Last night, I flipped on Prime Video to watch a movie and, like millions of other streamers across the world, was promptly greeted with a commercial.
Truly, this sucks.
For all intents and purposes, Prime Video is now indistinguishable from the host of free video streaming apps that populate the Roku realmâunless, of course, you want to shell out an extra $3 a month for the same exact service you just had. If youâre unwilling to pay the extra money, youâre dooming yourself to a viewing experience that isnât wholly dissimilar from the one you get while watching Tubi.
I first encountered Tubi, a free streaming app with ads, a couple years ago and, for the most part, have had a pretty good experience with it. Thereâs a good assortment of movies and TV shows on it and, while it doesnât have a ton of original programming or particularly high resolution (it craps out at 720p), it provides a lot of basic entertainment value and provides it for free.
For obvious reasons, Prime can now effectively be regarded as actively worse than this sort of app. Want to watch Superbad with ads? Watch it for free on Tubi. Want to watch Superbad with ads and a slightly higher pixel count? Pay $108 a year to watch it on Prime. What a deal!
Why Amazon is doing this is the question. The reason that the company has given for its price hike is so that it can continue investing in what it calls âcompelling content.â Roughly translated, Amazon is claiming that it needs more money to continue churning out original TV shows and movies, just like other streaming platforms have been doing over the past several years. Of course, this could just be a pretext for Amazon to further bilk its customers. After all, that seems to be what everybody else is doing. Notably, Netflix kicked off the odious trend of adding ads and a more expensive subscription tier and has since been joined by most of the major streaming services.
Much ink has already been spilled explaining how after streaming killed cable television, it is now in the process of reinventing it. The bottom line, however, is that Amazon is set to accrue billions and billions of dollars through this price hike. It begs the question: If streaming studios see youâre willing to pay a little extra just because they insisted, where does it end? Truly, streamers would be best served by banding together and protesting what is just a craven cash grab by our entertainment overlords.
All of that said, Amazonâs excuse for raising everybodyâs rates is sorta funny. I mean, letâs just say for a moment that the company is being honest about the whole needing-money-to-continue-creating-âcompelling contentâ thing. Even if thatâs the case, Iâm not entirely sure what itâs talking about.
Like, is it talking about Reacherâthe show that Forbes recently likened to a âbudget network procedural with lousy, unimaginative cinematography, crappy fight scenes and bad writingâ? Or is it referring to Citadel, the Russo Brothers produced spy show that Rolling Stone dubbed a â$300 million disasterâ? Itâs possible the company is alluding to its Wheel of Time adaptation, which RogerEbert.com has characterized as âparticularly superfluousâ with a âgo-nowhere sensibility.â One thingâs for sure: Itâs definitely talking about The Rings of Power, the ridiculously expensive LOTR show that almost nobody finished watching. If youâll remember, Amazonâs budget for Rings was projected to be somewhere in the neighborhood of $250 million, while the median viewing experience left TV critics saying stuff like: âThe Rings of Power isnât very good. It quite often isnât anywhere near good.â
Look, nobody asked Amazon to spend a quarter of a billion dollars on a TV show about elves. While only God knows why they did it, all I know is that I now have to suffer through Purina dog food commercials every time I want to watch There Will Be Blood.
It might be helpful if Amazon learned to stay in its lane. If anyone from the company is interested in some free advice, hereâs something to consider: The whole reason I ever watch stuff on Prime is to search out movies that arenât on Netflix or Hulu. The great thing about Prime is that, while other streaming services have rotating or limited movie selections, it has pretty much everything. When I find the movie I want, my preference is to watch it in one high-definition, uninterrupted session, unclouded by corporate interjections. The platformâs only real advantage over a service like Tubi has been that it doesnât have ads. Well, it didnât.