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Posted by Roy L. Fuchs on 10/04/87 11:35
On 24 Dec 2005 08:26:50 -0800, "Goro" <evilninjax@yahoo.com> Gave us:
>
>Allan wrote:
>> On Tue, 20 Dec 2005 14:35:04 GMT, Justin <nospam@insightbb.com> wrote:
>>
>> >Allan wrote on [Tue, 20 Dec 2005 08:45:17 -0500]:
>> >> Here's the top five TV-DVD sellers of 2005, from bottom to top:
>> >>
>> >> 5. Friends 9.x (790,000 units)
>> >> 4. The Simpsons 6.x (830,000 units)
>> >> 3. Seinfeld 4.x (860,000 units)
>> >> 2. Lost 1.x (1,040,000 units)
>> >> 1. Chappelle's Show 2.x Uncensored (2,840,000 units)
>> >
>> >Not bad for a dead medium.
>>
>> "one of the few categories in the now-mature DVD business that's still
>> on a steep growth trajectory."
>
>i liked this part from TFA :
>
>This growth in TV-DVD is both good and bad for the home entertainment
>business in general, Adams said. On the positive side, the higher price
>points help maintain profits as prices for theatrical catalog titles
>"and even fairly recent hits" sink to new lows, he said.
>
>And yet he can't help but wonder whether all those "complete season"
>sets are eating up viewing time that used to be spent watching movies.
>
>"Those are a lot of hours people are buying for $30," Adams said, "as
>opposed to a two-hour movie for $20."
>
>-goro-
Well, one doesn't sit and watch the entire season in one sitting...
usually.
I usually watch several episodes at a time though... :-]
Kung Fu is good.
The Greatest American Hero is good, though wasn't filmed or directed
so good. The same "front of the house scene" appears in almost every
episode, and in many, more than once. Same shadows and everything.
Sad that.
Hell, shooting TV shows on video instead of film has got to be
cheaper. That's good, as they can spend more on doing it right.
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