Curious who writes/ proofs the descriptions for Amazon Prime content, and who develops the app (Roku or Amazon)? After the recent platform changes and updates, the TV/ movie info is rife with typos. Also, many movies have no info at all. Since Amazon bought IMDB, perhaps they’re pulling info from that database. Thoughts?
The Amazon Prime Video app for Roku streaming players is developed by AmazonLab126.
The only app that Roku, Inc. developed is the Roku Channel app.
~Jordan
As @Michelle3 mentioned, Amazon is responsible for the content within their channel. And yes, since they own IMDB I would expect the metadata to come from there. But I've seem synopsis information for movies that really didn't accurately reflect the material. Who writes that stuff? No idea, but often it seems whoever wrote it had never actually watched the movie/show.
Can't remember if it was IMDB, but I read info once that labeled Stalag 17 as a comedy. Just because a movie might have some humorous bits doesn't make it a comedy. Maybe they were confusing it with Hogan's Heroes, which was located in the fictional Stalag 13.
@atc98092 wrote:As @Michelle3 mentioned, Amazon is responsible for the content within their channel. And yes, since they own IMDB I would expect the metadata to come from there. But I've seem synopsis information for movies that really didn't accurately reflect the material. Who writes that stuff? No idea, but often it seems whoever wrote it had never actually watched the movie/show.
Can't remember if it was IMDB, but I read info once that labeled Stalag 17 as a comedy. Just because a movie might have some humorous bits doesn't make it a comedy. Maybe they were confusing it with Hogan's Heroes, which was located in the fictional Stalag 13.
You’re right, @atc98092. Amazon is responsible for content available on their app, but what is Hogan’s Heroes?
~Jordan
@Michelle3 wrote:
@atc98092 wrote:As @Michelle3 mentioned, Amazon is responsible for the content within their channel. And yes, since they own IMDB I would expect the metadata to come from there. But I've seem synopsis information for movies that really didn't accurately reflect the material. Who writes that stuff? No idea, but often it seems whoever wrote it had never actually watched the movie/show.
Can't remember if it was IMDB, but I read info once that labeled Stalag 17 as a comedy. Just because a movie might have some humorous bits doesn't make it a comedy. Maybe they were confusing it with Hogan's Heroes, which was located in the fictional Stalag 13.
You’re right, @atc98092. Amazon is responsible for content available on their app, but what is Hogan’s Heroes?
~Jordan
Oh dear. Are you that young, or am I that old? 😛
@atc98092 wrote:
@Michelle3 wrote:
@atc98092 wrote:As @Michelle3 mentioned, Amazon is responsible for the content within their channel. And yes, since they own IMDB I would expect the metadata to come from there. But I've seem synopsis information for movies that really didn't accurately reflect the material. Who writes that stuff? No idea, but often it seems whoever wrote it had never actually watched the movie/show.
Can't remember if it was IMDB, but I read info once that labeled Stalag 17 as a comedy. Just because a movie might have some humorous bits doesn't make it a comedy. Maybe they were confusing it with Hogan's Heroes, which was located in the fictional Stalag 13.
You’re right, @atc98092. Amazon is responsible for content available on their app, but what is Hogan’s Heroes?
~Jordan
Oh dear. Are you that young, or am I that old? 😛
I’m saying “What is Hogan’s Heroes?”.
~Jordan
Hogan's Heroes was an American TV situation comedy from 1965-71. It was based in a German WWII POW camp named Stalag 13. The lead character was American Army Air Corp Colonel Robert E. Hogan (played by Bob Crane) who actually ran a secret spy operation from within the POW camp.
As I said, it was a comedy and really poked fun at Germany during WWII. Here's the Wiki page about it.
@atc98092 wrote:Hogan's Heroes was an American TV situation comedy from 1965-71. It was based in a German WWII POW camp named Stalag 13. The lead character was American Army Air Corp Colonel Robert E. Hogan (played by Bob Crane) who actually ran a secret spy operation from within the POW camp.
As I said, it was a comedy and really poked fun at Germany during WWII. Here's the Wiki page about it.
Is there a production company and a distributor of that show in specifications?
~Jordan
I have no idea. The show is still in syndication.
Pretty sure the IMDB community laid landmines before Amazon took over. Been around since '87, it's what I would have done.