
Who's going to tell Netflix that one of their biggest competitors just dropped monthly fees
TL;DR: Curiosity Stream is a documentary streaming service with lifetime access on sale for $150 right now.
If you're the kind of person who actually wants to learn something while you watch TV, most streaming platforms probably aren't cutting it. Between reality shows, reboots, and endless scrolling, finding a good documentary can feel like winning the lottery. Curiosity Stream is built for people who love diving into something real wit, big ideas and fascinating facts, and right now you can get a lifetime subscription for $149.97 instead of the usual $399.99.
Curiosity Stream is a platform dedicated to documentaries and all sorts of fascinating content. Everything on Curiosity Stream is nonfiction. No filler, no fluff. Just well-made documentaries on science, nature, history, space, technology, and more. Whether you're curious about black holes, ancient civilizations, climate change, or future tech, there's something worth diving into. The library includes titles like Planet of Treasures, Engineering the Future, and Into the Jungle, and new shows are added all the time.
Advertisement
New York Post Comp
The visuals are stunning and the narration is top-notch, with voices like David Attenborough and Nick Offerman guiding you through each story. It's the kind of content that makes you feel a little smarter after every episode.
You can stream on basically any device, including your phone, tablet, laptop, smart TV, even a gaming console. The app is easy to use, lets you download episodes to watch offline, and makes it simple to pick up where you left off.
Best of all, there's no monthly fee. You pay once and you're set for life. That means no worrying about price hikes or forgotten subscriptions eating away at your bank account.
If you love documentaries, now you can make sure you have a lifetime supply.
It's only $149.97 to get a Curiosity Stream lifetime subscription.
StackSocial prices subject to change.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
14 hours ago
- Yahoo
Film festival returns with global cinema line-up
Warwickshire's Big Picture Film Festival returns to Stratford-upon-Avon this summer for a weekend of international cinema. Organised by Live & Local, this year's festival takes place from 28-31 August with the theme of connection and disruption. The festival, which is supported by Stratford Town Trust, will open with a screening of David Attenborough's latest documentary, Ocean with David Attenborough, after organisers partnered with local environmental groups Stratford Net Zero and River Hope. Live & Local said the line-up included an array of cinema, from classics to modern independents, from live music scores to documentaries and animated works. This year, the festival will be based at The Bear Pit Theatre every day, with additional events taking place at Holy Trinity Parish Centre and Stratford Youth Hub, as well as several fringe events in Warwickshire yet to be announced. What's being shown during the festival? The varied line-up includes a screening of the oldest surviving animated feature film in the world, Lotte Reiniger's The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926), which will be accompanied by a band playing the original music for the film. Another classic being shown is Toshio Matsumoto's debut feature Funeral Parade of Roses (1969), hailed by the British Film Institute as a "landmark of Japanese queer cinema". Stratford-based refugee charity Welcome Here is partnering with Stratford Amnesty International Group to present a screening of the Iranian/Scottish co-production, Winners (2022) - a film set in a small Iranian town as two children find a lost academy award. Also on the line-up is Thelma (2024), featuring 94-year-old June Squibb playing a woman seeking vengeance after being scammed out of $10,000. Local groups Stratford Net Zero, Welcome Here, River Hope and Stratford Amnesty are also presenting a screening of the 2024 Oscar-winning animated film Flow, which follows a black cat in a flooded world, joining other displaced animals on a journey of survival and co-operation. Are other events taking place? Several Q&A sessions will also take place as part of the festival. Stratford-based Bafta winning duo The Brothers McLeod will lead a discussion about the life and death of ideas, called False Starts and Surprises. The festival also welcomes Bafta breakthrough filmmaker Ella Glendining and international award-winning director Gordon Main for Q&A screenings of their documentaries. Ella Glendining's Is There Anybody Out There? (2023) presents a first-hand account of living with disability. Gordon Main's London