The DVD Rental Race Analyzed 306
Thomas Hawk writes "Netflix and Blockbuster have been locked in a price war with regards to the DVD rental space. Wedbush Morgan Equity Analyst Michael Pachter has a $3 dollar price target on Netflix and is in contrast bullish on Blockbuster. Davis Freeberg challenges Pachter's thinking that Netflix will be the loser in the DVD rental battle and Pachter himself responds back on his rationale on why he thinks Blockbuster has the advantage." From the article: "Irrespective of what Pachter thinks about the overall DVD rental business, Pachter's seemingly obvious prediction would appear pretty dire for Netflix. Pacther updated his price target for Netflix On 4/22/05 with the new $3 price. If Pachter is right, then we should expect to see Netflix's stock fall by approximately 75% over the next 12 months."
I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't know a single person that uses Netflix so that's rather difficult. I also haven't heard it *anywhere* other than on Slashdot. I wouldn't even know it existed otherwise.
Now go into your local Blockbuster Video store and ask the clerk there how he feels about his employer.
I have a feeling that they will have no comment... We all know what happens when you bite the hand that feeds you.
Netflix's customers are huge evangelists for the service and they view the service as fun, innovative and exciting -- not bad for a growing company with very little debt.
This guy is probably a customer for this young and new company w/o many subscribers (compared to Blockbuster). I really can't speak either way about it though as I have never used them myself.
Blockbuster on the other hand is a bloated company, with tons of debt, who is laying off it's employees, cutting back their hours, fending off a shareholder proxy fight with Carl Icahn, who has had their CEO recently announce that if he was not re-elected he would resign from the company.
Ok, yeah, it's bloated - along with plenty of other companies out there. I am not fan of Blockbuster and their tactics which include blatant lying to their customers and potential customers about their "no late fees" crap.
Cutting back hours? I don't know about that. I know of a couple Blockbusters around here and they are open the same hours they have been for years. At least you know that the movie rental places are open on Thanksgiving and Christmas.
In the long run, all three companies, Netflix, Movie Gallery and Blockbuster will face a tremendous battle to stay alive when Video on Demand becomes widely available, but in the short run, if you agree with Pachter, then you should short Netflix and use the proceeds to buy Blockbuster and Movie Gallery.
I'm not holding my breath for VoD, really, I'm not. Even if/when it does become "viable" I have a feeling it will continue to be expensive and a little bit behind the DVD release dates. I really don't see any advantage to VoD but then again I have ~6 different movie rental places within 5 miles of me. YMMV.
I realize that I am a bit different than most people when it comes to renting DVDs. I'd prefer to buy them. Target has great deals on movies (i.e. Pulp Fiction with extended crap for $10 and many random titles for $7.50). I spend a lot of time looking through the $5 bins at Walmart for movies. I also buy previously rented DVDs which are usually 3 or 4 for $20. I don't frequent Blockbuster as I always feel uncomfortable in their store. I prefer Hollywood Video because of their random titles that are $1 back if you return the movie within 24 hours.
So I really don't care if Blockbuster or Netflix do well or not but I certainly don't believe for a second that the sudden downfall of the rental business will come from VoD. Then again I'm not a market "analyst" blogging away about stock prices... I'm just a movie watcher that doesn't like to pay a whole hell of a lot to watch a movie once.
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:5, Interesting)
They have 1.5 million customers. Clearly somebody is using it. In our little corp headquarters office or 25 people I can think of 4 people who use it (myself included) and the other 3 are definitely not in the Slashdot demographic.
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:5, Insightful)
They have 3 million [marketwatch.com] subscribers, not 1.5 million (I hate to link to such a dire-sounding headline, but the article does have a lot of hard info). And their subscriber base is growing rapidly.
Every day at my office you can see a bunch of those red envelopes in the office inbox. And a lot of us that subscribe get them at home, so clearly there are more where I work than I even know about.
This is a popular service and one that people really like. One of the first things I learned when picking stocks is that the bottom line is the product has to be something people want. The quick test of any stock is to look around at what people are saying about the company, not from a business perspective but as customers. I have honestly heard the words "I love Netflix" more times in one week than I've probably heard the words "I love Blockbuster" in my entire life.
