintained, and updated their app on the Roku streaming platform.
@makaiguy I am trying to watch it on Roku, I subscribed through Roku and it is acting like I don't have a subscription and I need to upgrade to Premium which I just paid for on December 1st and yes it has posted to my account. I have actually watched it on my Samsung TV and Roku, so that doesn't make a difference, but just in case something changed I turned on my Roku and it I had the same result, it is asking me for certain shows and movies to subscribe to Premium, so something is wrong
Saying you are "trying to watch it on Roku" doesn't say WHERE on Roku you are trying to view it. I specifically asked about THE ROKU CHANNEL in my previous message, because for many channels subscribed through Roku, this is where you can access your subscription, not on the specific channel's dedicated channel app.
i am going through the same thing... but... i didnt subcribe through roku i subscribed through peacock itself... im payin for premium... when i click on a show or movie it tells me to subscribe... i tried talkin with both peacock and roku but i get stupid bots or tells me to chat on messenger... and on roku it doesnt have any type of option... i want 2 speak 2 some1 live... not a freakin bot...
In my opinion, the more seasons and episodes to tackle, the better. The more invested I wind up, however, the harder the heartbreak when all the content has been consumed. Anytime the discussion of movies or series arises, I always choose series.
Series allow for a person to connect more and develop a connection to the characters and to the storyline of a show. Movies, in my opinion, never give enough satisfaction due to the lack of time permitted to allow a story line to blossom. This, of course, only makes the post show depression worse.
Mourning a show comes as no joke and the grief comes in stages. Usually for me, the first step is starting the series over again from the pilot and rewatching my favorite episodes and scenes. The next step would be acceptance in which I come to terms with the unfortunate reality that I can never experience the show for the first time over again.
And finally, the most difficult step remains moving on and realizing that it is time to give another show a shot, thinking that no show will ever compare to the last. Then somehow this cycle starts all over again.
I know that this habit may not be not healthiest, however, it brings so much enjoyment that I could not imagine giving it up. Despite knowing that I need to wake up for work, school or any sort of big day, I will still choose to stay awake and continue watching. I always regret this the next day when I am too tried to function though it always seems like a good idea in the moment.
It can feel extremely difficult to avert our attention away from a show when it seemingly takes over our lives, leaving us so engrossed and ultimately addicted. The pandemic did nothing but add fuel to this already out of control fire due to the increase in free time.
Ultimately, no harm can come from indulging in binge-watching, it has actually been proven to be a great way to decrease stress. However, some people get so caught up in it that they do not realize they utilize it as a means to escape from reality. A much needed break from reality should be taken from time to time though too long of an escape can become cause for concern.
So, I look up from MLB At Bat on my iPad last night and see the above image. Wow. Interesting, enticing even. But, not so fast. What followed this image on the DVR was some of the worst TV I'd seen in a long, long time. Welcome to ABC's "Bachelor Pad." My wife, I love her dearly, but she has this thing for mindless TV stuff like "The Bachelor" and "The Bachelorette." So, of course, she set the DVR last night for the latest spinoff, "Bachelor Pad." googletag.cmd.push(function() googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1597166322662-mid-article-1'); ); It "stars" rejects from the other two shows and wow was it bad. Honestly "The Bachelor" and "The Bachelorette" are pretty bad, too. Even viewers (including my wife) admit it but like most train wreck television people keep on watching. Me? I just can't watch it. Even with boobs thrown at me, "Bachelor Pad" isn't going to make my DVRed show list ever. Sorry, honey. Care to see more of what I'm talking about? ABC streams the show here. More stories on: bachelor pad, bachelor, ABC, bachelorette, DVR Share with someone you care about:
He grew up in Wauwatosa and graduated from Marquette University, as a Warrior. He holds an MBA from Cardinal Stritch University, and is the founding president of Young Professionals of Milwaukee (YPM)/Fuel Milwaukee.
