It's currently available on the Roku TV app through Roku only. It's with commercials, but they're short and you know how many ads there will be. You can fast forward through everything except the ads.
I think if you've watched all the seasons & episodes then Roku takes it off based on your subscription...at least that seems to be what has happened to me. It is currently available, without commercials, on HBO Max
Amazon prime
I think if you've watched all the seasons & episodes then Roku takes it off based on your subscription...at least that seems to be what has happened to me. It is currently available, without commercials, on HBO Max
Amazon prime
No one has answered this question yet.
No one has answered this question yet.
Cold Case is being stalled on its release on DVD because of copyright issues having to do with the music in the show. It will cost millions of dollars in royalties that would have to be paid to the record companies and the artists for use of their songs on the DVDs.
Actually, Cold Case the TV series is available on DVD set at certain sites. Type it in google and these sites will come up.
Yes, they would. The more exposure the music gets, the greater the sales will be. Common sense would dictate that the copyright holders would have a huge incentive to make sure a DVD is released, even if they have to sell the rights at a fairly low price (or even for free). But unfortunetely, the music business is not run by common sense but by egos. The people involved would be too afraid of looking bad if they don't receive a high licensing fee. They would rather look tough by not agreeing to a deal even if it does not serve their interests in this case.
No, it was established many times that Stillman only has one daughter, and we know it is intended to be the same daughter because she was a few months pregnant in "Glued", and had her baby baptized in "Revenge". This is one of the biggest and most noticeable goofs in the series.
No, when Lilly approaches her in the holding cell, she says that her husband left her.
The songs in question, "Bitter Lies" and "Velvet & Veil", are sometimes credited as belonging to a band called either Girth or Garth from the 1980s era. In spite of this, the band appears not to exist, with no record of such a band or its songs in any public music database, streaming website, or music shop. It is likely that CBS obtained the songs from a private music library; there are companies that sell private licensed music, often obscure songs unknown to the mainstream public, for use in television production. One interested in locating copies of either of these songs would probably have to contact CBS to request further information.
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