valet
The official Chaplain of the Coli
looks like it should be a movie instead of a tv show.
Check out the Korean flick The Tiger.
If you enjoyed the fukkery between the bear and Dicaprio, then you gonna love what the tiger does to the japs.
I highly recommend.
at 1st yes , then no and then yes..and finally you will feel at peace.WILL IT fukk UP AN ANIMAL LOVER WATCHING IT?
THE NATURE BOY GOT A SOFT SPOT FOR HIS ANIMAL BREHS
WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
at 1st yes , then no and then yes..and finally you will feel at peace.
TilikumBlackfish documentary is crazy
Scripps Network Interactive, the company behind popular channels such as HGTV and Food Network, has chosen not to renew their partnership with Netflix.
This means that shows like Fixer Upper, Chopped, House Hunters, Food Network Star, Worst Cooks in America, Flip or Flop, and Property Brothers will no longer be available on the streaming service.
Scripps is one of the largest producers and distributors of lifestyle programming. In addition to HGTV and the Food Network, shows from the Travel Channel, the DIY channel, and the Cooking Channel will be removed from Netflix at the end of 2016.
All these programs have been available on Netflix since October of 2014, however, there will be no new episodes added to the streaming service and all the previous ones will be removed.
On Monday, Chief Operating Officer Buton Jablin explained during an earnings conference call that the company would be parting ways with Netflix at the end of this year, according to Fox News.
"We assessed and analyzed the S-VOD [streaming video-on-demand] universe and have made the strategic decision not to extend our S-VOD agreement with Netflix past the end of this year," Jablin said. "In the end, it is really not the kind of dual revenue model that best monetizes our content over the long-term."
Ken Lowe, the Chief Operating Officer believes that Scripps Network Interactive is "big enough," and does not want to shackle itself with the obligation of a streaming partnership with Netflix.
"If you look at where the industry is going… we just see a lot of opportunities," Lowe said. "We have such compelling content for advertisers we don't want to cut ourselves off," Lowe said.