Maybe you forgot to set your alarm this weekend. Maybe your DVR was broken. Perhaps you were working the graveyard shift,Watch Taboo Family Online or just partying way too hard.
Or, possibly, you just didn't thinkyou cared, only to realize too late that you totally did.
SEE ALSO: Here's how to watch the Royal Wedding without cableWhatever the case, you missed the royal wedding between Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. And now that it's everywhere, you're wondering if it's too late to catch up.
Well, we've got good news for you. While nothing can undo the poor life decisions that led to your skipping the TV event of the year (no offense; between us, I missed it, too), you can watch it now. Here's how.
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Run time:264 minutes
If you're ready to go deep into Royal Wedding coverage, ABC News (available on Hulu) may be your best bet. Hosts Robin Roberts and David Muir devoted four and a half hours to the event, broken up into five "episodes" for release on the streaming service.
The first two episodes cover the arrivals, including the princes', the queen's, and Meghan Markle's; the bride enters the church near the very end of the second episode.
The ceremony itself comprises the third episode. The fourth begins with the couple's exit from the church, leading into the post-wedding procession. And the fifth wraps up with a bunch of post-event chatter. Like I said, this is the stream to pick if you're ready to dive in headfirst.
Or try:People TV's coverage runs 181 minutes long, with commentary from People Now host Jeremy Parsons, a panel of Peopleeditors, and occasional guests. There's less post-event commentary than Roberts and Muir's had, and a wider assortment of fancy hats.
Run time:573 minutes
Can't get enough of all those wedding guests? Want to make sure you've caught every single minute? Prefer your own commentary over any talking head's?
PBS' footage, which you can see on YouTube, covers everything you could possibly want, and we do mean everything. There are nearly three hours of arrivals before the ceremony gets underway, and the last five hours are spent just watching ordinary onlookers milling about after the wedding.
Why you'd ever want five hours of footage of random folks hanging out is beyond us, but we're not here to judge.
Or try:TIME's stream of the event cuts down the pre- and post-wedding stuff to a comparatively reasonable 372 minutes, while USA Today trims theirs down even further to 268 minutes. (The latter also features captions explaining the action, but you don't really need them.)
Run time:93 minutes
Okay, this is actually the same ABC News coverage we mentioned above. The difference is that thisvideo cuts it down to a totally manageable 93 minutes, for anyone without the time or patience for the 264-minute version.
That comes out to about half an hour of pre-event commentary over the arrivals, which is just right if you ask me: long enough that you feel like you know what's going on, but not so long that you'll find yourself skipping ahead to get to the good stuff.
Run time:89 minutes
Let's get this out of the way: Cord and Tish — a.k.a. Will Ferrell and Molly Shannon, reprising their chatty on-air commentator roles from the Rose Parade — are not a good choice if you actually want to, you know, see the ceremony.
But they're the obvious choice if you care more about laughing and having a good time. Better yet, watch the ceremony elsewhere and then return to Cord and Tish for some of their perfectly innane narration.
Run time:66 minutes
If you just want to get on with it and see the ceremony itself, Entertainment Tonight's video is a good bet. There's no pre- or post-ceremony gawking here, no live commentary, and no gaudy chyrons. Just pure, uncut royal romance.
Or try:CBS News and Global News a few minutes of chatter before the main event. And Fox 10 Phoenix's upload has no commentary, but does have chyrons throughout, in case you relive all of the Saturday morning news and not just the royal wedding.
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