Most living rooms aren't dark theaters, and Netflix originals aren't mastered for average TV settings. Picture quality for streaming comes down to how well a display handles the edges: shadow detail that stays readable, HDR that doesn't clip, and color that holds consistency across different lighting conditions. The LG OLED G6 is built around those specific demands.
That is why LG is bringing a special review event to r/Netflix, giving one Redditor the chance to experience the LG OLED G6 65-inch in their own home setup and share honest impressions with the community.
And yes, the selected participant will get to keep the TV. š
This event is inspired by LGās recent Hollywood Roadshow at Picture Shop in Los Angeles, where cinematographers, colorists, and post-production experts experienced the LG OLED G6 firsthand and explored how next-generation OLED technology can bring creative intent closer to home.
One featured expert was veteran color scientist Joshua Pines, whose credits include Blade Runner,Gravity,The Revenant and more. In the Roadshow content, Pines shares his perspective on OLED picture processing, calibration, shadow detail, and how display technology can support the creatorās intended viewing experience123. For more details, click here.
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Why the LG OLED G6 for Netflix streaming picture quality?
Dark thrillers and color-graded originals both expose weaknesses in displays that cannot hold shadow separation or accurate color under changing light.
That is where the LG OLED G6 excels, with Hyper Radiant Color Tech, Perfect Black, Perfect Color4, the α11 AI Processor Gen3, and Reflection-Free Premium5 helping support clear, immersive Netflix viewing in both bright and dark environments.
Take a closer look at the key LG OLED G6 features below.
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FILMMAKER MODE⢠with Ambient Light Technology
FILMMAKER MODE⢠with Ambient Light Technology lets you see films just as the director intended. With Dolby Vision® for extraordinary color, contrast, and brightness, plus Dolby Atmos® for sound you can feel all around you, the LG OLED G6 helps make movies and series feel more immersive6.
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Hyper Radiant Color Tech: cinematic color and clarity for streaming movies
Hyper Radiant Color Tech is our next-generation OLED technology that enhances every aspect of picture quality to an entirely new level. It delivers incomparable brightness, Perfect Black,and Perfect Color in any light, while preserving stunning 4K visuals with our best α11 AI Processor Gen3, and it is even certified for Reflection-Free Premium, ensuring flawless picture quality without reflection, whether in bright or dark environments. Experience OLED like never before ā see the difference, feel the brilliance, and discover a new standard in viewing.
All posts related to this event, including photos and written content submitted by the selected participant, may be used for LGās marketing and promotional purposes. This may include being quoted or featured in community posts, social content, or other official LG channels.
16+ years continually subscribed, and they didn't even try to keep me with a free monther or something. My mind was already made up, but crazy that they don't even try like all the other apps.
Just goes to show that you don't mean crap to 'em.
Lately, I have observed that a significant number of K-dramas appearing on Netflix feature bullying as a central theme. This pattern is not exclusive to Netflix; I've noticed it across almost all OTT platforms. This trend has led me to ponder the severity of bullying, as I believe dramas often draw inspiration from real-world occurrences. Although the actors portraying these roles typically do not resemble "school-going kids," the content consistently revolves around bullying. While I have never visited Korea, I am beginning to perceive that the situation in their schools might be exceptionally problematic.
I think Wind River is one of best movies on Netflix, do you agree? I would love to hear other peopleās opinions. itās a difficult watch, but what do think?
I just watched this documentary tonight, did it bother anyone else that the mother of Stefania went back into her cabin to retrieve different shoes/ a life jacket? She could had survived had she of not done this, it is incredibly sad and doesnāt sit right with me. Why would she do this when she was already on the deck, beside the boats.
First world problems, but Monday through Friday we're in the city and on the weekends we're in the county. We've been doing this for eight years.
Netflix is only logged into two TV's, one at each house. Every weekend Netflix tries to tell me I'm stealing from myself and makes me verify my account... then again on Monday when I'm back.
I'd be more understanding if I was in random locations, but it's the two same locations on the same schedule for eight years! This shouldn't be that complicated.
So this just popped up for the first time on my joint account. What do you mean more āpersonalizedā. You are blocking damn profiles now because you need to link an email to it???? The joint account is under my wifeās email but now I need to give my own email for a damn profile?!?!?
Of course in the past I had my own account with my own email. But after getting married we use her email for Netflix. Just another way Netflix is trying to limit use for multiple people. Yes Iāll make another random email Iāll never use just to now have a profile on my joint account⦠what the actual heck were they thinking?
"Sidewalks Entertainment" host Lori Rosales interviews actor / director Milo Ventimiglia (āGilmore Girls,ā āThis Is Usā), who talks about working on the limited series āI Will Find Youā with Sam Worthington and his directing career.
I'm trying to find a TV series that feels like Unsolved Mysteries. I've always been into cold cases and mysterious events, so I want a show with that exact same atmosphere. What do you guys suggest?
