No antivirus other than what comes in Windows 10
Windows 10 comes with Windows Defender installed as the default malware and anti-virus software. See
http://wiki.jriver.com/index.php/Taming_Windows_DefenderWindows 10 also comes with Windows Firewall, and software firewall that can prevent a program from doing what it is supposed to do. Windows Firewall should be set to allow MC processes including network and internet access. There are many discussions on solving firewall problems in the forum.
So I have things that are already imported, such as videos from Disney that got dropped in the videos shows section where tv shows should be, how do I move them out of there, I'm looking through the options and I really don't get it.
It sounds like Kodi uses the paradigm that a folder is associated with a media type. MC doesn't use that paradigm, although it does something similar as Brian described. Different types of media can be stored anywhere that MC has been told to look, and it is the [Media Type] and [Media Sub Type] tags that define to MC what the files actually are. If you wish to keep movies in a separate folder, you can do that. But you could just as easily put all media files under a top level folder such as D:\Media, and then have Auto-Import import all media types in or beneath that folder.
In practice it is easier to at least keep video and audio files under separate folders, as with Images, Playlists, Data files etc. Then set up MC's Auto-Import to import only those file types that you expect to put under those folders. when you set up Auto-Import you will have seen there are options to select which file types are to be imported. For example, AVI, MKV, 3D Blu-ray, etc. In fact I have separate Movie, TV Show, and Recorded TV folders, just for convenience. They all contain video files though. I could set Auto-Import to only import JRiver's JTV recording format plus MPEG Transport Streams the Recorded TV folder, since those are the only file types that should ever be in there.
But videos are still videos, and both TV and Movie files are video files, and could be in any of the video file formats that MC imports. So the [Media Type] is "Video" for both Movies and TV, and it is the [Media Sub Type] that defines what type of video it is. i.e. Movie, TV Show, Home Video, Educational, Music Video, Test Clip, Short, Trailer, etc.
With the "correct" [Media Sub Type] tags set, Views in MC are then used to show those media file types that you wish to see. The default views are a start, but you can edit and/or create almost any View you want. Plus you can group the results, sort them, choose how to display them, and so on.
It is just a different paradigm to Kodi. Once you get your mind around it, it is very flexible and powerful.