That doesn't mean the company's on the road to success, but it does mean they have the basic building blocks right. Blockbuster's really got nowhere to go but down at this point.
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:2)
They have 1.5 million customers.
They have 3 million subscribers, not 1.5 million
Wow! What a testament to the power of the Slashdot effect. They doubled their subscribers since the grandparent post!
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:2)
Um, over 3 million, actually.
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:4, Insightful)
If one in 6 working age americans used netflix that would be a customer base more like 30 million.
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:2)
I haven't entirely figured out why people got so worked up over this. As soon as they introduced the new policy, I went up to the counter and asked "So, what does this mean?" I got back the straight answer that it gives you up to two extra weeks to return your videos. I didn't even have to ask them to elaborate on what happens after that. It's just like the l
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:3, Interesting)
I worked at Blockbuster, and even while I was there, everyone hated working there. I suppose its better than fast food, but the pay sucks and so do the customers.
In the words of Randal Graves, "This job would be perfect, if not for the customers."
Yeah I worked there too (Score:5, Informative)
and yes it really REALLY sucked working there. The number one thing i couldnt figure out was why they would try to sell all that movie merchandising crap but it was a loss every damn month when they would put it at 99 cents clearance just to get rid of it piling up. also i hated how they would have us specifically mislead the customers for their rewards cards and return times.
Netflix Customers (Score:2)
In pheonix, my little sister does netflix (very much not a geek).
I do not use it, but I also do not use any rental agency (buy the dvd, comcast, and movie in those order).
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:2)
Almost everyone I know uses it exclusively, and likes it very much. They epecially like the variety they'd never be able to get from B'buster or Walmart.
I don't know a single person that uses Netflix so that's rather difficult. I also haven't heard it *anywhere* other than on Slashdot. I wouldn't even know it existed otherwise.
Did someone pay you to write this, or have you been living under a rock? (Or bot
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:2)
Then it hooked me like a crackrock in Compton.
I love it. I think it's right up there with Google (a few years back), Craigslist and eBaY--almost right up there with coffee and beer!
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:2)
Not sure about where you live, but here on the Central Coast of California, we're getting commercials for Netflix on TV. Also, BestBuy has given me fliers for it before.
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:3, Informative)
Even when they were a couple of bucks higher then blockbuster - i stayed loyal because they were the innovaters and still offered me great service.
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:5, Insightful)
So, for the price of basic cable I can get DVDs right to my doorstep, usually with no more than a day lag time. I can hold on to those movies, with no penalties. They have a selection that puts the "local" (30 mile one way trip) blockbuster to shame.
I think services like NetFilx will be able to find a niche if they want to - specifically with rural america (which is pretty big IIRC from the last election etc...).
With gas costs rising, do you want to drive 20+ miles to get to blockbuster, and then drive back, and then be locked into driving them back within a week (or 2 now?) or else fees? Gas is somewhere around $2.20 a gallon most places in the US.
I think the average gas mileage is 25MPG or so. So figure on average 3 gallons per trip out to blockbuster for many rural americans. That's 6 gallons once you return the movie. So, it cost you around $13 just for travel, not counting wear and tear on the vehicle or time. That one trip to blockbuster just about paid for a standard NetFlix monthly package, before you rent one video. And this assumes your time is worthless.
Of course, we try to make our blockbuster trip coincide with other shopping and such, but that's not always feasible, though the new extended time (I think, I haven't really looked at whatever the "end of late fees" became) it's a lot easier compared to the 2 day turn around time on new releases previously.
With more TV shows coming out on DVD a year later, and with our situation in the country, when the analog TV goes dark, we'll just up our NetFlix subscription. Better quality, better choice(4 analog tv stations on a good day), and no commercials.
So, I think NetFlix can do very well if they don't mind catering to the rural market.
Never heard of - Best Buy????? (Score:2)
You just might if you ever shopped at BestBuy or bought a DVD player there.
A mental excersize - do you think more than a few people just might be buying DVD players at Best Buy?
It's HUGE in southern california (Score:2)
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:2, Interesting)
I know exactly one person who uses netflix and he loves it. He was using it 5 years ago.
