avclub-1cfead9959b76ce44a847c850b61c587--disqus
Jay G.
avclub-1cfead9959b76ce44a847c850b61c587--disqus

The Coup's "Party Music" wasn't due out that week: 9/11/01 was a Tuesday, so a number of music albums came out that day. Party Music was originally scheduled for "early September," but had been already pushed back to November when 9/11 happened.

@avclub-1e2184e9a38acddfb65b66905ad70f9a:disqus The Double Fine Adventure Kickstarter broke $1 million in under 1 day. So it was actually funding faster than Wastland 2 at that point.

@avclub-282f3a0cee1b0a724ccab671ee4cb03b:disqus  Being gay doesn't exempt you from the toilet seat debate. When I was dating my wife, I got the "put the toilet seat down" request not from her, but from her gay male roommate. Apparently he sat down when he peed, always. My wife never complained about it; she knew to

@avclub-eaa88660d97aa2a15400335bcf9d93ac:disqus : The bonus DVDs are taken from the Definitive Collection LDs. For Star Wars, they took the original crawl that they had from the Empire of Dreams doc and replaced the "A New Hope" crawl, but otherwise it's the same transfer.

Regarding the split seasons..

I actually read a book released in 1995 about a group of serial killers that met up online. "Watch Me by A. J. Holt. So this show idea isn't just dated, it's also unoriginal.

A big factor that will limit 4K consumer products is inertia. Manufacturers won't make the devices until there's content for it, and content providers won't provide content until people own devices that can play it. Meanwhile consumers will tend to stay away from it until there's both devices AND content.

There were several LD formats,: CAV, which stored 30 minutes per side, and CLV/CAA, which each held about 60 minutes per side. So some movies were CAV, which required flipping and changing discs for a regular-length movie, while others were CLV/CAA, which could fit a 2-hour movie on one disc, requiring only one flip

CD3 actually came out at the same time as CD5, or "regular" CDs, and were intended to be used for singles/EPs, while CD5 was for LPs. Eventually, though, they figured out that it was cheaper to press a single/EP to a CD5, even if it could've fit on a CD3. Thus, they fell out of favor.

ryan1, if your "DVD" player had a telephone jack on it, it was a DIVX player. DIVX players played DVDs, but no DVD player played DIVX. DIVX players were never twice as expensive as DVD, but were almost consistently $100 more than a comparable DVD player (same manufacturer, features, etc). After DIVX died, Circuit City

Time Warner in NYC definitely aired those scenes, and my DVR caught them.

The last episode started with them in the TARDIS doing nothing in particular, except it was more entertaining because the Doctor was telling a ridiculous story.

I figured they fell through at some point. Perhaps as companions to another Time Lord.

Considering that Neil Gaiman has said he had to revise his script to fit within the show's budget (and it had been moved to series 6 because they didn't have the budget for it in series 5), it's entirely possible Neil's first draft had the secondary control room be one from Classic Who.

@ Immaculate Misconception:

Watcho, if you don't think that EVERY film is "directed by the editor," than you don't have that firm a grasp on the concept of editing. There's a reason why directors reserve the right to remove their name from the final edit of a film, even if they directed every single shot in that edit. Watch "The Cutting Edge:

Regarding the camera operators "outing" two relationships:

The Doctor Who episode "The Girl in the Fireplace" is another good time travel romance story.

"The fourth season's premiere leaves us exactly where season three left off"
A few things wrong with that sentence: