Tuned In

Let Me Pick Your Brain

Your delicious, delicious brain… no, actually, this isn’t a Alec-Baldwin-for-Hulu brain-eating request. I’m writing a piece for the magazine about the various ways to watch TV other than televisions + cable/satellite/antenna–e.g., on your computer, on iPods or similar devices, via iTunes, Hulu, DVD rental, cellphone, downloads via Xbox Live, etc.

We talk about this stuff often enough here, but I’m just curious: what non-TV means of watching TV do you use? And do you find there are certain types of shows you prefer to watch in different formats (i.e., do certain shows work better on the small screen than others, do certain show demand to be watched live)? And how, if at all, has using these other formats changed the TV-watching experience for you? 

If you have a minute to post, I’d be grateful. And I promise to leave some brain for you.

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  • jr77006

    I use iTunes and Hulu. I primarily use them when my DVR goes on the fritz and I miss something, or like when I had no power due to Hurricane Ike, I use them to catch up on what I missed. I have decided to go with House on Hulu though, because it’s the odd man out on the MOnday 7:00 CST pile-up. I enjoy Chuck and BBT/HIMYM much much more.

  • greenlyfe

    I mostly watch TV on DVR or online now. The few times I watch live it’s very weird to have to sit through the commercials. Strangely, I don’t mind sitting through the hulu or other online commercials because I pull up a blog post or skim the paper or something to get through.

    I generally watch 30 Rock on hulu and HIMYM on cbs and the daily show or colbert if my dvr didn’t catch it online. Dramas I like to dvr or buy from itunes if I missed and watch on my iMac display.

    I hate watching tv on my ipod and hate the small screen thing. I don’t have a rational reason why, the picture looks fine. Podcasts are great and that’s how I get most of my news now, from NPR. And skimming the paper. And blog feeds.

  • natego

    HULU is God of non-TV TV to me.. but they’re content is sketchy.. shows/episodes come and go and its never guaranteed content.. if we have free TV on Hulu why even bother with Netflix or iTunes??

  • Matt

    My “TV” watching breaks down into 3 categories:

    Live or watched-on-Tivo-within-a-day: for shows that I don’t want getting ruined (ie, Lost) or shows that I just really, really love (HIMYM, 30 Rock)
    Hulu or network website: for shows I enjoy when I see, but don’t care enough about (or have time) to watch them live (Chuck, Psych, Daily Show/Colbert)
    Netflix rentals: for shows that people tell me I will absolutely love and have to watch. I did that with 24 (it was a bust) and West Wing (not a bust).

    There’s also a pseudo-4th category – shows whose recaps I read on Wikipedia. I mainly do this with Heroes, because I’m still interested in the overall story, but watching an actual episode makes my stomach hurt.

  • btmorex

    I watch cable news and sports live on normal tv. I watch everything else on my computer directly or on my computer hooked up to my tv (if I want a bigger screen). For computer viewing, I use hulu and if it’s not on hulu I download it from questionable sources. Also, I watch the daily show usually the day after on the daily show website.

  • Mr. B

    I haven’t done it yet, but I have long been contemplating jettisoning cable altogether and grabbing an AppleTV box. It’s cheap, no monthly fees, doesn’t take up much space and with the right open source software (Boxee) you can stream Hulu and just about any other Internet TV option you want directly to your TV.

    The only problem is that AppleTV doesn’t have the right hardware to stream Netflix, which at this point is the deal breaker for me. I could wait for Apple to come out with upgraded hardware, but I doubt that will ever happen as they seemed to have abandoned the device.

    My point is, cable is far too expensive. I personally pay for hundreds of channels but watch maybe four or five non-broadcast channels on a regular basis. It’s not a question of if I’ll ditch pay-TV for all-Internet, it’s a question of how soon til I find a viable option.

  • tyrantking

    I try to record everything I want to watch through windows media center. These shows then get streamed to my tv through an xbox 360. I also use netflix, both discs and streaming watch it now. Finally, for shows I somehow miss, I find torrents and again, stream them through my xbox 360. Ultimately, I’m still watching everything on my tv.

