This will be the straw that breaks the camel’s back for me.

      • God forgive me, I’m going defend Prime. I always thought that because Prime was also required for faster shipping, they were willing to explore artistic shows that something like Netflix wouldn’t touch these days. People likely aren’t subscribing or cancelling because of the video offer, so they have more freedom to greenlight interesting concepts.

        Prime shows like Solos and Tales from the Loop probably aren’t great for getting new subscribers, but they’re absolutely wonderful, especially compared to season 47 of [generic low-budget comedy baking reality show]. Shows like The Expanse, Mr Robot, Homecoming are all solid and Prime seems far less likely to cancel shows before they end properly.

        •  bermuda   ( @bermuda@beehaw.org ) 
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          9 months ago

          I loved what the grand tour was able to accomplish on prime that they simply couldn’t on BBC with top gear. The early seasons are wonky with weird formatting, but when they started focusing more on specials in the later seasons (seamen, eurocrash, the Mongolian special, a massive hunt) have been some of the best top gear content since like top gear season 7

    •  Fester   ( @Fester@lemm.ee ) 
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      9 months ago

      I think we had Prime before streaming even started, so that was like a bonus.

      But lately we hardly use it. The site is so janky and bloated with trash, I’d rather pay shipping and buy directly from a brand website or a normal retailer. Most have free shipping nowadays anyway.

      I just bought an Apple USB wall adapter from Amazon because Best Buy was out of them. I spent like 20 minutes inspecting it and the package and watching videos about how to make sure it isn’t counterfeit. Buying a $20 thing shouldn’t be a stressful ordeal.

      • Imagine for a second you were a paid member of a gym, but decided to do most of your exercise outside the gym you just paid for.

        That’s most streaming platforms for a large amount of people. They’re so inconvenient that people will pay for them, and still not use the service they paid for.

        A damning indictment of modern day streaming platforms tbh.

  • If you subscribe to other channels via Amazon Prime (e.g., Paramount+ through the Prime app), they already serve you 70-90s unskippable ads. Often ads for the very show you are about to watch. It’s infuriating.

    If I were paying for it myself it would be totally unacceptable. Since I’m just using someone else’s account, it still makes me mad but I’ll tolerate it.

  •  Pechente   ( @Pechente@feddit.de ) 
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    59 months ago

    I canceled it at the beginning of the year. Im not missing anything and I try to diversify the stores I purchase from.

    The only thing that sucks is when I HAVE to use amazon for something. They will nag you so hard to get prime. It only makes me avoid them even more.

      • There have been many items I’ve looked at or bought, mostly from small-ish manufacturers, that are only available through amazon due to the manufacturer not have the resources to handle all the logistics and web store that come with selling through amazon. I do everything I can to avoid buying from them because I can’t stand their bull shit.

      • If you live remote, say, an hour or more from real shopping and such it’s the way to get fast delivery on anything, though Walmart does ok with this, though their “fast” is fairly unreliable. (Great for front door delivery of kitty litter, dog food, etc)

        But no, most people don’t need it because most people don’t live remote.

        •  NaN   ( @Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org ) 
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          19 months ago

          A lot of things offer free same day shipping for me now. I’ve gotten things three hours later for no extra charge.

          I usually try to shop locally or at least a smaller online business, but if it’s a more expensive item and Amazon is cheaper, and I can still get it the same day or the next, Amazon usually wins out. One thing that has also bothered me is when I order directly from a company for more money and slower shipping and it’s still fulfilled by Amazon.

  • This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Amazon is set to introduce adverts to its Prime Video streaming service in 2024 as it seeks to put more cash into creating TV shows and films.

    UK Prime customers, along with those in the US, Germany and Canada, will see ads early next year unless they subscribe for an “ad-free” option at an additional cost.

    At the moment, a Prime subscription, which includes free one-day delivery on goods as well as access to its streaming service, costs £8.99 per month, or £95 a year, in the UK.

    The company said it would get in touch with Prime members a few weeks before ads are introduced to show how to sign-up for the ad-free option if they wish to.

    Live event broadcasts, like sports matches, will still include adverts even for those who sign up to the ad-free option.

    Data previously released by analysts Kantar showed that people cut back on video streaming services in their droves last year as they sought out different ways to deal with the spike in the cost of living.


    The original article contains 398 words, the summary contains 175 words. Saved 56%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!