Recruits (2024), tells the story of the undercover anti-racism missions carried out by ordinary Londoners during the South African apartheid. Screenwriter Geoff Thompson, director Michael B. Clifford and producer Natasha Carlish - all from Warwickshire - will also do a Q&A event about their trilogy of three short films, filmed across two decades, including Bouncer, which starred Ray Winstone and Paddy Considine, and Brown Paper Bag, which won a Bafta. Alongside the main festival, there will also be an awards ceremony and Q&A screening of this year's short film competition winners. How much do tickets cost? The festival has maintained its pay-as-you-feel box office, with organisers saying this meant there was "no financial barrier to attend". Chris Davis from Live & Local said: "We are extremely grateful for the support of Stratford Town Trust, which has allowed us to bring our film festival back to the town and also helps to make the festival more accessible to audiences. "We have some great events lined up and we encourage audiences to come along and enjoy, whatever their budget." Follow BBC Coventry & Warwickshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram. Related internet links Live & Local Big Picture Film Festival


New York Post
a day ago
- New York Post
Inside Zohran Mamdani's posh multi-day Uganda wedding bash with phone jamming system, armed guards
Socialist NYC mayoral frontrunner Zohran Mamdani celebrated his recent nuptials with a lavish, three-day affair at his family's ritzy, secluded Ugandan compound — complete with masked security guards and a cellphone jamming system, The Post has learned. The gates of the bustling, private compound, which sits in the wealthy Buziga Hill area outside the capital city of Kampala, were heavily guarded by military-style, masked men this week, with guests streaming in and partying until midnight, according to sources in the town who wished to remain anonymous for security reasons. Mamdani, 33, eloped with artist and animator Rama Duwaji, 27, in February. Advertisement He told his social media followers Sunday he was heading to his homeland to celebrate with his wealthy filmmaker mom and professor dad, who own the Buziga Hill property. The neighborhood is home to some of Uganda's richest, including billionaire businessman Godfrey Kirumira, a city tycoon with stakes in real estate, tourism, petroleum and infrastructure, and houses neighboring the Mamdanis easily fetch more than $1 million. 6 Rama Duwaji and NYC Mayoral frontrunner Zohran Mamdani, who eloped in February, were celebrating their nuptials with a multi-day bash in his native Uganda. Instagram/Le Marché des Fleurs Advertisement The home is set back from the road and sits on two acres of lush gardens surrounded by trees, has breathtaking, panoramic view of Lake Victoria and features at least three security gates. This week, it was transformed into a party pad, with Christmas lights strung into the canopy of trees in the garden and music blaring, sources said. On Tuesday, buses, several Mercedes and a Range Rover 4 were seen driving to the compound. 6 Christmas lights were seen strung into trees inside the Mamdani property's garden. Katumba Badru/New York Post Security was extremely tight, sources said. Advertisement 'Outside the Mamdani house were more than 20 special forces command unit guards, some in masks, and there was a phone-jamming system set up — and all for the strictly invite-only Mamdani event,' one witness confirmed to The Post. 'One gate had around nine guards stationed at it,' they added. 6 Guards including government-style security were placed outside Mamdani's house as he celebrated his wedding. Katumba Badru/New York Post Mamdani's parents, Nair, 67, and her husband, Mahmood Mamdani, 78, an anti-Israel political theorist, live on the estate but also split their time between New York and New Delhi. Nair's Instagram page includes one post featuring a coconut tree planted when Mamdani was born. Advertisement A native of Kampala, Mamdani moved to New York when he was 7, becoming a U.S citizen in 2018. He'd announced his marriage to Duwaji, an illustrator, earlier this year. The pair met on the dating app, Hinge and now share a rent-stabilized apartment in Astoria. On Thursday, revelers enjoyed fruit juices, a typical addition for Indian-style events, as well as dancing to music from a local DJ, sources told The Post. 6 Mamdani and Rama Duwaji who spent three days celebrating their wedding at the Mamdani house outside Kampala. Getty Images One witness reported making out the NYC's Democratic mayoral nominee's voice on a microphone addressing guests later that night, with the party ending after midnight. 