Early in his career, Sherman was one of youngest members of the Greater Milwaukee Committee, and currently is involved in numerous civic and community groups - including board positions at The Wisconsin Center District, Wisconsin Club and Marcus Center for the Performing Arts. He's honored to have been named to The Business Journal's "30 under 30" and Milwaukee Magazine's "35 under 35" lists.
He owns a condo in Downtown and lives in greater Milwaukee with his wife Stephanie, his son, Jake, and daughter Pierce. He's a political, music, sports and news junkie and thinks, for what it's worth, that all new movies should be released in theaters, on demand, online and on DVD simultaneously.
I once saw a video of bison being trapped in preparation for their sorting and slaughter. It had been filmed in 2004, in Yellowstone, the last year the Park Service permitted viewing of their bison operations. In the video, the bison are angry, bucking and kicking. The wranglers cry, " Hyah, hooee, yah yah, uhsh uhsh," smiling as they whip and beat the animals from catwalks. The camera angle shifts to the colliding bodies of the creatures, which cram in the bottleneck of the chutes. They climb over one another like worms in a bucket. Then the wranglers shove hooks into the noses of the bison. The animals' heads are forced up, their eyes bulging, bloodshot, and you can hear them wheezing and panting, and you can see the fury in their gaze. A needle is jammed into their necks to test for disease. I'd also seen video of other acts perpetrated on the bison: officials from the US Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, for example, shoving dildos into the asses of bull bison to make them ejaculate, so they could collect semen samples.
By 1900, wild bison in North America had dwindled to just 23 animals holed up in Yellowstone National Park, where they were protected from hunters. The Yellowstone bison, listed as "threatened with near extinction" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, have recovered in recent years to as many as 5,000 animals. They have never been domesticated, never been fenced in or interbred with cattle. They are genetically pure, behaviorally wild, surviving as their ancestors did, battling snow, ice, predation, and starvation. They are the last of their kind, the only remaining link to the herds that roamed this country for more than 11,000 years.
Last February, a week after the ACLU filed its letter, I stood at dawn on a dirt road near Yellowstone, listening to the sound of bison that had been corralled. There were the moans of bulls and cows, the calling of the calves for their mothers, the cracking of the wranglers' whips, the cruel voices of men, and the crashing of the creatures' huge bodies against metal chutes. Through a spotting scope I could see, one and a half miles distant in the lowest reaches of the valley where I stood, a labyrinthine structure of steel and wood, the Stephens Creek Trap, from which the sounds reverberated. The animals had been wrangled off the landscape and chased by men on horseback into this labyrinth. I could discern through the scope, though barely, that several dozen bison were in the process of being sorted in the trap, some of them to be trucked to slaughterhouses.
The goal of the ACLU lawsuit was to see, smell, and hear, up close, bison corralled, beaten, whipped, raped, sorted, and moved onto the trucks that carry them to their death. The Park Service bars the viewing of these activities out of an ostensible concern "for the safety and welfare of the public, staff, and bison." I think the real concern is that the public, if it knew what was being done to the Yellowstone herd, might demand a change in policy.
Among the missions of the National Park Service is not only to protect public lands but also "to preserve native wildlife species and the processes that sustain them." The reason this mission is ignored in the case of bison depends on who does the reasoning.
Critics of the IBMP call it a politically corrupt scheme that fails to address the scientific facts of brucellosis. A 2009 study by the Journal of Applied Ecology found that not a single instance of brucellosis transmission from wild bison to cows has ever been documented. The US Government Accountability Office found in 1992 that the risk of transmission approaches zero. Paul Nicoletti, a veterinarian and animal epidemiologist at the US Department of Agriculture, told a documentarian for the Buffalo Field Campaign that "the threat doesn't seem to be there." When pressed, even the Park Service admitted, in a statement to VICE, "There is recognition by both disease regulators and wildlife managers that the risk of brucellosis transmission from bison to cattle is minute."
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