Cutting back hours? I don't know about that. I know of a couple Blockbusters around here and they are open the same hours they have been for years. At least you know that the movie rental places are open on Thanksgiving and Christmas.
I don't
Re:I'm no market analyst, just a movie watcher... (Score:2)
I have Time-Warner. Their advertising slogan is 'watch it when you want'. It should be 'watch it when our server isn't completely overbooked'. Pause the movie and you loose the connection. We lost 'AVP' 10 minutes from the end and couldn't finish watching it till the next day.
I'd much rather have the DVD.
Netflix needs to be acquired (Score:4, Insightful)
Who would buy them? Well Walmart is an obvious choice. The current offerring sucks. Barnes & Noble? Target? I'm sure there are others, these are the only ones that immediately jump to mind.
Re:Netflix needs to be acquired (Score:2)
They also have a lot of expensive real estate, payroll, and other costs associated with retail locations, which are becoming less and less relevent. Even if Blockbuster starts to dominate the mail order rental space, they're still saddled with the retail ball and chain -- which Netflix, etc., don't h
Re:Netflix needs to be acquired (Score:2)
Brick and mortar isn't going away any time soon. There's a lot more to the "shopping experience" than just driving to the store to buy something. Heck, my wife (and many others) can tell you that.
Re:Netflix needs to be acquired (Score:2)
Compare shopping for that really good movie at Blockbuster to shopping for that really good movie on Netflix.
Re:Netflix needs to be acquired (Score:2)
Re:Netflix needs to be acquired (Score:5, Insightful)
Netflix should get off their collective butts and start shopping around.
I keep reading people saying this, but my question is: Why? Every interview I read with the founder of Netflix says he's having a ball running the company as is, they're moderately successful, profitable (how many startups can you say THAT about?), and have a strong brand.
What would the deep pockets of wal-mart, amazon, or blockbuster give them? It's not like there's a lot of room for innovation in the online rental market. I go to the site and request a disc, they mail it to me, I mail it back. What sort of value added service are they going to provide, offer to mail me popcorn with my disc? Thanks but no thanks.
I think Netflix has a good thing going, and the founder has said repeatedly he is not going to get into a price war with blockbuster, he is going to compete on service.
Granted I'd love to see netflix do away with throttling [dirtynerdluv.org], but for my $18/month I'm happy.
Re:Netflix needs to be acquired (Score:3, Insightful)
All beside the point. Netflix isn't a mom-and-pop business that can stay open and independent as long as they have money coming in. They're a publically held company whose management holds their jobs at the pleasure of investors. None of those investors have seen any serious returns on the
Re:Compete on Service? (Score:2)
You can mail back multiple DVD's in a Netflix mailer as well BTW.
Re:Netflix needs to be acquired (Score:5, Insightful)
Netflix on the other hand has a much more flexible overhead structure. They have fewer customers? Well first, they KNOW how many fewer they have because they have subscribers and a predictable cash flow regardless of customer usage unlike Blockbuster. Second, if they get fewer customers they spend less on postage. Perhaps they reduce purchasing on new titles. At worst perhaps they lay off employees.
Netflix is a remarkably proficient business model. The biggest issue is that since they went Public in '02 they have become part of the beast that is stakeholder appeasement. They are a 'growth' stock. Shareholders want growth so a company has to invest in infrastructure, marketing, promotions and everything under the sun to show revenue growth. It frankly doesn't matter if the growth is done smartly as long as it's not slowly. The board of directors gets pressue for stock growth, which bears pressure on the CEO for that same growth (who is beholden to their own income (ie options) to show growth). The days of developing a solid income stock company are dead. Profits be damned if revenues grow by 19.5%!! Who cares if you lost 100 million in a quarter. Anyway, that's all a tangent rant but suffice to say that because Amazon posted losses during their growth years doesn't mean the business model won't work. It also doesn't mean there's no place in the market for retail when a web service is available.
I have both (currently) (Score:2)
Blockbuster is better on price, and 2 free instore rentals per month.
I'm dropping Blockbuster.
