We found that some extra steps might be involved if you want to stream Netflix while vacationing this holiday. With the Netflix password crackdown in effect, some people may encounter challenges logging in when away from home, so we're aiming to walk you through the changes.Īccording to Netflix, travelers should find it easy to use the streaming service on their phones, tablets or laptops or when signing in on a new TV. Here are a few summer-friendly hacks that'll help you enjoy the service this season. You can also access Netflix if you're traveling far from home, but the path to streaming might be slightly bumpier than you remember. To help you make the most of the streaming service during the holiday weekend, we've compiled the best tips, such as how to download a newly released show and how to use hidden codes to find the perfect thing to watch. Obsessed with Hamilton? Give John Adams another spin and begin the letter-writing campaign to HBO to continue on with miniseries installments for the rest of the founding fathers.July 4th lands on an ordinary weekday this year, so you might be planning to extend the weekend and pack it with sun-soaked activities, family time or a Netflix marathon. Adams was a fascinating character, one with plenty of peculiarities but a love for America nonetheless, and the miniseries wonderfully hones in on his relationship with wife Abigail ( Laura Linney)-which was more of a partnership when it came to his political career-and his contentious relationship with Thomas Jefferson, plays by Stephen Dillane. Paul Giamatti is perfectly suited to play our nation’s second President, and one who struggled to get out of George Washington’s shadow. The King’s Speech and Les Miserables director Tom Hooper helms all seven parts of this all-encompassing chronicle of the life of John Adams, beginning with the Boston Massacre in 1770 and concluding with Adams’ death in 1826. If you’re really in for an indoor day on the 4th of July, why not go all-in with the HBO miniseries John Adams? Technically this isn’t a movie, but I think it qualifies. So if you’re planning an indoors-day for the 4th of July, give Lincoln another watch as a reminder of the great things that can happen in American politics when passion meets compromise and diligence. Yes, there’s a fair amount of wheeling and dealing involved, but sometimes the ends justify the means, and watching Lincoln work tirelessly to bring slavery to an end and solidify his legacy, through a phenomenally possessed performance by Daniel Day-Lewis, is at once sobering and awe-inspiring. But it’s also a wildly compelling procedural about the American political process as it actually works, not as we’d like to think it works. It avoids hagiography, not shying away from the many contradictions in Lincoln’s life and the difficulty (and care) with which he approached the issue of slavery. Steven Spielberg worked for over a decade to bring one of our nation’s greatest presidents to the big screen, and while Lincoln was met with solid reviews, it feels like one of those films that’s going to be reconsidered as one of Spielberg’s masterpieces in due time. Lincoln is also about the American political process, albeit with a bit more nuance.
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