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I hate it when they start to put out a series on DVD and then after a few seasons they just stop.
While I understand the studios position that it maybe due to poor sales, I also think it just pisses off consumers who maybe didn't even know the series was available on dvd and finds out that only a few seasons were ever made available. Are they even going to start buying it on dvd when they know in advance that they can't even complete the series on dvd? Likely not. So that further hurts sales of the existing seasons. And the studios see that and the cycle continues.
I really like Sally Field and bought the two existing seasons of The Flying Nun on dvd. The second season was released years ago and not even a rumor of when season 3 could be available. That really pissed me off.
I hate that!!
It's too bad when they got the rights that they didn't word the contract to include all possible broadcasts & video formats and etc.
Oh well.
Still a lot of these shouldn't have music rights issues, so it must come down to another reason.
I know that at least they could release the first few seasons of Family Matters on DVD. Well, until they started having music groups guest star and Eddie wanted to become a singer, those seasons could have music rights issues.
That's one bad thing about having singers on a show. Sure it seems hip at the time, but years later it just dates the show so quickly.
Cute little deer.
When I was a little kid I once saw a flying squirrel. The only time I ever saw one. It was so neat to see it "fly" from one tree to another.
One thing I've noticed is that I don't see many lightning bugs anymore. When I was younger there were all over the place. Now I don't even see them anymore. I wonder if it has to do with all the chemicals they spray on their lawns around here.
Nor do I see any red-winged blackbirds either.
Nor toads either.
Here are some tv series I would like to see released in season sets on DVD.
Alice:
Bionic Woman:
China Beach:
Eerie Indiana:
Family Matters:
Ferris Bueller
Green Hornet:
Hangin with Mr. Cooper:
Head of the Class:
Hogans Family:
Honey, I Shrunk the Kids:
Hooperman
Kung Fu: The Legend Continues
Land of the Lost (90's version)
Logan's Run
Man from Atlantis
Max Headroom
Operation Petticoat
Otherworld
The Ropers
Six Million Dollar Man
Some of my Best Friends
Space Precinct
Starman
Step by Step
Two Guys and a Girl
Unhappily Ever After
Wonder Years
OK.
Is the TV mix the same as what is on the dvd?
In other words do they sound mix movies on dvd the same as for TV & DVD/Blu-Ray or do they use different sound mixes for dvd and/or Blu-Ray and TV?
And what about HDTV? Which I think has at least DVD quality sound.
Regarding the sound.
What type of sound systems did you watch the movie with?
It could be possible that there was indeed buzzing sounds but they were only audible through the rear channels.
Now if you did indeed watch it with a sound system that uses the rear channels/speakers and nothing was heard from them then I stand corrected.
Perhaps the only true way to verify if there was or wasn't any buzzing sounds is to wait for the dvd release.
I couldn't even watch it.
The cable company here moved the Sci-Fi channel to Digital well over a year ago.
I guess because they think all the sci-fi geeks are into gadgets and thus already has HDTV and/or digital cable.
All I know is that I have to wait till the DVD. And even then it's not a DVD that I'll pay full price for. So when it goes for less than $10 or perhaps goes into the $5 dump bin then I'll buy it. $20 is just too much imo.
In Pennsylvania you have to take the car to a certified dealer for inspection,
Is this some sort of annual inspection?
Is it like a safety inspection or something?
If so, then many cars around here wouldn't even pass that.
There are cars on the road here that looks like they are ready to fall apart. Some look like they are composed of junk yard parts, different color doors, trunk or hood. Cars without bumpers.
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Just do an image search on google, search his name and include Chicago Tribune.
He has curly hair, a goatee and wears glasses. He kind of looks nerdy.
I didn't like Ben Mankiewicz at all. He just seemed conceited and full of himself.
I liked Ben Lyons a tad more. He seemed more friendly. But I do tend to agree that Lyons tended to do reviews in "sound-bites' that could easily be used in critics quotes for a movie ad.
But I don't like that Michael Phillipps guy either.
And I have no clue who that other guy is at all.
Why is it that I think the time for this show is quickly coming to an end. They should just finally pull the curtain down on this show.
Well they didn't last long.
http://newsblogs.chicagotribune.com/tow … -out.html?
Two Bens lose their jobs
Chicago Tribune's Michael Phillips, N.Y. Times' A.O. Scott take over 'At the Movies'; Ben Lyons, Ben Mankiewicz out
A year after its extreme makeover of "At the Movies" went over like "Land of the Lost," Disney's ABC Media Productions said Wednesday it is overhauling the Chicago-based syndicated TV program yet again in hopes of reconnecting with its respected past.
Gone are Ben Lyons of E! Entertainment Television and Ben Mankiewicz of Turner Classic Movies, the cable hosts Disney chose last summer to front what it called "the next generation of the series," in favor of a return to dueling newspaper film critics, Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune and A.O. Scott of the New York Times.
Both Phillips and Scott filled in for Pulitzer Prize winner Roger Ebert opposite fellow Chicago Sun-Times columnist Richard Roeper in the earlier incarnation of the program, which traces its roots to Chicago public broadcaster WTTW-Ch. 11 in 1975, when Ebert was first paired on-air with Gene Siskel, the late Chicago Tribune reviewer.