I went to cancel BB once already, and they acknowledged the poor selection and availability. They gave me a free month. Still going to cancel at the end of the free.
The Other Kind of DVD Rental Race (Score:5, Interesting)
I wonder how quickly Blockbuster returns videos for what percentage of the population as compared to Netflix?
Re:The Other Kind of DVD Rental Race (Score:2)
Lackluster video has only a handful of distribution centers. The same is true of Walmart and others.
Re:The Other Kind of DVD Rental Race (Score:2)
I knew Netflix was good, but I didn't know they were THAT good!
From my experience, if I get the discs into the mail Monday morning, they'll be waiting for me when I get home Wednesday night.
Re:The Other Kind of DVD Rental Race (Score:2)
WOW! That's impressive!?!?!?
Re:The Other Kind of DVD Rental Race (Score:2)
Yeah, I'm adicted, so?
Re:The Other Kind of DVD Rental Race (Score:5, Informative)
I assume that Blockbuster is the same way. If not, then they're in serious trouble. I'm not going to say it's easy to achieve on a large scale, but they'd better not be any slower and I bet they can't be any faster.
I don't usually get 48 hour return time, even thoug my local distributor is only an hour's drive from here. But that's mostly the post office adding an extra travel day on one end or the other.
One could choose to alter their model to allow even faster service; say, the ability to request that a movie be sent when you put it in the mail, rather than when they get it, and trust you to be honest (and drop you if you're not). But that would involve them letting out more movies at once, which would cost them more.
Blockbuster could add service whereby you could exchange either by mail or at their place. That might work well for them, since it would mean that they could batch up returns. Mailing costs have got to be a huge chunk of Netflix's cost, since those recipient-pays envelopes have a significant surcharge. A big box of returns would cost only a few dollars. But that would mean making more copies available at the individual stores...
Depends on what Netflix hub you go through (Score:2)
Re:The Other Kind of DVD Rental Race (Score:2)
Re:The Other Kind of DVD Rental Race (Score:3, Informative)
Last month I went through 15 movies, which could've cost me $45-60 to rent locally (assuming I could even find that many movies worth watching amidst the rows upon rows of garbage), but instead was only $15.
I used to split Netflix with my roommates in school...but I have to say I went with BB on my own because of the price and the two free movie/game local rental cou
Re:The Other Kind of DVD Rental Race (Score:3, Informative)
I was talking to an employee at the Blockbuster store by our house (when we were using one of our 2 free monthly in-store rentals, which are handy when you want something on a whim) says they're in talks with the USPS to have them scan the returning DVD's when they receive them, so that they can send outgoing ones before the returning ones even arrive at the dis
Netflix could easily match that though (Score:2)
That's an interesting idea, but Netflix could pretty easily match it if they go forward with the plan - just let consumers indicate when they've dropped the disc in the mail and send off another right then.
They already do something simialr if you report a disc damaged or incorrect, they mail off another right a
Re:The Other Kind of DVD Rental Race (Score:2)
I get the 5 at a time deal and average about 5 movies per week
Re:The Other Kind of DVD Rental Race (Score:2)
Re:The Other Kind of DVD Rental Race (Score:2)
I also live in Louisville, and my DVDs came addressed to a PO box in Louisville.
Last summer the service was great. 48 hour turn-around.
This fall it got krappy, somewhat less than 3.0 DVDs per week, they only seemed to ship on Tuesday or Thursday, so that set the ceil at 3/week, and one disc was always mislabeled or MIA or scratched or some other bull. We decided to cancel.
Netflix (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Netflix (Score:2)
Re:Netflix (Score:2, Interesting)
I have been one of their early customers and I must be responsible for at least 7 or 8 other Netflix accounts being open.
I agree they have excellent selection. Service, on the other hand... what are you smoking ?
I am a high-turnover user. I have been born and raised in a former communist country and only came here some years ago, so I have never had the opportunity to see almost any good movie until I moved to the US
hmmmmm (Score:2)
Comcast being better than a rental company sounds oxymoronic, but its possible. I somehow think there will be more wrinkles in the plot before this falls out to a two horse race.