  • shara says

    I watch very little when its actually on. I tend to coordinate my live viewing with the blog discussions I will want to participate in the next day. Like, when everyone stopped covering Heroes, I realized that I had lost my primary motivation to watch it live. So, I watch Supernatural (have a weekly viewing party at our house) and American Idol and Lost when they air, and usually House also. I watch a lot of stuff on Hulu (BSG, Burn Notice, Psych, Daily Show, Medium, Chuck, etc), and download a TON of stuff on iTunes (House, Gossip Girl, The Office, etc). I marathon DVDs of whole seasons from netflix. They now have this awesome Watch Now function, which is how I watched the first 2 seasons of Friday Night Lights, which I can access through XBOX Live (so I can watch it on the big screen TV) or the internet to watch on my computer. I used to watch stuff streamed from network websites, but haven’t even wandered that way since I got into Hulu.
    .
    Then there are all the shows that I don’t watch regularly, but I keep up with the TWP recaps – mostly for shows that I can’t access any other way (Big Love, Dexter) or that I’d never really watch but want a sense of the train wreck (various reality shows).
    .
    @natego: “why even bother with Netflix or iTunes”: Because Hulu doesn’t leave all episodes up forever – they just have a few at a time. So, if I’m late in discovering a show, I can’t get all the earlier episodes on Hulu. if I want to watch an episode again, it might not be on there next time I look. Downloading gives a non-commercial, high-quality file that can be watched whenever/wherever.

  • shara says

    HAPPY LOST DAY, BTW.

  • profdante

    For the most part I’m a Tivo-within-a-day kind of person too. The only thing that I typically watch live is sports. (I wonder if ESPN is making more ad revenue these days because advertisers know that their commercials are more likely to be seen?) I sometimes catch up on shows on my laptop through the network websites, but that’s mainly for water-cooler purposes with shows like Survivor that don’t demand a whole lot of attention (and the webads they have on those sites make that a really painful experience). Finally, my cable comp. doesn’t carry Sci-Fi, so I’ve also bought BSG on iTunes, which I’ve watched on my computer *and* on my iPhone but the experience just isn’t the same. For the current season, though, I’m taking advantage of Amazon’s video-on-demand and having BSG sent directly to my Tivo, which is fantastic! I get to watch it the next morning first thing.

  • http://procrastinationchronicles.com procrastinator

    i still prefer to watch tv on tv, though most of it is admittedly delayed watching on tivo, it’s a bigger screen and my living room is setup for that to be the most comfortable, i do sometimes like to watch live tv while doing things around the house like last night’s idol which i don’t need to pay a ton of attention to.
    .
    i do watch some tv online mostly through the actual network sites mostly for the overbooked timeslots (house, ggirl, bbang/himym, chuck) but i just realized i missed a couple of the mentalist episodes and they don’t seem to have full eps online… i’m not as in love with watching it on my laptop screen and feel like i need to hit mute on those online commercials that repeat… if i do watch online I prefer the comedies. i don’t want to watch anything on an ipod/cell…
    .
    i like to watch most shows in current seasons though i do catch some of the cable shows i don’t get or didn’t catch on to in the first season through netflix, dexter, battlestarG…

  • http://tv-eh.com Diane

    I’m boring: most of my tv watching is either live or DVR within a few days.

    On the computer, I only watch shows I can’t get on TV, like Gavin & Stacey, or S3 Dexter (I was starting to get spoiled early on so didn’t want to wait for DVD). But, um, that’s not so legal so never mind. (Though – rationalization – in Canada I think it’s still a grey area.)

    On DVD, I tend to watch shows that aired on channels I don’t get (eg The Wire, S1/2 Dexter). Something like The Wire works really well on DVD because I think I watched more attentively when I could see it on my own timeline, and it’s a show that rewards that kind of attentive viewing.