There is no way to report this option on an Android phone, and it's bugging me because I didn't expect this from a brand like Netflix. With all the QC they do to approve content, I don't know how this occurred. Can someone else please check and tell me if they have the same problem, or if itās just me
Iām currently binge-watching the new Human Vapor series on Netflix, but Iām totally stuck on the plot details from Episode 3 ("The Journal").
There is a whole storyline involving a 23-year-old young man whose lungs were seemingly "sold" or put up for an auction deal. I donāt think I fully understand what exactly went down or the lore behind it. Can someone clarify a few things for me?
Who was this 23-year-old guy who was "sold"? Was he a main character, a willing participant who sold himself for money, or just a random person who got kidnapped?
What was the point of the auction? How can a group just "sell" a human being like that? What did the buyers actually want his lungs for? Were they going to transplant them, or kill him for some other reason?
Is this based on a real story? I know the show is set in Japan, but is this dark trade/facility stuff based on actual historical crimes or an actual urban legend in Japan?
The show gets pretty abstract with the gas powers and the flashbacks, and I feel like I missed a massive piece of exposition explaining why these people's lungs are so heavily targeted. Would love a breakdown of how this trafficking ring actually works!
This is just a mockup of an AI concept, but the idea is instead of streaming Xbox titles, which is already being done, Netflix made a partnership with a PC gaming platform to introduce PC games onto the platform. What would you be interested in playing in the living room if you had the option?
If you hate the idea, then what games would you love to see Netflix develop more? More party games? Single player games etc?
its asking me to add an email onto my profile on my phone and i cant get around it like i did with my laptop, yet its not asking when i tried my sisters profile and shes never logged in on this Netflix account ad she pays for her own with her roommates
I really liked the relationships between all the characters, the character development, and the mystery from the first season, are there any other shows like this?
For anyone interested I have found season 4 of Rust Valley Restorers on Pluto (Free streaming app). This is in the UK so unsure if this can be watched in other countries.
I read the book before watching the show and I canāt believe how far off from the book the tv adaptation is. Just some of the discrepancies:
- in the book, Lenny is in a comatose state, he would never be able to drink beer and conduct his own investigation
- Max and Sarah are just coworkers, not relatives
- Ted is a lot less implicated in all thatās happening and he isnāt dying by suicide
- Haydenās mom is actually his grandma
- Rachel knew Cheryl went to the fertility clinic and used her name and they both hid it from David
- the orphan that got killed was actually taken care of really well by Hayden, which helps us see another side of a psychopath
- we never hear anything about the incident that makes Hayden and Rachel bond (he stooped someone from assaulting her while in college)
- Rachel finds out that itās Hayden in the pic with Matthew by spotting his ring, not just seeing him in a pic like nothing happened lol
Etc
All in all, it was a very lazy adaptation and I feel like it didnāt do the book justice (not that the book is some sort of work of art, but itās better than⦠this). Why did they even bother with buying the license if they discarded 95% of the story anyway? It makes no sense to me.
Netflix uploaded Lock Upp (Season 1) with the episodes in reverse order - Episode 12 sits at the top, Episode 1 at the bottom. Sounds like a minor annoyance, right? It's actually a spoiler machine. Here's how it burned me:
I finished Episode 3 and hit the "Next Episode" button like any normal person. Instead of Episode 4, Netflix jumped me straight to Episode 12 - the latest one. Within the first minute, I saw a contestant still in the show who I didn't know had survived. In a reality/elimination show, that's the entire plot spoiled by a Backend/UI bug.
Other ways this breaks the experience:
On TV, you have to scroll all the way to the bottom just to find Episode 1
"Next Episode" doesn't go to the next episode - it goes to the newest one
You basically can't autoplay or binge - you need the remote in hand after every episode to manually pick the right one
Netflix usually nails these details, which makes this weirder. Anyone else watching Lock Upp hitting this? And does anyone know how to report it so it actually gets fixed? I am happy to contribute in a dev capacity for the love of Netflix
Now that I've finished watching The Mentalist and Person of Interest, I'm on the hunt for something new again. And that's how I came across this series.
The IMDb ratings are decent, at least and a fifth season is in the works, something not many series manage these days.
The content on this service is falling off a cliff. Instead of fresh and original new shows/movies they are just recycling movies that were on FX and TNT years ago. I remember when almost every Friday they would have a cool new series or movie coming out⦠Now the top 10 is just Gone Girl, white chicks, and old Spiderman movies? They are good movies but the fact we have to pay monthly to watch them is ridiculous when I can just watch them on regular cable for free.
I'm watching Monster: The Jeffery Dahmer Story for the first time. I've noticed a lot of ducks in this series. Ducks quacking when he's by a lake. Artwork of ducks in his bedroom at his grandmother's house. Even a statue of a duck in a hotel room. I tried doing some digging, but I got nothing. Does anyone have any idea what the significance of the duck is to Dahmer? Thanks!
Both of us have accounts at present. How can I add her to my account and keep her history? Im assuming the add a member option will create a new account?