Re:hmmmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Really? Do you think you'll be able to watch the movie as many times as you want in a given period for a fixed fee? Can you "lend" your copy to a friend? I'm also pretty sure that they will devise some way to "force" you to watch advertising (granted, DVDs do this too, but it appears that may be changing based on recent proposed legislation).
I'm sorry, but I believe that saying Video on Demand will replace DVDs is a lot like saying eBooks will replace paper (and I'm a big eBook proponent).
Re:hmmmmm (Score:2)
Streaming is not better than renting! (Score:2)
I will always continue to rent. I will never pay to stream. There are a few reasons why. If I rent, I can watch anytime, pause, stop, come back the next day if I want. If the movie is really good, I can watch it a second time for free. I physically have the media in my hand.
If it streams, how long can I pause it for? What if I f
Re:Streaming is not better than renting! (Score:2)
Re:hmmmmm (Score:2)
VOD is only for the average Joe that watches Hollywood blockbusters and mainstream movies on a 31 inch 4:3 format TV.
Anything but (Score:2)
I would say that video on demand would be the winner if anyone but cable companies were feeding it up.
The great thing about a DVD is that you can watch it in a lot of places. Cable Video On Demand is carefully protected so you can only watch it in a few. And DVD's are generally a little more random access with more features than any video on demand I've seen.
I agree video on demand wi
Investment Rule (Score:4, Insightful)
Second rule in investment is never say a stock can go no lower. The trip to zero is a hard fall at any price.
First rule, you probably are wondering, is: buy low and sell high.
Re:Investment Rule (Score:2)
Stock never actually hits zero. 1/128th of a cent, yes. But never zero. (And yes, I do remember a company trading for about that price at one point)
adult (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:adult (Score:4, Informative)
Re:adult (Score:2)
Re:adult (Score:2, Informative)
Re:adult (Score:2)
illegal in some places (Score:4, Informative)
Re:illegal in some places (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:adult (Score:2)
Porn is the cash cow of the video rental industry. While it might take up 10% of the floor space it makes more than half the profit.
Forget Blockbuster renting porn. IMO it won't happen unless they get bought out. Rumor has it the Mormon church owns a chunk of them but I have no idea if that's true or not.
As for Netflix though I could see them moving into it if things get difficult. Think of it as their "nuclear option". While they'll catch crap from
Re:adult (Score:2)
Considering brick-and-mortar rental stores have made money over renting pr0n for a great while now, a lot of people would answer "yes" here.
One important thing Michael Pachter is missing (Score:5, Insightful)
Blockbuster pissed me off so bad in the 1990's I haven't rented from them in several years, nor would I even consider renting from them if they charged less than half what Netflix did.
Check out the other people they pissed off:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=blockbuster+
Re:One important thing Michael Pachter is missing (Score:2)
It's obvious that the late return customers will get upset at the idea of being charged the full replacement price of a movie after seven days after the due date, but the extended return grace period has a bigger effect in that people are keeping titles out longer.
I'm currently on the "movie pass" program which a
Embrace the technology (Score:2, Interesting)
War of attrition (Score:5, Interesting)
Blockbuster is a fat cow. Netflix will die by the very sword they have drawn.
Offer what the others don't, and offer it at a good price. It doesn't have to be the lowest. I buy from NewEgg not because they have the best price, but because I get what I ask for and they are quick to fix it if I don't.
Re:War of attrition (Score:2)
Re:War of attrition (Score:2)
And not a moment too soon. At their stores I've been to their selection sucks and service is worse. There was once almost a riot when the line went to the back of the store and the manager didn't put more people on the registers.
An example about their selection - a friend once tried to rent some movie and was told they didn't stock it because it had a black/white love scene. And it's not like we're in the Bible Belt, either - this was on the Upper West Side i
Re:War of attrition (Score:2)
Re:War of attrition (Score:2)
Tell me about it. Whatever happened to the 8-out at a time for $40 plan? That is ideal for my summer vacations - I hate watching TV, but boy can I burn through a season of Deep Space 9 or Sex and the City in a couple of days. Now the best they can do is 3-out at a time, but it's not quite enough to meet my needs as well as the rest of my family who wants to rent actual movies.
