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Amazon Stock Falls on Mixed Earnings Report and Weak Forecast. AWS Missed Too.

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Movies

25 of the Horniest, Sexiest TV Shows Ever Made

screenshot: Farscape/The Jim Henson Company

Filmmakers understood the power of sex long before TV did—or at least, they actually made effective use of it much more quickly. The early days of the television medium were largely about all-ages programming. Families might have any number of children, but no obvious way in which they had come into being, given the chaste pecks exchanged between parents and the double beds in mom and dad’s bedroom. (Lucy Ricardo’s pregnancy was a topic of much discussion among executives—wouldn’t a pregnancy imply sex had happened? Perish the thought.)

By the 1960s, and certainly the 1970s, the production code had broken down enough that movies, though they’d gotten quite good at implying sexuality, no longer had to be nearly as coy about it. Television soon began following suit, if slowly, and with more subtlety.

As in real life, it’s entirely possible to be excessively horny without ever actually getting down to business; sexual tension builds just as well—or even more effectivelywithout exposed boobs and butts. We didn’t need to see Gomez and Morticia getting busy to know that their coffin was getting a workout every night. Modern TV is far more explicit about sexuality, but sexual tension (which is to say, unbridled horniness) is something else entirely. And these are 25 of the horniest TV shows ever made.

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Business

Amazon Fresh to Charge Delivery Fees on Orders Under $150

Amazon Prime members who use Amazon Fresh, the company’s grocery delivery service, will soon be shelling out more for their standard shipments. The company is set to start charging delivery fees on all grocery orders under $150 on February 28, 2023, according to an email sent to Amazon Prime members and seen by Gizmodo.

The forthcoming tiered fee schedule will charge $9.95 for two-hour delivery of orders less than $50, $6.95 for orders between $50 and $100, and $3.95 for orders from $100 to $150. After $150, delivery will remain free. Customers in some areas will be able to get a discount on the delivery charge by opting for a longer, six-hour delivery window instead of the standard two.

“This service fee will help keep prices low in our online and physical grocery stores as we better cover grocery delivery costs and continue to enable offering a consistent, fast, and high-quality delivery experience,” the company wrote in its email to customers, and an Amazon spokesperson reiterated in a statement emailed to Gizmodo.

Previously, Amazon charged $14.99/month, on top of the monthly or annual cost of Prime membership, for its grocery service. Goal in 2019, the company scrapped that additional membership cost, making the service free to all Prime members—with the small caveat of an order minimum ($35 in most of the US, $50 in New York City).

Obviously though, the move to slash customer costs wasn’t set to last. Instead of re-instituting the blanket subscription fee, the company has moved towards charging for delivery instead—arguably in opposition to the core idea of Amazon Prime. Prime membership itself got a price increase last year, going from $119 to $139 annually. If customers of the mega e-tailer are routinely placing grocery orders of less than $150, Amazon Fresh will easily become more expensive than it was pre-2019.

Amazon first began selling groceries online in 2007. In the years since grocery delivery has become an increasingly crowded business landscape, full of start-ups and established tech companies pivoting into the game. One of Amazon Fresh’s biggest competitors, Instacart, boomed in popularity at the height of the covid pandemic. Yet in recent months, online grocery sales have been declining.

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