Now that I'm living in Russia, I really miss my American TV. I know that because of my current IP, I can no longer view web-sites like Hulu. Is it possible for me to just manually change my IP to my old IP back home in order to "trick" the internet into thinking I still live in the United States?
I know that there are services out there that give you an American IP so that you can "trick" the internet. But, since there are a lot of services out there so it is hard to know who is legit. Plus, if I can just use my old IP from back home then I would rather do that.
I live in Japan

. It depends on what kind of programming you miss.
NEWS:
I get most of my full-hour news programs (CNN/MSNBC) using video podcasts through iTunes. I also listen to NPR everyday (All Things Considered/Talk of the Nation have free streams). Most of the programs on MSNBC have full-episode podcasts. If all else fails, Justin.tv often has a live stream of CNN International running and you can tap into that.
SITCOMS
Torrents, hands down. In the States I was hesitant about this, but when you live abroad it can be necessary. If you have a show you really like, you can often purchase digital files and streams on iTunes (but be forewarned that Amazon and other sites like Netflix etc. do not stream outside of the US.) I like to watch Modern Family and Mad Men-- both of which I download on iTunes and pay episode-by-episode out of respect for the shows. For old shows, Star Treks, Highlander, Seinfeld--- namely impulse-watches Megavideo streams are very fast (though sometimes out of sync and/or unreliable and not particularly safe to search for if you're running Windows).
LIVE SPORTING EVENTS
This can be tricky. My cousin plays college basketball and during March Madness ALL the cames are streamed for free. During the regular season, I often get lucky on Justin.tv and other free T.V. sites.
TALK SHOWS
The Daily Show with John Stewart and Colbert Report both stream internationally-- and these are really the only shows I watch that would fit into that category. Definitely check local websites about this!
OTHER OPTIONS
If you are truly hankering for just "channel-surfing" style of T.V. watching you were used to in the States (personally I've never been much into that)-- there are some services like
http://www.habu.tv/ that I have never tried. I'd ask around, but these sites claim to give you full, DVR-style access to pretty much any channel you could access on cable T.V. in America from anywhere in the world for a monthly fee.
Hope this helped! Good luck living abroad

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