I can't wait until they have a legal t
no no no.... (Score:5, Funny)
Thumbs up on Netflicks (Score:2)
Financial analysts (Score:5, Insightful)
Beating the Street, a good read (Score:5, Informative)
I took Peter Lynchs advice as the best. His whole opinion of stocks boils down to one question: "Do I like their product, their service, the way they treat me", "Will I be buying from them again, and like it", "Will other people like them". He says, if you anwser yes to these questions, chances are you have a good company. Lynch said the best companies he invested in, the big ten-bangers, were companies he really liked, or noticed other people liked.
People can read all about P/E ratio, how fast a company is growing, and the rest. But this will not tell you who will suceed. These numbers should just tell you if there is a red flag, if a company could collapse on itself.
It all boils down to a good product. Price is very important, but if someone sells you crap, or bad service, people will not buy from them, and their buisness is doomed.
Re:Beating the Street, a good read (Score:2)
Peter Lynch was not interested in what HE liked personally, he was interested in what people in general liked. That's why he invested in barbers who did a bad job of cutting his hair. (but only after a lot of thinking) That's why his favorite strategy was take his daughters to the mall. When his daughters bypassed GAP completely one day he knew in advance GAP was going to have a bad quarter.
Both studied those financial reports in depth. They both made sure the management was good. However before a
In my experience (Score:5, Interesting)
Compare that to Blockbuster that gave me about a 18 day turn around. About 9 days to get my returned DVDs. About 9 days to get new ones back. It was ludicrous! Here's an even better example: Two months after quitting I get an email saying they finally received one of the DVDs I had sent out OVER two months prior!
Blockbuster is SO bad I seriously think it's a ploy to make internet/DVD rental services look back to protect their brick and mortar stores.
Re:In my experience (Score:3, Informative)
And the winner is... THE CUSTOMER! (Score:5, Funny)
The only reason Blockbuster ever used to charge those late fees is because, gosh, it's what customers wanted. And now that customers want something different, Blockbuster is responding to demand.
You can look forward to a ever-brighter future of more and more choice, lower prices, and, of course, better movies.
Because... everything is for the best in this best of all possible worlds.
VOD (Score:2)
I too hate BlockBuster, got burned to the tune of $40 after retuning a video to the wrong blockbuster, so the main reason I'm sticking with Netflix is for fear of the dark side. I don't think Blockbuster can compete with Video On Demand in the future, the doubters sound like long distance phone companies about five yea
Re:VOD (Score:2)
Anecdotes are useless to judge service. But I'll give one anyway ;). They've never lost a disc. They've never sent me a wrong disc. I've rented well over 300 DVDs and have only 1 scratched disc. They're service slowed a little last month, for about two weeks, but it sped right back up to the typical turnaround (return on Mon
Re:VOD (Score:2)
Yeah, you're right, we should just rely on the obviously accurate marketing materials and press releases put out by the company. I mean, I don't know how I'd live without my copy of Duke Nuke'm Forever and New Coke.
Missing the boat (Score:2)
DVD Evangelism (Score:4, Insightful)
what about Canada? (Score:2)
Re:what about Canada? (Score:2, Informative)
You'd be bloated too (Score:2, Informative)
Why can't I rent Music CDs? (Score:2, Interesting)
totally different labor force and advantage (Score:2)
Netflix can hire anyone (and just temporarily too if they want) to push discs and envelopes under a barcode scanner, attach labels, etc. Anyone can do this, and it's a no obligation job. No personal skills needed, or asked. Replaceable in a second.
On the other hand, to work at a video store, you have to be the type of person who likes movies, can interact tolera
Netflix Totally Gets It (Score:3, Interesting)
Netflix, Amazon, Google, Apple and others get this, while, for example, Enterprise Rent-A-Car definitely does not. See http://www.failingenterprise.com/ [failingenterprise.com].
Both have physical distribution - Netflix wins (Score:5, Interesting)
The reality of physical distribution nodes is that Netflix has a lot - they are called distribution centers! In fact they are far better off than Blockbuster in that regard.
