Yeah, they change the streaming content, there is only so much available at a time. Like I said, its great for kids to stream on your iphone.
I am sure there are great documentaries and whatnot on Netflix, but I don't want to pay for umlimited streaming documentaries. Its just not my cup of tea. If you dig that stuff, and its worth it to you, great. Maybe you love the Goonies, I like that movie, and you love to stream it every day. More power to you. Me, i would just rather do other things. Like I said, my bias is against movies, half the time I watch a movie I feel like I should have read, or played a video game or gone outside and played with my dogs instead. We all have different ways we like to enjoy our free time.
I hear all of you on the obscure/foreign stuff, that is how netflix got popular to being with. I just, personally don't like that stuff, and neither does most of America. Funny thing is, if you look at the history of movie rental, at first it was small, local mom and pop shops that catered to whatever their immediate neighborhood liked, so if you were in a ethnic community, you would have lots of foreign films, if you were in an artsy neighborhood, you would have lots of indy films, etc. Then along comes blockbuster and hollywood video and these mega chains and they negotiate directly with the studios so that they get the big movie releases first. Since the small video stores couldn't compete on the big hollywood movies, and since that market is the bulk of what people watch, they went out of business. Netflix got their start buy buying up all the old stock of these out of business video stores, as a result they had a lot of older movies, foreign movies and artsy movies that the typical blockbuster didn't carry in their stores. It was these niche offerings that attracted people to Netflix in the first place, and now, the business built on the ashes of the old video stores has conquered the mighty beast that killed off the original mom and pop stores. Kind of poetic justice in a way...