Premiere episode online now!
It's been on YouTube (temporarily) and Netflix. The blogs have been full of speculation and links to online promos (heck, we even have a couple on our site, Studio 60 TV Show.com).
Everybody's been looking for a way to get a sneak peek at the "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip" premiere episode before it airs next week.
Guess what!
AOL is NOW SHOWING the premiere episode, without commercials. Well, not exactly -- AOL will have a light, flaky crust of online advertising, for your distracting pleasure. But the premiere is THERE for the watching.
Studio 60 - AOL Television
Here's an article on Mediapost that mentions Studio 60 and number of other shows that AOL plans to debut before their air dates.
Sneak peeks of the series were kind of fun when it was someone posting the video in crummy pieces on YouTube. The Netflix release seemed like a bit of a come-on to get new subscribers (but then we all knew that, and subscribed anyway). But now that die-hard Studio 60 pre-fans sold their souls to the Netflix database, the AOL thing seems a little bit uncool.
Give your opinion: Will this slick, smooth, ad-free pre-airing suck the anticipation and energy out of the Studio 60 premiere? What do you think this means for TV?
For those of you who don't want to spoil your Studio 60 Premiere Night on Sept. 18th, don't go to AOL. Heck, have you seen the
2003 Charlie Rose interview with Aaron Sorkin on Google Video yet?
Everybody's been looking for a way to get a sneak peek at the "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip" premiere episode before it airs next week.
Guess what!
AOL is NOW SHOWING the premiere episode, without commercials. Well, not exactly -- AOL will have a light, flaky crust of online advertising, for your distracting pleasure. But the premiere is THERE for the watching.
Studio 60 - AOL Television
Here's an article on Mediapost that mentions Studio 60 and number of other shows that AOL plans to debut before their air dates.
Sneak peeks of the series were kind of fun when it was someone posting the video in crummy pieces on YouTube. The Netflix release seemed like a bit of a come-on to get new subscribers (but then we all knew that, and subscribed anyway). But now that die-hard Studio 60 pre-fans sold their souls to the Netflix database, the AOL thing seems a little bit uncool.
Give your opinion: Will this slick, smooth, ad-free pre-airing suck the anticipation and energy out of the Studio 60 premiere? What do you think this means for TV?
For those of you who don't want to spoil your Studio 60 Premiere Night on Sept. 18th, don't go to AOL. Heck, have you seen the
2003 Charlie Rose interview with Aaron Sorkin on Google Video yet?


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