logo
Ring in the new financial year with Binge's birthday offer — now 50% off for 5 months

Ring in the new financial year with Binge's birthday offer — now 50% off for 5 months

Tom's Guide4 hours ago

With the cost of streaming services in Australia steadily rising, scoring a discount on a subscription is becoming rare. However, Australia's own Binge has just turned five, and to celebrate, it's offering a juicy discount on its Basic tier.
From today (June 24) to June 30, Binge has slashed the price of its Basic subscription in half to just AU$5 p/m for five months — that's AU$25 total. This subscription usually retails at AU$50 over that time, so new and returning customers will save a massive 50% off.
With some upcoming new originals, select on-demand sporting events, lifestyle content, and more available within, Binge's birthday offer is not one to miss. You'll need to act fast to nab this discounted offer, as this deal will end on June 30, 2025.
Typically costing AU$10p/m for a Basic subscription, this Binge deal will save you AU$25 over the first five months. For a nice AU$5 per month, you can access all of Binge's content catalogue and stream in HD on one screen. Note that this is an ad-supported tier, meaning you'll experience around 5 minutes of advertisements for every hour of viewing.
Despite losing the HBO catalogue in recent months with the launch of Max, Binge is still thriving on its own. A slate of new originals is heading to the platform, including the comedic documentary "SOLD! Who Broke the Australian Dream?" coming on July 21, which explores Australia's housing crisis.
Notably, the recent mini-series "Mix Tape" has received rave reviews after its debut last month. The show stars Teresa Palmer and Jim Sturgess as Alison and Daniel, as the series moves between their teenage romance in Sheffield, England, in 1989, and modern-day reality as they reconnect through a song from their shared past.
Binge is also home to "Colin from Accounts", "The Last Anniversary", which is based on a Liane Moriarty novel of the same name, and new seasons of "Selling Houses Australia", "Mr Inbetween", "Real Housewives of Sydney", "The Twelve", and "Love It Or List It Australia".
Binge likewise features some popular international series, including "Day of the Jackal", "Real Housewives of Beverly Hills", and complete boxsets of fan favourites like "The Office" and "The Walking Dead".
As for sports fans, select NRL and AFL games will be streamed live and available on-demand with no ad-breaks during play, thanks to an integration with sister site, Kayo Sports. And considering both Kayo tiers just experienced a price increase, with Binge, you can watch fan favourite games for as little as AU$5p/m until November. That means you'll be able to stream the NRL Grand Final on October 5 and the AFL Grand Final on September 27 for less. You beauty!
But what does a Binge Basic subscription actually include? Here's what this discounted rate will get you:
What you miss out on — compared to higher tiers — is the comfort of ad-free viewing and the ability to stream select titles in 4K resolution (a feature that's only available on Standard and Premium plans). If you're okay with watching up to 5 minutes of ads per hour, then this is a good way to access all of Binge's exclusive shows, movies, and sports.
And if you find that the streamer isn't up your alley, you can always cancel your Binge subscription at any time.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Watch John Oliver and a wood carver turn the tables on AI slop
Watch John Oliver and a wood carver turn the tables on AI slop

Digital Trends

time2 hours ago

  • Digital Trends

Watch John Oliver and a wood carver turn the tables on AI slop

Last Week Tonight frontman John Oliver put AI slop in the crosshairs in the latest edition of the popular HBO show. AI slop, for the uninitiated, is all the AI-generated imagery that's starting to take over your feeds on sites like TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, X, and Pinterest. The slop can also be AI-generated videos on YouTube, music on platforms like Spotify, and even e-books, news articles, and games. As Oliver notes in his monologue, the growth of powerful AI-generation tools over the last couple of years has made it easier than ever to 'mass produce and flood social media sites with cheap, professional-looking, often deeply weird content.' Oliver gave a few examples: 'Images of Jesus made out of shrimp … videos like Barron Trump wowing the judges on America's Got Talent while his dad plays backup piano, a pug raising a baby on a desert island, or Pope Francis taking a selfie with Jesus while flying through heaven.' The Last Week Tonight host also points to some deeply strange though highly creative videos showing people transforming into various fruits and vegetables (6:51), with his favorite one showing a man changing into a red cabbage (yes, it's as wacky as it sounds). But the show takes a more troubling turn when Oliver highlights a photo of a man beside a wood carving of a dog (14:49). The photo, which has more than a million likes, is AI-generated, and is very close to another (real) image of a wood sculptor next to a wood carving of a dog. The issue is that generative-AI models are trained on content — including real artworks, books, music, and so on — scraped from the internet, and the artists whose work has been scraped, like this wood sculptor's efforts, are not being compensated. And worse still, the platforms hosting the slop are raking in revenue, as are some of the folks posting AI slop. 'So any enjoyment you may get from weird, funny AI slop tends to be undercut when you know that someone's hard work was stolen in order to create it,' Oliver said. In a neat move at the end of the show (27:02), Oliver brings in the wood carver, Michael Jones, to show off a piece of his own work based on the previously mentioned red cabbage man, neatly turning the tables on AI slop. 'I don't have a big fix for all of this, or indeed, any of it,' Oliver said. 'What I do have, though, is a petty way to respond. Because perhaps one small way to get back at all the AI slop ripping off artists would be to create real art by ripping off AI slop.'