    Or I get DVDs for shows that for some reason I couldn’t get into on a weekly basis, like Mad Men. I think it has to do with the slow pace. For me it has a cumulative greatness but each individual episode doesn’t leave me dying to see the next one.

    I used to think I’d use DVD to catch up on shows I was interested in but never got around to watching much, like Gilmore Girls, but I’ve given up on that idea now. I think the barrier is that I figure if I were REALLY interested, I would have made time for them when they was on, so making the time now seems like a burden and there’s always something else to watch.

    My results are kinda skewed because I’m not sure if I’d watch more on Hulu or network sites if they weren’t geoblocked here. Canadian nets have comparatively little online. But I also don’t love the experience of watching on that small of a screen, and it’s easier to watch the TV and multitask since my multitasking often involves working on the computer.

    The only time I’ve watched much of anything via streaming was rewatching the original Cupid series on YouTube, because it’s not available on DVD and I wanted to relive it before catching the remake.

  • anon76

    I watch very little live tv- mainly the Thursday night lineup on NBC (minus Kath and Kim). Other than that, Hulu is my TV. Before Hulu I was downloading BSG & Colbert on iTunes, and I still have an Amazon subscription to this season of BSG, but owing to the fact that I own Macs rather than PCs I can’t actually watch it.

  • andrewraff

    I do much of my non-tv TV watching on my TV, either through Netflix on TiVo or through iTunes or Boxee on Apple TV. The Boxee software makes it possible to stream Hulu on my TV.

    I do use Comedy Central’s The Daily Show and Colbert Nation websites to send clips around for discussion and usually get sucked into watching old segments. And ABC.com’s streaming video player to go back and revisit Lost episodes (in HD) that I’ve forgotten.

  • andrewraff

    And I meant to add, that while some shows do work better in series (say, on DVD or streaming) with watching multiple episodes in a row (anything serialized, like The Wire or Lost), the online discussion keeps me trying as much as possible to watch certain shows (Lost, BSG, The Office, 30 Rock) the day that they air, in order to be able to participate in the discussions and not have to scrupulously avoid spoilers. So even if watching them on DVR to fast forward through commercial breaks, I’ll try to watch those as close to live as possible.

  • Chaddogg

    Hulu is amazing, but for non-Hulu network internet sites, I think ABC wins hands down. HD quality picture, streams with minimal commercial interruptions, all their top shows, plus they frequently post old episodes during the off season so newbies can catch up. So, when it comes time for time-slot wars, I frequently divert my ABC viewing to their website, since it works so well.

  • Chaddogg

    As for me, I watch a lot live if I can (Lost, 30 Rock, Office, Bones, 24, Chuck), and everything else tends to be DVR’d if they conflict or if I have plans (which happens a lot with BSG and FNL). I fill in the gaps on shows I want to keep up with using Hulu or the network sites (I watch a lot on ABC.com, CSI and HIMYM on CBS.com, and some others on Hulu). And I use Blockbuster.com to catch up on old series that I missed (I did this for BSG and Freaks and Geeks very successfully).

  • cosanostra1

    I teach class 2 nights a week and spend the rest grading, etc so the Mrs and I don’t tend to watch much TV ‘live’. The majority of my TV viewing is taped (Monday & Thursday nights also seem to have the majority of the shows we like, so we’re forced to tape just to see everything). That’s right I said taped, as in good old fashioned VHS. We haven’t joined the 21st centry so we don’t have a DVR. :-) We tend to tape and then have marathon sessions when I’ve pried myself away from PowerPoint.
    .
    Mrs cosanostra1 and I have on occasion watched a missed episode on the network website (Jericho – me, Kitchen Nightmares – her) and she is currently catching up on The Tudors via DVD. Mrs cosanostra1 likes the DVD route as she can watch as little or as much as she wants and its not a show where she’s likely to accidentally read a spoiler. We do watch some shows purchased via iTunes on our respective ipod Touches, but that’s mainly for shows we can’t get (Primeval is our current show of choice) but the screen is rather tiny so its far from an optimal way to watch. I’d prefer hook up the laptop to the TV to watch these. Like Matt I’ve got a couple of shows were I just read recaps (24, Heroes will likely join this group).
    .
    Although its a treat to watch a show ‘live’ it is oh so nice to skip over the commercials.

