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  2. Flixster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flixster

    Flixster was a North American social-networking movie website for discovering new movies, learning about movies, and meeting others with similar tastes in movies. It is currently owned by Fandango Media.

  3. FMovies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FMovies

    The site was created in 2016, [3] [7] and blocked from Google searches in December 2016. In November 2017, FMovies lost a lawsuit brought by Filipino media and entertainment group ABS-CBN, and was ordered to pay $210,000.

  4. Yidio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yidio

    Yidio was founded by Brandon and Adam Eatros in January 2008, and debuted in June that same year. [3] [11] In November 2009, Yidio raised $350,000 from angel investors Alan Warms, Jim Collis, Bill Luby, Jamie Crouthamel, and Lon Chow.

  5. Movie4k - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Movie4k

    The website provides a detailing listing of television programs and films, and aggregates the media content available on the Internet.Movie4k.to does not host any content, and instead acts as a search index for streaming sources.

  6. FilmRise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FilmRise

    FilmRise, is a New York–based film/television studio and streaming network. [1] [2] [3] As of November 2024, the FilmRise App has reported more than 31.5 million downloads in the U.S. and can be seen on Roku, Amazon Fire TV, Comcast, iOS, Android, Apple, Vizio, among many other platforms. [4]

  7. Free ad-supported streaming television - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_ad-supported...

    The FAST ecosystem has several layers. The best-known FASTs are the aggregators, which fall into three categories. FASTs owned by major media companies: Paramount's Pluto TV, Fox's Tubi, Charter Communications and Comcast's Xumo Play, Dish Network's Sling Freestream, ITV’s ITVX service, NEW ID's BINGE Korea, [3] Allen Media Group's Local Now, and Gray Television and National Association of ...

  8. Popcornflix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popcornflix

    Popcornflix was conceived in July 2010, and went into live beta in March 2011. The site primarily streamed independent feature films, many of which come from Screen Media's library. [3]

  9. Kanopy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanopy

    Kanopy is an on-demand streaming video platform for public and academic libraries that offers films, TV shows, educational videos and documentaries. [1] The service is free for end users, but libraries pay fees on a pay-per-view model, from which content owners and content creators are paid.