Yes for perhaps 10-20 titles you might get stuff a little faster at Blockbuster. However a lot of stuff people rent is not going to be something carried at your average Blockbuster - and then the advantage of Netflix becomes apparent, in that you are going to get ANY movie no matter how obscure pretty quickly. Not just the 10-20 post popular at the moment.
So basically Blockbuster has a lot of distribuition centers, but with poor stock. You can think of it like a really badly run cache management scheme, where Netflix fares much better.
And both are just idling until online distribution takes place in large quantities - I'll bet that Netflix is more nimble in this regard.
Netflix + Tivo (Score:2)
Basically, the first company to figure that out will get my money.
Neither (Score:3, Interesting)
Blockbuster (at least their retail locations) are terrible. They have a horrible selection that concrentrates only on crap released in the last two months. The prices are insane and the employees utterly clueless.
Netflix has a much better selection, but it's still lacking. I don't get to select exactly what I want due to the list system and quite frankly I'm pretty damn picky about what I'm in the mood for. The turnaround time is also pretty bad. I want to select the movie that I feel like watching now, not a movie that I kinda want to see so I'll leave it around the house for a week or two until I'm in the mood and want to watch a movie.
My local video store, however, has a great selection (though anime fans may appreciate their huge selection I'm far less appreciative when they shove aside horror to make room for it), generally knowledgable employees, excellent prices (almost everything is $2 for 5 days, new releases are $3 for 3 days, a few are $1 for 5 days) and are cunningly located (the main location is next to the cheap pizza place, they're also smart enough to have a drop-off bin on campus). One of the few times they haven't had something that I asked about the employees said "Wow.. we don't have Foo? I can't believe that, we need to order it." Lo and behold it was on the shelf there not long after. It's also the little things. If a film is not a new release, but rather an older film just recently released onto DVD it does not go on the new release wall like so many other locations. The owner once dropped off my lates fees when I went to pay them off citing that they were only a few hours late. Employees regularly let me skirt the drop-off time (ingeniously 7pm so that the new movies are on the shelves when you come by to rent) if I'm a little bit late. They carry porn (though a really crappy selection and heavy on hentai).
I could go on and on, but quite frankly a good local shop will always win out over either a giant, crappy chain or a mail-order service in terms of giving the goods. Now, if you want something really obscure (not everyone is blessed with a store that has their own Troma section or carries the Short Films of David Lynch box) Greencine or some other option might help you find what you're looking for, but I doubt it'll be a primary rental location.
Blockbuster censors movies, Neflix doesn't (Score:4, Informative)
Maybe I'm 'misunderestimating' the maturity of the average American, but I think that as long as Blockbuster and Walmart have crappy policies like this, there will be a nice niche for the comparatively corageous Netflix.
Re:I just use On Demand (Score:5, Interesting)
At least with a DVD, I can play anamorphic Widescreen with 480 progressive scan DVD player and get something that looks half-way like the movie in the theatre. DVD still has artifacts, but they aren't nearly as bad as Video on Demand.
Re:I just use On Demand (Score:2)
Re:First Post (Score:5, Informative)
But the real value is in the selection. Netflix stocks a lot of things that aren't easily found locally. If the price becomes too low, they won't be able to afford buying anything but the most in demand titles. That would suck.
Finally, I did a free trial w/ Blockbuster. They were missing an entire season of one of the Star Treks (a middle season like season three or four -- I can understand not having the last season, but why have 1,2,3,__,5
So, while I don't think of myself as Netflix zealot -- I will become one if it means keeping Blockbuster from dominating the DVD by mail rental market.
Re:Dvds by mail. (Score:3, Interesting)
The millions who have signed up for these services, who else moron! And let me ask you this, is the movie going to suck after a three day wait? A great movie is a great movie whether it's Monday or Wednesday.
And you don't even understand the service, you're constantly getting movies. For example, I'm getting about 14 movies a week for less than 70 cents a movie. Does your local store offer that kind of deal?
And lastly, does your local v
Re:What about Online Downloads? (Score:2)
Or even VOD + Broadband, but they always want to force cable on you. And I really think many younger people would have a difficult time caring less about cable now adays - crap on it, and interrupted by commercials that you get to *pay* for? Sign me up lol.