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no just no the hub sound better,easier to type, faster to say an motto aint as catchy
And a better logo. Looks less ugly than Hub’s overly purple thing.
Essentially, but with more input form one of the owners about what will be shown.
TP was amazing. But wasn’t it already in syndicated repeats by the time The Hub even existed?
!derpicdn.net/img/2012/11/22/159686/thumb.gif!
“Only…on the Hub…”
;_;
Oh well, in with the new, out with the old!
(kicks Hub T-shirts in the trash)
Farewell, good friend. Hopefully the network won’t be any different in terms of the programming we already have.
Looking into it, a lot of the paid TV companies have a vast majority of the market tied up in contracts, so Netflix Australia wouldn’t be able to offer much at all as a result, even if they did open up here.
It’s really quite stupid, but that seems to be the trend.
Believe it or not, Australia and New Zealand differ on a lot of policies. I don’t know the exact reasons off hand, only that we don’t have it. I’ll look into it further though.
I am surprised Netflix is not in Australia but a company has a free VPN just for Netflix in New Zealand.
Can’t that be done in Australia?
Dashie is mine in this picture :)
They DID have Transformers Prime - second best iteration of the franchise after Beast Wars for sure. So many plot threads unresolved - I always felt it was rushed in the final season.
I still think it was the best thing the Hub ever had. Great series, good characters, LIKEABLE humans…
Really, it’s that Hasbro had nothing to offer adults besides MLP. The Hub did great with both children and adults during hours when children were watching, but lousy during prime time and late night. Discovery Channel felt they could make better use of those time slots if they weren’t obligated to share decision-making with Hasbro’s sensibilities then. So they bought back Hasbro’s controlling interest in the station, and now they won’t have to subsist on G-rated reruns of Blossom and Family Ties during the most potentially profitable hours of the evening.
Don’t forget that Discovery Communications was already a stakeholder in The Hub, and that the station was Discovery Kids to begin with. Hasbro simply sold 20% of the network back to Discovery Communications in the hope that Discovery-style programming will help increase it’s market share. It wasn’t that The Hub wasn’t making lots of money… it’s just that it wasn’t making obscene amounts of money.
Big fish gets eaten by bigger fish.
If there’s the Discovery channel and ABC Family on basic cable, what would this bring on a premium network?