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    If you’re a Nielsen family, yes. We were for a few months before we moved and they were counting Hulu Live since it shows the same commercials as cable.

    Hell, I watched a half-hour of cornhole the other day and you could count the literally tens of people in the seats.  ESPN will air anything they can get cheaply enough.

    I tend to be an esports television skeptic (at least to the extent that they will ever be anything more than a niche fan thing), but this seems like something that could be said about any sport:

    It seems like they thought they could use their user base to pressure theaters to give them discounts, but the theaters just said, “Look, if you go broke people aren’t going to stop coming to the movies, they’ll just buy straight from us like they used to.” And they were right.

    If people came into articles about my pastime and whined about how it wasn’t real and wasn’t impressive when my friends are putting hundreds of hours into it, I’d be defensive too.

    There are very few barriers to entry in the streaming world. The reason you’re seeing WB, Disney, Sony, and all of these other production companies looking to start their own streaming services is because they have these huge backlogs of content just sitting there. They monetized it in the past by selling it off in

    In their meek defense, it was only functional and profitable because the content creators didn’t realize how much their content could be worth and there were very few competitors.

    Lifehacker and Gizmodo post How-Tos on violating copyright law all the time.  I don’t see you complaining then.

    Sling doesn’t have that option because they don’t own the channels and most cable channels are owned by one of a half-dozen or so conglomerates.

    Just rotate them. The big advantage of this model is that you don’t have to subscribe to everything all the time. We just canceled our subscription to Amazon Prime (after catching up on Man in the High Castle, Doctor Who, and a few others) and picked up HBO for a month so we can watch Westworld. Next we’ll probably

    Yeah, that’s something that’s usually pretty easy to negotiate having the seller pay for since it is, as you say, only about $650.

    But those things aren’t necessities, they’re luxuries.

    I think the point he’s trying to make, though, is that most peole don’t need 3-4 bedrooms. 61% of the country lives in 1-2 person households which increases to 71% if include married couples with one child. That means 71% of the country could get by just fine with a 2-bedroom, 1,000-1,200 sq ft starter home. As your

    IVs are way less important for a beginning player than level, thoughs. You’re way better off trying to power level up to Level 30 and catching a bunch of 30+ weather-boosted Pokemon than spending stardust and candy powering a Level 20 up to that point.

    Right, but level 30 is the soft cap. At that point you can do 99% of what a level 40 player can do and leveling up Pokemon from 32-40 has minimal advantage.

    And when I started the account it was at the beginning of a double XP event, so I went from 0-20 in about two weeks. It took another probably 6-7 weeks to get from 20 to 30.

    This is a decent strategy if you’re willing to spend a lot of money, but it’s not very effective if you aren’t because it’s not a very efficient use of your Lucky Eggs. Unless you’re willing to a buy a bunch (and the raid passes to boot), your best bet continues to be mass evolve sessions using pidgeys, weedles, and

    Are these really spoilers?  I mean, the dinosaurs get off the island within the first twenty minutes of the movie.  At that point they’re just Chekov’s gun waiting to go off.  

    I feel like it’s worth adding that Hulu’s cost depends on what other Hulu services you have. That is, Hulu Live comes with Hulu, so if you’re already subscribing to regular Hulu, you won’t be adding $40 to your cost; it’s an extra $32.

    Warning: This “TV” is not actually a television, it is a home theater display, which means it does not have an internal tuner capable of, you know, receiving television signals. So, if you have cable, it’s probably fine, but it’s not a good option for cord cutters.

    Warning: This “TV” is not actually a television, it is a home theater display, which means it does not have an