'Then on Friday, inside the compound, there were military style tents being taken down when the party had finished,' they added. 'Then what looked like Mamdani personal security guards took over at the gates.' 6 Flowers were left outside a closed gate at Mamdani's home after days of wedding celebrations in Buziga, Kampala. Katumba Badru/New York Post 'Flowers were also left in a pile on the ground near one of the security gates.' The property is isolated enough that some locals weren't even aware of the three-day wedding extravaganza. Advertisement 'Local children have been watching Mamdani on TV, and everyone was talking about him, but not about the wedding,' another resident said. 'For us, it's just about survival. We're just trying to win the bread and make sure our families are OK.' 'We had heard that Mamdani was going to be Mayor of New York, and he had made it over in America,' another added. 'We want to know now if we can get free visas to the U.S. and to travel to New York like he did.' 6 Expensive cars were seen arriving at Buziga Hill Road last week as Mamdani threw a party for his wedding. Katumba Badru/New York Post While the Mamdani family celebrated, neighbors were in mourning for former Ugandan Supreme Court Judge George Kanyeihamba, who had lived a stones throw from the Mamdani's place and died July 14. Advertisement Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni also came to pay his respects to Kanyeihamba and 'the street was blocked by the president's cars,' a local said. Some found Mamdani's wedding bash 'insensitive.' 'Because of the culture here, it was insensitive to have a wedding celebration in the same week as mourning – or 'Okukungubaga' – as it's called here,' one told The Post. 'People are still in mourning,' the person added, pointing in the direction of Kanyeihamba's house, about three minutes away from the Mamdani property. Advertisement 'He has not even been buried, and we have his friends coming to give last words and to mourn before the burial next week, yet Mamdani is celebrating his wedding for three days,' the source continued. It's unclear if Museveni also attended Mamdani's party. Mamdani did not respond to a request for comment from The Post. Advertisement The Queens assemblyman confirmed in an Instagram video that he would stay in Uganda until the end of the month. 'Since you will undoubtedly read about this trip in The New York Post —Inshallah on the front page—here are a few of my humble suggestions for headlines,' Mamdani quipped while holding a slew of newspaper covers, one which read, 'M.I.A.:MAMDANI IN AFRICA.'


USA Today
a day ago
- USA Today
'Happy Gilmore 2' star Haley Joel Osment makes first red carpet appearance since arrest
"Happy Gilmore 2" star Haley Joel Osment made a rare red carpet appearance months after his April arrest made headlines. The former child star, now 37, walked the film's red carpet Monday, July 21, at Lincoln Center in New York City. He wore a floral shirt, and white pants for the affair, pairing the look with a matching jacket and slip-on suede loafers. "The Sixth Sense" star appears in "Happy Gilmore 2" (released Friday, July 25 on Netflix) — the brainchild of comedian Adam Sandler — as new character Billy Jenkins in the sequel to the beloved 1996 golf comedy. Osment's appearance at the premiere marked his first major public outing since he was arrested this spring and charged with disorderly conduct for public alcohol intoxication and possession of cocaine at Mammoth Mountain Ski Area resort in Mammoth Lakes, California. 'Happy Gilmore 2': The wildest celebrity cameos, from Travis Kelce to Ken Jennings Earlier this year, Osment apologized for his use of a slur in a statement shared with People and the New York Post April 18 after his arrest footage surfaced. The footage, shared by Page Six, shows Osment calling an officer a "Nazi" and hurling an antisemitic slur about Jewish people. "You'll wish you treated me nicer," Osment said to the officer. As he was escorted into the jail in handcuffs by two officers, the actor said, "Good luck." Osment told the outlets that "I'm absolutely horrified by my behavior. Had I known I used this disgraceful language in the throes of a blackout, I would have spoken up sooner." He added that "the past few months of loss and displacement have broken me down to a very low emotional place." Osment continued: "But that's no excuse for using this disgusting word. From the bottom of my heart, I apologize to absolutely everyone that this hurts. What came out of my mouth was nonsensical garbage - I've let the Jewish community down and it devastates me. I don't ask for anyone's forgiveness, but I promise to atone for my terrible mistake." Contributing: Saman Shafiq