[Self Promotion] I built custom movie dashboards for Apple TV

I got tired of mediocre search in all the streaming apps on my Apple TV, and the jumping between apps meant I ended up not watching anything or end up on youtube.

The truth is across Amazon Prime, Disney+, Netflix, HBO Max, Apple TV+ there must be over 10k movies.

So I made Memovee, a Web / iOS / Apple TV app that allows you to search using natural language and build dashboards for your living room.

You can search across your streaming apps ask questions like:

  • "Show me the top movies on Netflix released in 2025"
  • "Show me fun sci-fi movies for family movie night"
  • "Give me 90s action movies I can stream tonight”

Then I can add the movies on a list that show up on my Apple TV. I can curate my list / dashboard on the go and come back from work, sit on my couch and the movies I want to watch are right there. I don't have to figure out which streaming app because it routes me to the movies directly.

You can also make a dashboard for your kids (if you have kids) and show them content you've chosen for them or movies they've requested, and make protected dashboard that require your approval before access.

Ultimately Memovee seeks to give you control of what comes into your living room.

When you sign up you get 5 free credits that let you query memovee for free. Then if you want to make lists / dashboards and not have to worry about credits go Pro the price is:

- Monthly - $4.99 bundled with 50 credits
- 6 Months - $14.99 bundled with 170 credits
- Yearly - $19.99 bundled with 250 credits

With pro you can make as many lists / dashboards as you want.

App Store: https://apps.apple.com/app/id6759630955

On Apple TV search for Memovee, you'll need your iPhone to login on Apple TV.

I'd love to hear your feedback.

u/memovee — 8 hours ago
▲ 94 r/Cinema

I declare Ryan Gosling a top tier S class performer

I have to say. I’m not generally a fan of any one particular actor but I recently saw:

- The Gray Man
- Fall Guy
- La La Land
- Project Hail Mary

Seen long time back

- Blade Runner 2049
- The Big Short
- Crazy Stupid Love

I have the following on my watch list

- First Man
- Drive

I thought he was great in most of the films but I think La La Land and Project Hail Mary has got to be the reason why I’m compelled to make this post.

It’s been amazing to see his performances across the various genres and how he’s grown as a performer.

I think I’m going to add these to my watchlist:

- The Place Beyond the Pines
- Barbie
- Blue Valentine
- Fracture

If I missed anything let me know.

reddit.com
u/memovee — 18 hours ago

I built custom movie dashboards for Apple TV

I got tired of mediocre search in all the streaming apps on my Apple TV, and the jumping between apps meant I ended up not watching anything or end up on youtube.

The truth is across Amazon Prime, Disney+, Netflix, HBO Max, Apple TV+ there must be over 10k movies.

So I made Memovee, a Web / iOS / Apple TV app that allows you to search using natural language and build dashboards for your living room.

You can search across your streaming apps ask ask questions like:

  • "Show me the top movies on Netflix released in 2025"
  • "Show me fun sci-fi movies for family movie night"
  • "Give me 90s action movies I can stream tonight”

Then I can add the movies on a list that show up on my Apple TV. I can curate my list / dashboard on the go and come back from work, sit on my couch and the movies I want to watch are right there. I don't have to figure out which streaming app because it routes me to the movies directly.

You can also make a dashboard for your kids (if you have kids) and show them content you've chosen for them or movies they've requested, and make protected dashboard that require your approval before access.

Ultimately Memovee seeks to give you control of what comes into your living room.

If you're interested to learn more the app is available on:

App Store: https://links.memovee.com/aB1x/emfbry8d
Blog Post for Step by Step Guide: https://memovee.com/posts/creating-your-first-dashboard

The 'Why?' of Memovee: https://memovee.com/#why

On Apple TV search for Memovee, you'll need your iPhone to login on Apple TV.

I'd love to hear your feedback.

u/memovee — 5 days ago

Nightcrawler (2014)

What makes Lou Bloom terrifying isn’t that he’s violent. It’s that he understands incentives perfectly.

In this scene, he doesn’t seduce Nina. He identifies her dependency, calculates his leverage, and turns a date into a business transaction. Every word sounds polite, but underneath it is pure coercion.

Nightcrawler is such a sharp film because Lou doesn’t feel like an outsider breaking the system. He feels like someone who learned the system better than everyone else.

u/memovee — 13 days ago

Vice (2018)

The fishing symbolism in this scene is not subtle.

Bush thinks he is making the offer, but Cheney is the one casting the line.

