Monday, September 7, 2009

FreeGeeking (a first in a multipart series): TV

Hope you guys have had a lovely Labor Day. I got my outdoor fix of Whitewater Rafting in the Poconos, drinking in Philly, and a pretty sweet weekend in NYC. Anyway, with my regular trips to nyc, my gaming habits, and my food habits, my girlfriend (an investment), I've had to become an even smarter geek when it comes to saving money. You can find many websites like the consumerist or lifehacker, both of which I follow for random little tidbits. I also have some of mine which I'll add here too, as part of a little series I would like to call FreeGeeking. Enjoy.




How to save money the Geek (and legal) way (part one of many): TV.

The Internet is your friend. As people start to watch less and less tv and start doing more online, TV shows are starting to take notice and are going online. If you are scraping for cash, ditch the cable and keep the internet and check to see if your favorite shows can be streamed online. You can watch them any time, and if you have a PS3, 360, or wii, you can put them on your tv and it's like nothings changed:



-I was surprised that youtube has a lot of full season tv shows on it now, although most are pretty old. Everything from the old school class Star Trek series to Anime like Code Geass (both seasons and dubbed or subbed) and even the original 90210 series. I'd recommend youtube for older stuff, anime cartoons as they have a lot, and a few newer shows. Course, in the end, you can entertain yourself for a whole night on the failblog clips alone.


-Hulu is probably the one to beat right now. A small sample of shows ranges from Heroes, The Office, Lost, Ugly Betty, Grey's Anatomy, CSI, Family Guy, Gossip Girl, The Hills, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Burn Notice, and Battlestar Galactica. Needless to say, virtually any show you watch on tv now is available on Hulu.






-Also, another great alternative is Netflix. For as low as 5 bucks a month, you can have a dvd a month with two exchanges and a few hours of streaming netflix (also available on 360), or 16.99 a month for 3 dvds at any time and unlimited streaming. Netflix has TV shows via dvds of most of the popular tv series, and my friends have been watching all the seasons of Law and Order: SVU on the 360 by streaming the past few weeks. Depressing, but a good show nevertheless. The only downside to this is that obviously the tv show had to have a dvd collection of it released, and netflix opted to pick it up.

-Finally for me there's sites like mysoju.com, which provide access to Asian tv shows like drama and anime. You couldn't even get this on regular tv if you wanted in the first place. It's a little grey area in terms of legitness, but it uses existing streaming sites to provide tv shows. I am not into Jdrama or Kdrama, I swear. Along those lines, there are streaming sites that offer up to date tv shows but those are almost always over night shops and disappear by the time they get popular. And there's always bittorrent.... -_-;;







More to come in my next post. Stay smart and stay cheap.

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