Wed Mar 12, 2008 12:20PM EDT
See Comments (67)
I had a chance to check out Hulu (a joint
venture of NBC and News Corp., the owner of Fox) last fall, while it was still
in beta. The site itself doesn't look all that different now. It still boasts a
clean, clear layout for easy navigation, along with a slick video player that
lets you zoom in to a full-screen mode.
Now that Hulu is open to the public, however, it's stacked with way more
content. The site hosts about 250 TV shows, including hits like "The
Office, "30 Rock," "House," "Terminator: The Sarah
Connor Chronicles," and "Heroes." It's also got a truckload of
older shows, such as "The A-Team," "Adam-12," the
unfortunate "Galactica 1980," "Hart to Hart," and
"Remington Steele."
Also new are a slew of free movies, including some hits ("The Big
Lebowski," "Dude, Where's My Car?" "Mulholland Drive,"
"Sideways," and "The Usual Suspects") and some misses
("All Dogs Go to Heaven 2," "Attack of the Puppet People").
For other movies-including "Alien 3," "Garden State,"
"Juno," and "Office Space" ("Did you see the memo?")-only
clips are available.
Another cool feature is Hulu's Flash-powered HD "gallery," which for
now offers about 20-odd movie trailers. The HD video quality (at 720p) is
excellent-clips load quickly with little in the way of pixilation or other
obvious artifacts. ABC streams
full HD episodes of "Lost" and "Desperate Housewives,"
but its streams are a little touch-and-go, especially for those with so-so
bandwidth.
Meanwhile, the standard TV and movie streams look OK, if not great. TV streams
look a bit pixilated, but the video itself looks smooth enough, with a minimum
of stuttering. Movie quality on Hulu is pretty variable-some of the movies I
saw were in their original aspect ratios, some were panned-and-scanned, others
were actually windowboxed (that is, big black bars surrounding the video). That
said, all the films-even the R-rated ones-are uncut.
As before, everything is free, and you can even edit clips from the show and
embed them into your own website-that way, you get the video, and Hulu gets
credit (and presumably, revenue) for the traffic.
Of course, there's a catch: non-skippable ads.
For TV shows, you'll have to deal with four to five commercial interruptions
for an hour-long episode, or seven-plus commercials for a two-hour movie.
(Clips also begin with a pre-roll ad.) The ads themselves are only about 15
seconds each, and for now there's only one ad per commercial break. (In some
cases, you won't see an ad at all.)
That said, I'm sure those commercial breaks will start filling up. And indeed,
from everything I'm hearing, advertisers are lining up to buy spots on sites
like Hulu.
While I would rather pay a couple bucks for a commercial-free TV episode (or
more for a commercial-free movie rental), it sounds like free, ad-supported TV
and movies may well be the wave of the future. Guess we'd better get used to
the idea.
Let's also keep in mind that Hulu isn't the first site to offer free TV
episodes over the Web. Other
networks have streamed shows online for months now. Indeed, some of the
bigger players-notably ABC and CBS-haven't signed on with Hulu.
What would I like to see from ad-supported video sites like Hulu? A more complete video library, for one, since most of the TV series listed only have streams for a handful of recent episodes (on purpose, apparently, to avoid "cannibalizing" DVD sales).
Also, why not allow downloads to portable media players? Services like the new NBC Direct already allow for PC-only downloads, but nobody is offering free, ad-supported downloads for iPods or other portable players.
Anyway, check out Hulu and report back with your thoughts. Like what you see? Can you live with the ads? What's missing?
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
How long until Comcast starts blocking this?
I will try it but it will have to be very good for me to switch from Veoh TV which also let me watch bands, download and even Email what I'm watching.
I can't imagine trying to watch a suspenseful tv show or movie with commercial breaks! Spending a couple bucks on iTunes is worth the instant gratification and fun! (plus it has much more to choose from)
Not impressed with Hulu at all. I want to take the video with me or watch it on my TV. Where's the support for the world's most ubiquitous media player, the iPod?
Very sad. Hula said it wasn't available in my region. Hey, I do live in Ontario...What's up with them??? Eileen
The only problem with this wonderful idea is Bandwidth. If every person on the web start----- ting these sites and downloading, pretty soon you'll be seeing bandwidth meters and your monthly internet bill will reflect it. Internet cannot kill the Video Star.
Likewise, I also live over seas and yeah, Hulu looks great but I can't access the videos. I'd love to be able to sit back for free and enjoy shows from home too. There's a huge untapped audience living abroad...
Yes we can't seem to watch any of the shows here in Japan. American living here it's a real shame. If it's free like You tube you can watch that anywhere why not this ? what a big disappointment .
Umm, this is just greedy Murdoch adding another money-making machine to his arsenal; why wouuld ABC and CBS shows on this? Don't be ridiculous. FOX, Universal, Direct TV, on and on it goes...
cool. just what america needs. more television. the dumbing down of america continues. easier to control the masses, eh?
Though a great idea, it is unavailable to those living overseas. I was transferred to Japan (bringing the whole family with me). So, here we are with few American TV shows and movies being shown in English on cable and no viable, legal, free method of keeping up with the shows we love. If the industry truly wants to eliminate piracy, start by making the content available worldwide (Americans are by no means the only people illegally downloading Tv and movies).
We live overseas and would love to have something like this available. Luckily we have slingbox and a DVR but this would be much better.
On behalf of the thousands of americans living and working overseas,PLEASE make this available here too. Inparticular the old tv shows they offer are compleatly unavailable here in any form.As it is now you can visit Hulu but not watch a single film or show! Whats the problem?What is Hulu afraid of?They should make atleast some of the videos availble to view here otherwise its really just a waste of space!..... thankyou!
Excited to see, but get not avaliable in your area. We are military over seas and can't get the programming over here. Would like to see a user sign up interface so we could get the programming over here as well.
Overall i like it. Ads are annoying but not long for the most part and after watching an epsoide you don't have to watch the ads if you rewind the show. Also the quality is Awesome.
good to see something like this arise, although most content I like I have to see it as it comes live or if it airs within the last week or so.
The content is almost nil. Heroes, for instance, is one of my favorites, but they only have a few episodes. I would almost be scared to try out a new series, for fear that I won't be able to see more than a couple of episodes. Sigh. When are these companies going to realize the potential on the net and give us quality AND selection? Oh, well...
Just anohter way to waste time and not learn anything. No Thanks
Two Big Misses for HULU! First, why must you register to use an open-to-the-public,must-endure-commercial-advertising site? That is just invasive. Second, why is access restricted to the United States? We live abroad, but are US citizens. We really need & wnt a service like this - I'd even consider paying per event or per episode. What's up? Nice concept, poor delivery.
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6 Posted by surgefilter2 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:49PM EDT Report Abuse
Just love this whole 1980s retro scene at the moment. Hulu certainly helps me re-live those years. Hopefully Knight Rider 2008 will be picked up for the Fall (and they'll give the car and The Hoff more to do). In the meantime I'm enjoying the awesome new, digitally remastered Airwolf soundtrack that they've just released called 'Airwolf Themes' which you can download off Apple iTunes Store, or from their official website where there are great teaser samples, http://www.airwolfthemes.com/ I think Hulu's Airwolf pheneomenon is just the tip of the iceberg and really just setting us all up for an Airwolf revival movie too.