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I buy all my TV programs. (DVD)
I refuse to watch commercials so it's really the best option for me.
I don't remember the last time I actually watched a broadcast.
All marketers can go die in a fire.
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I remember when I was a child, and we had at best three channels. And we watched almost anything!
Now we have Sky, and I-have-no-idea-how-many channels - but it's a lot. And I watch very little. Why? Because most of it is cheaply made rubbish, or repeats of repeats of repeated material. Yes, I can record it, yes I can watch it later. But I don't, because most of it isn't worth watching at all, or I've seen it before.
And if I have to sit through one more repeat of a fly-on-the-wall cops-are-wonderful reality TV show, I may throw something heavy at the set...
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We dumped Sky a month or two back and watch only what Freeview gives. Funny thing is we watch no more on Freeview to when we had Sky and to be honest you still get a lot of channels of cheap US shite and endless commercials which we used to pay Sky £30 a month for.
If there is one thing more dangerous than getting between a bear and her cubs it's getting between my wife and her chocolate.
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ChrisElston wrote: When I was but a lad we had 3 channels 2 more than we did.
Veni, vidi, abiit domum
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I think in reality most of the people who still watch TV as broadcast already have reverted to the old pattern even if they have 100 channels available. BBC, ITV, and Sky1 if you've got it. C4 maybe very occasionally, C5 for the cricket. And that's it.
What I don't understand is how so many channels survive when, to all and intents and purposes, nobody is watching them! Even if you're just churning out repeats of shows from the 1970s it's still an expensive business.
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Most of the crap on the tube isn't worth watching. If it is good enough and survives and gets enough viewership then it'll get on netflix or some other site like http://watchseries-online.eu. If it gets there then I may try it out. If I like it I'll watch it.
Yeah, I'll have to wait a year or two, but so what? And I'll miss out one some stuff, but so what? Real life is more interesting.
Thanks for being my filter!
If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader.-John Q. Adams You must accept one of two basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe, or we are not alone in the universe. And either way, the implications are staggering.-Wernher von Braun Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.-Albert Einstein
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I rarely turn the thing on anymore, other than to let my dog watch Animal Planet. I've got about 200 grossly overpriced channels of nothing to watch that interests me in the least most of the time, with an occasional movie. I'd dump it entirely, but my dog really likes Cats 101, and I'm not home most of the day.
Will Rogers never met me.
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ChrisElston wrote: I seek out things I know I like, I take less chance, I find fewer 'new' things
to watch.
Of course the other factor is that you are in fact older. And presumably you have learned from experience to make judgments about things you might like or not like before you even try it.
For example you probably ate bugs as a child. Yet as an adult you probably don't pop every new bug into your mouth the first time you see it just in case.
ChrisElston wrote: I think it was better when you had to watch what was on, whatever it was.
What say you?
No I don't think that was better.
During that same time period there was also no computers, no video games, very little access to books, almost no magazines, very limited movies and theater (almost zero as I recall) and naturally no DVDs (nor VHS.)
Those bucolic times are recalled as such only through rosy tinted glasses that have been thickened by many years.
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I grew up in a house full of books (there were several independent bookshops, not to mention a library within walking distance), and a town that had a cinema. It has long closed down unable to compete with the out of town multiplex some ten miles away. No chance of a group of kids walking there to see a film. Also I regularly went to theatres, with both school and family.
Both cinema and theatre are now prohibitively expensive, and some distance away, and all but the chain bookshops have closed down, and there are none of them round here either.
“I believe that there is an equality to all humanity. We all suck.” Bill Hicks
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ChrisElston wrote: I grew up in a house full of books
I grew up in a house that had many books. That however didn't mean that as a teenager I didn't have to resort to reading things like the encyclopedia and the dictionary because I had read everything else many times.
ChrisElston wrote: (there were several independent bookshops, not to mention a library within walking distance)
None of those within walking distance of me. None really within biking distance. The library was a non-trivial distance by car. Probably some stores within car distance which had only little relevance because one would not only need a car but would also need to know that they exist (since they were not on every corner the idea is hard come by) and one would also need a way to find them.
ChrisElston wrote: and all but the chain bookshops have closed down
Not sure what period you are referring to but just to be clear when I grew up there were no "chain bookshops". First book store I ever saw was in a completely different state and probably when I 15\16. There probably was a bookstore in my town but it wasn't something I ever saw and I seriously doubt it was close to me.
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I agree;
With less choice, the quality was also higher, I think, but we all watched the same shows and either liked them or not. IN the days of 3 channels it was relatively rare in my household to have two shows on simultaneously that we wanted to watch.
Now I flick through the channels and the only shows that register are those I have heard of somehow.
If a new show is on satellite & I haven't seen some preview or review, I will tend to skip right past it (unless the title includes words that cannot be repeated here!)
MVVM # - I did it My Way
___________________________________________
Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011
.\\axxx
(That's an 'M')
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Your "history" is pretty much the same as mine, except that I wasn't in the country when the fifth channel was added, and it wasn't news where I was, so I was surprised to find it when I got back.
The trouble I have nopw is that I either have to record everything then find Chinese subtitles that fit (or amend them to fit), or download versions that already have the subtitles.
That restricts what I can watch by a lot -- i.e. news, current affairs, etc. are now all read on the Interweb, rather than watched in TV-show format, and Almost No Reality TV!!! (May the Lord be Praised!)
Like you say, though, I don't get to hear about many new programs -- except the crappiest ones, which are always over-advertised -- e.g. I only just found out that a SHIELD show will be starting soon (I was a Man from UNCLE, complete with ID card, badge, and secret decoder, when I was five, so this has to be my kind of show!)
I'm probably wrong, but it feels to me that the content of TV was a lot better when there were only three channels; there was almost always something worth watching -- and when there wasn't, we'd just do something else.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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... and funnily enough more accurate.
speramus in juniperus
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Damn!
Quick!
Where can I get a Lightning S cable!
GOOGLE HELP ME!!!
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Mac and Windows have been stealing ideas from each other from the start.
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djj55 wrote: Mac and Windows have been stealing ideas from each other Xerox from the start.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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I could not remember if it was Xerox or Sun.
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djj55 wrote: I could not remember if it was Xerox or Sun.
Answer: Xerox Star
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CBadger wrote: O the irony indeed!
Why?
If you want to do something then taking advice from someone who screwed it up seems like a good idea to me.
“I believe that there is an equality to all humanity. We all suck.” Bill Hicks
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ChrisElston wrote: taking advice from someone who screwed it up seems like a good idea to me.
Ok you got me there, that is a really good point indeed!
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CBadger wrote: Any thoughts?
Yes. What if Oxygen is really a poison that takes about 75 years to take affect? Or to continue todays theme, What if Oxygen makes our voices deep and Helium just restores it to it's normal levels? Either way I think I'm going to stop inhaling it.
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They really do sell some good sh!t in Havant these days...
speramus in juniperus
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Just work in Havant, live on Hayling and buy my sh*t in Pompey.
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