  • dwhitcomb

    The only thing I watch live are sporting events.

    Everything else I watch on DVR. I usually am able to watch that day or the next day. I avoid commercials during these viewings and love Fringe’s use of “Fringe will return in 90 seconds” because I can use the 30 sec FF button to easily skip the commercials.

    Due to a conflict between Fisher Communications and Dish Network I haven’t had the Portland ABC affiliate since Lost has been on this year. I’ve turned to ABC’s website and like Chaddogg am very impressed by their HD streaming. It’s the best quality on the web. The quality matches up extremely well with over the air HD. I was originally worried about having to watch Lost on the computer but it hasn’t affected my viewing experience adversely at all.

    Finally, I’ve used Hulu to catch up on some episodes I’ve missed here and there but use it only as Plan B because the quality just isn’t the same as TV.

  • lizsher08

    Hulu is awesome, but I wish more shows would get on board with them. I used to visit here all the time when I was in Tunisia. I still use it, but not as much because a few of my favorite shows aren’t available. But, at least I can watch the ones that are, and leave time open for other things when they are airing live.

  • natego

    Good Point Chaddog.. I watched the entire Season 1 2 and 3 of Lost on ABC.com in HD. If I hadn’t had the great picture and sound, I might not be as into it as I am now.. I actually would rather skip watching it live on tv and watch it online, but I can’t wait that long!!!!! (sad, i know).

  • tenderfeet

    Live watching for me is primarily new episodes of shows with a high ‘spoiler’ risk and/or my addition to reading blog postings about them the next day. These include Lost, BSG, Big Love, The Office (and more and more, 30 Rock), and (I’ll admit it) Top Chef.
    .
    Other shows I’ll either catch up on from the network site (ABC for Lost rewatches especially) or Hulu, depending on what’s available where. I should get a DVR but I’m worried I’d never leave the living room…
    .
    The biggest shift for me over the last few years is getting prior seasons of shows on DVD (either rented, loaned from friends, or purchased). I’ve been pointed towards a bunch good shows that I may not have seen or had access to when they originally aired.Why watch mediocre TV with commercials when you can watch the best without?

  • beerbaron

    I watch Lost live, plus Chuck, The Office, 30 Rock and HBO’s Sunday shows either live or on DVR. I use Hulu mostly for older episodes or to check out shows I don’t watch regularly. And I’ll confess that I’ve downloaded some TV series from questionable sources (i.e. torrents). I recently snagged the first five seasons of The Shield this way.
    .
    I’ve also caught up on a lot of series on DVD from this new free service in my city. You go to this big old building downtown, show some ID and get a membership card that lets you to take out any DVD you want…completely free (they have books too). You just have to promise to bring it back in a week, or they’ll charge you like a nickel a day. Yeah, I’m talking about the library. Most let you search the holdings online and reserve stuff. I even donated some of my old DVD sets.

  • Tom Shaw

    In general, everything should be watched on an honest-to-goodness television; there’s very little difference between live viewing and same day DVR viewing though.
    Broadcast network sites (Hulu, ABC.com) are only used when I’ve missed an episode and need to catch up.
    I don’t have anything against pay-for sites such as iTunes/Xbox, it is just that I a)don’t think the price premium is worth it, and b)have a hectic schedule, so if I have a window to watch something, its better to have it start in 60 secs when it is done buffering, than in an hour when it is done downloading and I am then doing something else.
    DVDs are only purchased for cable shows that either I don’t subscribe to (FOTC, Dexter – sorry Showtime, I’m not paying your subscription rate for 13 hours of Dexter every ~two years, vs. one DVD), or I intend to foist upon people who don’t have cable, yet must be exposed to sheer greatness (Venture Bros!).
    I don’t think video-on-mobile will ever be a big deal; the draw seems to be limited to big city dwellers stuck on mass transit, teens/college kids that should be paying attention in class, etc. – where’s the mass market?

