How It Works
Splitsider Presents is a digital comedy store selling great comedy directly to you. There are no hoops to jump through, and you don't need to hand over your identity. Buying is simple and straightforward; you don't need a credit card or an existing account. You can complete payment and be watching a show in seconds, choosing to pay via either Amazon or Paypal.
Splitsider keeps only 20% of the cost of the purchase after transaction, bandwidth and legal costs, with about 70% going directly to the artist.
You can stream your purchases on whatever device you like, or download them to your computer to keep forever in DRM-free file formats.
Purchase/Playback Info
For $5 you get 5 HD or SD DRM-free downloads and 3 streams, allowing you to watch on your computer or any other device. You can choose to pay via either Amazon or PayPal, and you'll be able to log into the site whenever you want to re-download or stream your purchases.
Need Help?
Buying and watching shows on Splitsider Presents should be simple, quick and undemanding, but if you run into trouble, we have an excellent <A href="http://splitsider.com/store/docs/help">help section and customer service</a> to assist you.
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On Community Recap: "Origins of Vampire Mythology"
I have to say I disagree with, well, everything you said. I love Community as much as the next guy (on the internet). That said, the opening scene at the table was definitely lacking some sort of gag and relying too much on old humor (Dean touches Jeff, Britta lacks all self-awareness, Troy/Abed pop culture reference). Every line of dialogue in the apartment was so telegraphed, I felt uncomfortable watching Gillian & Allison sludge through it. What hit for me, oddly enough, was Jeff's speech. Where early Jeff was manipulative and fake, the character is actually trying to grow as a person this season, and it reflects in the more self-affirmative, sincere speeches. It's a cool way of allowing a character to grow within the cyclical constraints of a television series. Dan Harmon, ladies & gentlemen. (Also, Gillian did kill this episode. I eagerly await the clip of her saying "A mother-flippin', carnie-banging junkie.") I'd get in a fight over my love of Dan Harmon, but I think he has to know Chevy isn't wrong about the show, at least any more than he is. Not every show needs an emotional hook, but it is at the heart of what makes Community so great (and well-loved). That's great for retaining viewers. Unfortunately, Community has to do more than retain right now. Team Compromise?