u/Professional_Fig6820

"A course that is interesting, open and dynamic": Organizers expect Pogacar to face tough competition at home European Championships

"A course that is interesting, open and dynamic": Organizers expect Pogacar to face tough competition at home European Championships

Pogacar is faced with an opportunity to equal Peter Sagan's record of three consecutive world titles on a familiar course in Montreal, but perhaps even more intriguing to the 27-year-old will be his home European Championships in Ljubljana.

cyclinguptodate.com
u/Professional_Fig6820 — 11 hours ago
▲ 118 r/netflix

You just became the new CEO of Netflix. What’s the first feature you’d eternally remove from its app?

For me, it would be certain genres and recommendation categories, like Teen, Teen TV Shows, and stuff like that.

Not just “show me less of this,” because Netflix still finds a way to sneak it back in. I mean a real setting where I can say: I’m not interested in this category, don’t recommend it, don’t put it on my homepage, don’t keep pushing it, simply NEVER show it again!

What’s the first thing you’d take down or change?

reddit.com

Since when are creators supposed to give viewers exactly what they want? If you haven’t watched Hide and Seek / The Chestnut Man Season 2 and still plan to, stop reading now. This thread is full of spoilers.

I’ve seen people say the show was ruined because the creators killed off one of the main actors halfway through. Honestly, I’m on the complete opposite side.

Since when are writers supposed to just give the audience whatever it wants? That kind of move is exactly what can make a show interesting. Let creators take risks. Let them make people uncomfortable. Let them kill off characters if that’s where the story goes.

Not every shocking decision is bad writing. Sometimes that’s the whole point.

Do you know any other shows that had the bottle to pull this off?

reddit.com
u/Professional_Fig6820 — 8 days ago
▲ 126 r/netflix

We’re looking for the ones that were a complete waste of time — and why. Not just “bad.”

  • Did the ending ruin it?
  • Did it drag on too long?
  • Did the writing fall apart?
  • Poor acting?
  • ...

Mine might not be an obvious pick, but I’d say Clickbait. I didn't even make it to the end tbh.

There’s a scene early on where the sister seems more upset about a bread machine than about her brother’s death. That completely took me out of it. For me, that’s either weak acting or poor direction — and once that credibility is gone, it’s hard to stay invested.

reddit.com
u/Professional_Fig6820 — 21 days ago