  • milpool

    I haven’t owned an actual television in three years.
    -
    I watch everything on my mac, mostly through the internet. Hulu is good for a handful of shows – megavideo fills in the rest, but I don’t subscribe to megavideo, so I can only watch 72 minutes at a time before a non-member delay appears and tells me I have to wait an hour to keep watching.
    -
    I find I have been able to track down almost any show through the internet, except HBO shows. I had to borrow shows like Sopranos and the Wire from a friend on DVD.
    -
    When I visit my parents home and watch television on the ol’ boob tube, I find I prefer a laptop with me. When a show – even an interesting show – slightly loses my interest – I surf the web.
    -
    But I watch television on a computer now. And with megavideo, I only typically have to wait an hour or so after an episode premieres to watch it.

  • http://kristin.eonline.com/ jengod

    Hulu, iTunes, Netflix streams. :)

    Mostly I just use them to catch up on seasons of shows I hadn’t watch before, and in the cases where the four TiVo tuners in our house can’t catch something (happens with some frequency), I try to find it online the morning after.

  • bgwynne

    I recently dropped all non-basic channels, subscribing only the most basic satellite package. I DVR as much as I can using two tuners (to watch later), but for anything I can’t squeeze in (Thursdays are always tough) or for any non-broadcast items, I find a way to stream or just grab a torrent. The AppleTV and Xbox360 (Netflix) are both lifesaving sources for movies and downloaded TV shows. Subscribing to TV RSS .net keeps me up to date when new shows came on, and I just grab anything I didn’t DVR. I can’t watch anything live – commercials are terrible, especially the trend towards boosting the volume with commercials over the last 5-10 years. Usually I’ll watch a show within 24 hours as others have said, if it has a community or there may be spoilers out there. But a lot of shows just go into the till and I’ll watch a few episodes at a time to get caught up.

  • alekshy

    As someone who fiddles with the bunny ears to get my one station (ABC) to come in, I’ve found the alternate ways to watch TV almost a saving grace for my television fixes. Unless it comes to watching Top Chef in 6 parts on YouTube…then I feel a little bit sad.
    .
    I never watch Lost when it’s live, instead I wait a day and watch it through my laptop, connected to my HDTV, through ABC’s website. With their high definition and full screen, it only makes sense to watch it a day after and avoid commercials.
    .
    There are just certain series (like Lost) that demand so much attention and emotional connections that breaking up each moment with commercials ruins it a bit. I can speed through episodes of Lost when commercials are taken out, via DVD or ABC.com.
    .
    I never thought that television would lead to my love for the library, but it has. Only until recently did I realize that the local library had many great shows on DVD to check out. I caught up on four seasons of Lost, both seasons (and special) of the original Office, and I get jittery with excitement when I walk through the doors to pick up another series for the price of free.

  • http://www.bookhopping.wordpress.com Molly

    Our household is pretty reliant on DVR. Most things that my husband and I watch together (The Office, 30 Rock, Scrubs, FNL), we either watch live or within a short period of time. The ones he doesn’t care about (Mad Men, Top Chef) I watch when I get the time. We use Hulu and iTunes occasionally, if we forget to record something, or if the DVR messes up. And because I’m compulsive about watching shows from the beginning, I rely on Netflix to catch up on anything I’m a latecomer to (HIMYM), as well as older shows (Freaks and Geeks), and HBO stuff (Big Love, John Adams).

  • jcb10

    I’ve been watching BSG on Hulu at work (during my lunch break!) on Saturday morning because I’m not usually home on Friday night.

    I freely admit to downloading BBC series off the Internet and then watching them on my iPhone or laptop during my hour-long bus ride home from work. I hate having to wait months to watch new episodes of “Doctor Who” or the SJA and would gladly pay for the privilege, but it’s not a legal option.