The new pair will make its debut when the series begins its new season Sept. 5 on ABC-owned WLS-Ch. 7, where the show is produced for syndication by Disney-ABC Domestic Televison.
"We are thrilled that A.O. Scott and Michael Phillips will be lending their well-respected and influential voices to At the Movies," Brian Frons, who oversees ABC Media Productions as president of daytime for the Disney-ABC Television Group, said in a statement. "They are regarded by millions of people as authorities in film criticism and will take the series back to its roots of one-on-one film debate that was established when the show first began with Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel."
Ebert and Roeper split with Disney last summer as their old show underwent several changes. Some such as a new theme song and set were minor. Others, such as the hiring of Lyons and Mankiewicz and including the input of other critics, were major. Very little of it seemed to gain a foothold, particularly with those who had been drawn to the original show.
Siskel and Ebert and later Roeper and his counterparts engaged viewers by talking about films -- both big and small, domestic and international -- in a sophisticated way that allowed them to share both their obvious love of movies as well as for spirited, well-considered debate.
Mankiewicz would escape much of the criticism directed at the revamped "At the Movies," most of which targeted Lyons, whose inability to articulate his opinions undercut his cinematic knowledge and critical skills.
Too often Lyons sounded as though he were dictating a blurb for an ad, rather than giving serious counsel as to whether a consumer should buy a ticket, rent a DVD or skip a film altogether.
"We tried something new last season and we think the world of Ben Lyons and Ben Mankiewicz," Frons said. "They did everything we asked of them and they have been complete professionals. However, we've decided to return the show to its original essence – two traditional film critics discussing current motion picture and DVD releases. We thank them for their hard work and dedication this past year and wish them nothing but the best on all of their future endeavors."
Phillips has been the Chicago Tribune's film critic since 2006. He has written for about entertainment and the arts for the Los Angeles Times, San Diego Union-Tribune, St. Paul Pioneer Press, Dallas Times-Herald and the Twin Cities weekly City Pages, and also covered movies for Minnesota Public Radio, WGN-AM and MSNBC.
"I can't wait to mix it up with Tony, who's one of the sharpest critical voices in the nation," Phillips said. "To co-host a show with such an extraordinary legacy is a privilege and an opportunity. I know we're both humbled by that legacy, and we're eager to get people thinking--really thinking--about movies and to guide cinema lovers in the right direction. And perhaps some unexpected directions."
Scott has been a film critic at the New York Times for nearly 10 years and been a frequent guest on PBS' "Charlie Rose," NPR's "Talk of the Nation" and other radio and television programs. Before joining the Times, Scott was the Sunday book critic at Newsday and a freelance contributor to dozens of publications, including the New Yorker, Wall Street Journal and The New York Review of Books and Slate.
"I'm overjoyed and honored to be joining 'At the Movies,' and especially excited to be working with my colleague Michael Phillips, one of the most intelligent and wittiest critics around," Scott said in the announcement. "This show, with its long history and rich tradition, stands for the idea that there is a place on television for vigorous argument and independent thinking about movies."
Whether the new team has the same kind of chemistry that Ebert shared with Roeper and can engage in the show's old brand of lively give-and-take will be among the challenges in regaining the show's standing.
Siskel and Ebert were anything but polished themselves when they made their WTTW debut, but that may have been part of their charm. The pair went national on public TV in 1978, moved to commercial syndication with Chicago Tribune parent Tribune Co. in 1982 and then to Disney in 1986. Siskel died in 1999 and Roeper was named his successor the following year.
Ebert had to leave the program in 2006 because of health issues that have robbed him of his voice, but his name and imprimatur remained with the program until the split with Disney last summer.
A sign of trouble had surfaced a few months earlier as the show dropped its use of "thumbs up" and "thumbs down" as shorthand for a recommendation or rejection of a film. Ebert and Siskel's estate owned the trademark on the thumbs.
"At the Movies" will continue to employ the "see it," "skip it," or "rent it" ratings system it adopted at that time.
"I loved working on this show, every moment of it," Mankiewicz said through Disney. "It was an honor to continue a broadcast legacy not merely started by Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel, but created by them. No doubt the show is in good hands."
Oh boy, this is just going to fuel these morons even more that believe this.
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Should be any easy one.
I'm very interested in District 9, sounds very good.
I forgot that I got these two from a garage sale for $2.50. Both sealed.
Got these today from Best Buy for $3.99 each.
Stills from The Open Road clip shown on ET.
In case anyone is interested, Best Buy's price is $22.99 for the 2-disc dvd and $25.99 for the Blu-Ray set.
Looks like we have a release date for The Open Road.
Ten lucky readers can win tickets to see the comedy film "Open Road" starring Jeff Bridges and Justin Timberlake opening in theaters Fri., Aug. 28.
The plot covers minor league baseball player Carlton Garret (Timberlake) who takes a road trip to track down his estranged father, legendary baseball player Kyle Garret (Bridges) when Carlton's mother (Mary Steenburgen) becomes sick.
Carlton enlists his on-again off-again girlfriend Lucky (Kate Mara) for emotional support. Once reunited, Carlton struggles to deal with the series of misadventures.
http://www.larchmontchronicle.com/Archi … iveID=1010