Carrie Coon talks ‘Gilded Age' Season 3: ‘We are leaning into the fun parts'
Carrie Coon talks ‘Gilded Age' Season 3: ‘We are leaning into the fun parts'

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Carrie Coon talks ‘Gilded Age' Season 3: ‘We are leaning into the fun parts'

The Gilded Age returned Sunday for its highly anticipated third installment on HBO, plunging straight into the aftermath of last chapter's social and political battles. At the center of the storm is Bertha Russell — played by two-time Emmy nominee Carrie Coon. Coon recently spoke to Gold Derby and offered fans a taste of what's to come: 'We are leaning into the most fun parts of the plot, and we've had some wonderful theater folks join the cast. We just had the best time welcoming new people. It's always fun to have new energy and we hope everybody watches so that we get a Season 4.' More from GoldDerby Rashida Jones raises the bar in 'Black Mirror' - and deserves an Emmy nomination for it Why 'Elio' sank at the box office - and why it could take a cue from 'Elemental' and rise again Inside the music scene at 'The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon': From breakout discoveries to global superstars That "new energy" includes additions like Merritt Wever as Bertha's sister, Bill Camp as financier J.P. Morgan, Andrea Martin as a medium, and LisaGay Hamilton portraying the real-life prominent Black abolitionist Frances Ellen Watkins Harper. Their arrivals promise to shake up the already crowded ballroom of Gilded Age society — and expand the show's exploration of power in all its forms. HBO But at the center remains Bertha, more driven and commanding than ever. 'She's pretty single-minded,' Coon explained at the ATX TV Festival in Austin earlier this month. 'We know she's determined to marry off Gladys. I'll say without spoiling anything, Bertha usually does get her way. But it doesn't mean there aren't consequences to that.' Those consequences will unfold not just in the drawing rooms of Fifth Avenue but also within the Russell family itself. Season 3 explores Bertha's increasingly complex dynamic with her daughter, Gladys (Taissa Farmiga), as well as her husband, George (Morgan Spector), whose understanding of power often clashes with Bertha's methods — and her motives. 'George can't really understand the stakes for a woman,' Coon explained during a press conference for the series. 'The woman's purview is very different. He doesn't understand our instinct for survival, which is, in this case, through marriage. Bertha really believes what she's doing is an existential question. She wants her daughter to be safe. She also wants her to be fulfilled and have a sense of purpose.' It's this combination of maternal protectiveness and relentless ambition that defines Bertha's arc this season, and Coon is quick to defend her character's controversial decisions. 'I have a lot of respect for what Bertha wants for Gladys, and I do believe it's loving,' she said. 'Does she go about it in a way that seems a little bit blunt? Perhaps. But she wants her daughter to be not just safe but fulfilled.' After wrapping filming on The White Lotus, Coon jumped straight into The Gilded Age with barely a moment to breathe. 'I showed up on set two days later. Thankfully they put me in my pajamas in my Bertha robe because I didn't have any of my costumes built yet,' she said. 'I know it's television, I know that television has to move quickly, but I needed extra time. Everybody was incredibly generous. Hopefully the editors made me look better than I surely was on the first two weeks.' Best of GoldDerby Everything to know about 'The Pitt' Season 2 Adam Brody, Seth Rogen, Jason Segel, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actor interviews Kristen Bell, Tina Fey, Bridget Everett, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actress interviews Click here to read the full article.

Mariska Hargitay's ‘My Mom Jayne' Premieres On Streaming This Week
Mariska Hargitay's ‘My Mom Jayne' Premieres On Streaming This Week

Forbes

time3 hours ago

  • Forbes

Mariska Hargitay's ‘My Mom Jayne' Premieres On Streaming This Week

Mariska Hargitay and Jayne Mansfield in "My Mom Jayne." My Mom Jayne, a documentary about the late Jayne Mansfield by her daughter, Law & Order: SVU star Mariska Hargitay, premieres on streaming on Max this week. Directed and produced by Hargitay, My Mom Jayne made its world premiere at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival in May. The official summary for the documentary reads in part, 'In her feature film directorial debut — and the first time she has delved into her mother Jayne Mansfield's story — Mariska Hargitay searches for the mother she never knew almost six decades after the Hollywood legend's tragic death. 'Through intimate interviews and an extensive collection of never-before-seen photos and home movies, she grapples with her mother's complicated public and private legacy, uncovering the surprising layers and depth of who Jayne was, not only to her fans, but also to those closest to her.' Warner Bros. Discovery announced in early June that My Mom Jayne will begin streaming on Friday, June 27, on Max and will air on HBO linear that evening from 8 to 10 p.m. ET/PT. For viewers who don't subscribe to Max, the platform has three subscription tiers to choose from. An ad-based tier is $9.99 per month, an ad-free tier is $16.99 per month and an ad-free tier with 4K Ultra HD programming is $20.99 per month. Mariska Hargitay Interviewed Her Siblings For 'My Mom Jayne' The official summary for My Mom Jayne from Max also reads that Mariska Hargitay 'was three years old when her mother, Jayne Mansfield, tragically died in a car accident at the age of 34 — leaving behind five children. 'The film follows Mariska as she seeks to answer her long-held questions about her mother and integrate the truths she uncovers into her own sense of self. As she explores the complexities behind who Jayne Mansfield was in public, she reckons with the persona that Jayne created, but was later desperate to escape.' Per Max, Mariska Hargitay interviews her siblings Jayne Marie Mansfield, Mickey Hargitay, Jr., Zoltan Hargitay and Tony Cimber for My Mom Jayne. Additionally, Mariska Hargitay interviews her stepmother, Ellen Hargitay, for the documentary, as well as Jayne Mansfield's press representative Raymond 'Rusty' Strait. My Mom Jayne will also include photos of Jayne Mansfield, as well as some of her personal letters and belongings. In addition, the documentary will include talk show and interview footage of the film star from the 1950s and '60s. Rated TV-MA, My Mom Jayne, directed by Mariska Hargitay, will arrive on Max on Friday and will begin airing on HBO linear the same day at 8 p.m. ET/PT.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store