  • saritajuanita

    Last year I splurged and purchased a 24″ iMac and an Elgato eyeTV, and got rid of the TV in my room altogether. I tend to watch TV now in the evening while reading the news/blogs on the web. I open eyeTV in a window alongside the web browser. eyeTV allows you to cut commercials from episodes and export them out to iTunes, so for favorite shows I’ll crop the shows down and export them out for my iPhone for long plane flights or car trips. I also love Hulu, and use it to watch Bones, Life, etc. I’ve noticed that I stopped DVRing “The Daily Show” since I can just pull it up on Hulu the next morning, pick the “full screen” option and watch it on my computer while I get ready for work. Hulu is also great because I can watch some things in HD, which the eyeTV does not support, but my monitor does. I’m also a sucker for any free episodes of new shows on iTunes, and I’ve purchased episodes before if I missed them for some reason.

  • texgator

    I’m catching up on a lot of tv on Hulu. I’m currently watching every ep of “Arrested Development” (I became a fan in season 3 and recently decided to go back and watch all the previous episodes that I missed…now I know why they all live together in a model home in an unfinished housing development). I like Hulu because I can watch several episodes consecutively (as opposed to 1 episode per night on conventional tv or having to rent an entire series run from NetFlix), I get to watch a full-sized broadcast (not thumbnail-sized on my iPod), and its free! Of course there is the added benefit that it is prepping my brain for future consumption by Alec Baldwin-disguised aliens so its a win-win for everyone!

  • jonls

    As part of a family that does not have TiVo, my wife and I are sometimes forced to compromise on what show to watch – usually we will watch the favored show at its air time, and the second show online in the next day or two. Some shows that don’t do full episodes online we currently pirate online, and while piracy is generally bad and not something we practice, we feel like if a show as popular as Criminal Minds is not going to offer its episodes online when it goes up against Lost its just asking for us to drop it entirely.

    Other than on the laptop and broadcast tv we occasionally do dvds of older series that are serials and not terribly long.

  • maytinee369

    I tend to watch shows live on TV and use Hulu to catch up. Due to Monday night programming, I’ve stopped watching Chuck live and watch House instead. Why does Fox make Hulu wait a week? I used to watch T:SCC on Hulu as well, but with the Friday night switch, I’ll be sitting down to a nice chunk of live TV.

  • matcatjat

    I have stopped paying for all extra channels. I dvr as much as i can and now my new found pleasure is instant viewing from netflix. for 8.99 a month I can watch as many hours of instant viewing i want. I can do it online in the privacy of my own laptop or on my tv with the 99$ remote box. my family can instant view on their computers as well. i also watch most network shows on the network websites, although it is very frustrating that not all shows are available.

  • deepfrieddm

    I pretty much only watch TV on the internet/DVDs. I don’t even plan on owning a TV after I get rid of my current one (since it’s obsolete after the digital transfer). I’m so glad the television industry adapted to the internet in a way the recording industry completely screwed the pooch on.

  • Bemused

    The only things I watch live are snippets of CNN while I’m cooking, drying my hair, etc. Even if I’m in front of the TV when a football or baseball game I want to see starts, I let the DVR record it and turn it on at the start about an hour or so in to avoid the commercials. I rarely watch TV shows on the computer–I find it uncomfortable and I can’t eat or read magazines at the same time as easily. Plus, I spend enough time at my desk during the day; I look forward to putting my feet up in a different part of my place at night.

  • aleksontv

    I’m sort of weary of sitting at my desk to watch TV — it just isn’t as comfortable as actually sitting on your couch with remote in hand. I do occasionally stream shows I would otherwise have no interest watching or recording when they’re on TV, like Scrubs, or even sometimes House, but neither of those require me to watch *every* week, so there you go.

  • rhys1882

    Hulu and illegal downloads I play on my TV through a separate media player for digital formats.

  • rhys1882

    Hulu and illegal downloads I play on my TV through a separate media player for digital formats. Does on-demand count? DVR? Those too, but those seem like they are official TV now. Also on real, legal, DVDs through Netflix and also purchased as a whole set too.

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