Cheddar is partnering with StackCommerce to bring you the Cheddar Shop. This article doesn’t constitute editorial endorsement, and we earn a portion of all sales.
With the plethora of streaming content out there, we often wind up spending more time flipping through titles than we do enjoying the show or movie we (finally) end up choosing. It’s not always to our satisfaction, either. How many times have you scrolled endlessly, only to be disappointed with your selection? Or you might find yourself mindlessly picking up your phone and starting to scroll soon after the opening credits.
Upgrade your next movie night with the CuriosityStream HD Plan: Lifetime Subscription. The award-winning streaming service features thousands of documentaries covering myriad topics. No dull docs here: CuriosityStream fuses top-tier storytelling and dazzling visuals for a viewing experience so immersive, you won’t even think about your IG feed.
Launched by John Hendricks, the media visionary behind Discovery Communications, CuriosityStream features documentaries across topics like history, nature, science, lifestyle and content for kids, including exclusive original programming. Tune into documentaries from experts like David Attenborough, whose segments dive deep into nature all around the world, as well as Michio Kaku and Brian Greene, who specialize in space, time and the future. New content is added weekly, so you’ll never run short on shows.
Watch in HD on your TV, smartphone, desktop or tablet. Use the download feature to ensure you can watch your shows anywhere, even without an internet connection. The smart features are super user friendly, too. Bookmark shows for later, resume watching a program on different devices, plus rate your favorite programs for personalized recommendations. CuriosityStream is also available on popular viewing platforms including Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV 4, Roku, Xbox One and more devices
Millions of subscribers already tune in to the world’s best documentaries on CuriosityStream, which boasts a 4.7-star rating on the Apple Store, 4.3-star rating on the Google Play store, plus 4 stars on PCMag. This catalog of documentaries, available for unlimited streaming, simply can't be beat.
Get the CuriosityStream HD Plan: Lifetime Subscription for $149.99 (Reg. $250), a savings of 40%.
This week's episode of Cheddar's Crypto Craze tackles the latest news and trends in this emerging market. Dropbox files to go public. The dow closes the week up more than 300 points. TV personality Kelly Killoren Bensimon is out with a fur slipper line.
Hanneke Weitering, staff writer at Space.com, discusses SpaceX's launch of the Falcon 9 rocket that carried a Spanish imaging satellite and two demo Starlink broadband test satellites. With this technology, SpaceX hopes to provide high speed, low cost energy across the globe.
Weight Watchers is getting slammed after offering a free membership promotion for teenagers. Project Heal's Kristina Saffran joins Cheddar to discuss the effects early dieting can have on young people's health and wellness.
Cody Gough, podcast host at Curiosity.com, discusses new studies that reveal why we may not want to be around people when we're sick. He also describes the physical characteristics that tell people when we're feeling under the weather.
I-han Chou, senior editor at Nature, discusses a new study about adolescence and how that period of your life influences adulthood.
Concerns over electronics' batteries overheating and potentially exploding have been circling for some time, reaching a head with Samsung's massive recall of its Note Seven phones. That is why KULR Technologies has created technology that protects batteries and material for everything from electric cars to NASA spaceships.
Facebook is back under the microscope for failing to stop the spread of fake news. Sara Fischer, media reporter for AXIOS, joins to explain how the big tech companies are, or are not, addressing the problem.
Extreme weather across the nation this week. New York City, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C. experiencing record high temperatures. Meanwhile, parts of Washington state and Denver are seeing record lows. Mashable's Andrew Freedman explains how the polar vortex split is causing wild weather coast to coast.
Temperatures in Washington, D.C., hit 82 degrees on Wednesday, while the West Coast braced for record lows. Andrew Freedman, senior science editor at Mashable, says a "polar vortex split" is partly to blame.
On Between Bells: Talking to kids about gun violence, Dallas Mavericks under fire, restaurant servers fight tip-pooling laws, and more. With Eater, Parents Magazine, and Popular Science.
Load More