He baits him with flattery, frames power as “mundane jobs,” and quietly turns the vice presidency from a symbolic role into control over bureaucracy, military, energy, and foreign policy.

That is how power often works in politics.

Not always through force.

Sometimes through the boring machinery no one is watching.

u/memovee — 16 days ago

Birdman (2014)

One of the sharpest parts of Birdman is how it goes after the comfort of criticism.

The critic gets to sit there and label everything: “callow,” “lackluster,” “marginalia.” None of it costs her anything. But the people making the thing have to risk reputation, ego, money, time, and the possibility of public humiliation.

That’s what makes this scene hit so hard. It’s not saying criticism has no value. It’s saying there’s a huge difference between understanding the work and hiding behind clever labels.

Creators bleed. Critics annotate the blood.

u/memovee — 20 days ago

Lost in Starlight (2025) - Clip

Some love stories don’t need grand speeches. Just two people quietly becoming braver because they found each other.

Lost in Starlight is a beautiful Korean animated romance about a songwriter and an astronaut falling in love in 2050 Seoul. It has gorgeous visuals, heartbreaking distance, and those small moments between lovers that feel almost too real.

Sometimes the person who inspires you to move forward is also the person you’re most afraid to lose.

u/memovee — 27 days ago

Fight Club (1999)

Fight Club wasn’t just about violence. It was about men waking up inside a system that taught them to trade their lives for status symbols, brand names, and the illusion of success.

Modern slavery doesn’t always come with chains. Sometimes it comes with a salary, debt, rent, subscriptions, and the belief that buying more will finally make you free.

The tragedy is not that people have no potential. The tragedy is that so much potential gets buried under corrupted capitalism, endless consumption, and jobs that drain the soul.

Maybe the real fight was never against each other. Maybe it was against the machine that convinced us this was life.

u/memovee — 28 days ago

Blackberry (2023)

Before BlackBerry became a status symbol, it was just a room full of engineers getting eaten alive by the business world.

Then Jim Balsillie walked in.

He saw the product.
He saw the potential.
And he saw exactly how badly they were being played.

This is the moment RIM got the killer instinct it needed to become a giant.

The tragedy is… that same hunger would eventually help bring the empire down.

u/memovee — 1 month ago

The Dark Knight (2008)

“When the chips are down…”

This scene from The Dark Knight still hits because it asks an uncomfortable question:

Are people good because they believe in something?

Or only because the world has not pressured them enough to abandon it?

The Joker is a monster, but the reason this scene works is because his philosophy touches something society does not like to admit.

u/memovee — 1 month ago

The Creator (2023)

This scene gave me goosebumps the first time I watched it.

The music, the imagery, the weight of the moment. Everything just clicked. I had never heard Radiohead’s “Everything in Its Right Place” before, but the way it was used here completely pulled me in.

The Creator has a lot of thought-provoking moments about humanity, AI, fear, religion and what we choose to destroy because we don’t understand.

It’s not a perfect film, but some scenes still live rent free in my head.

Definitely worth a watch.

u/memovee — 1 month ago
▲ 198 r/Koreanfilm+1 crossposts

Train to Busan (2016)

By far one of my favorite zombie apocalypse movies.

Train to Busan takes the chaos of a zombie outbreak and locks it inside a speeding train, turning every carriage into a fight for survival. The confined space makes the tension relentless there’s nowhere to run, nowhere to hide.

I hope you like it as much as I did.

u/memovee — 1 month ago

Guardians of the Galaxy (2014)

How to win over the deadliest woman in the galaxy:

Step 1: Share your music.
Step 2: Make her feel something.
Step 3: Pray she doesn’t kill you.

u/memovee — 1 month ago

John Wick (2014)

They took his peace.

They killed the last gift from his wife.

And in that silence, the Baba Yaga opened his eyes.

John Wick (2014) is a thrilling action film about a retired hitman seeking revenge after his beloved dog is killed and his car stolen. With intense fight scenes and a gripping storyline, John Wick embarks on a dangerous mission to take down the criminal underworld.

u/memovee — 1 month ago

Arrival (2016)

The story of Arrival begins with a mysterious arrival of twelve massive spacecrafts across the globe. As the world grapples with the unknown, linguist Louise Banks is recruited to decipher the alien language. But as she delves deeper, she uncovers a hidden truth that could change everything. Will she be able to communicate with the aliens before it's too late?

u/memovee — 1 month ago