I will buy physical media until it no longer exists. When it comes to movies and tv shows, I want to own what I purchase.
I will buy physical media until it no longer exists. When it comes to movies and tv shows, I want to own what I purchase.
“THR further noted that the show will “complete post-production on season two...and producers CBS Studios will shop both seasons to a new buyer.”
Never let reality get in the way of a clickbait headline.
The risk is effectively zero (worth noting that tea solids are, in fact, anti-microbial), and this kind of institutionalized overcaution is both ridiculous and detrimental.
It got off to a slow start for me - Dal was spectacularly annoying but as the series went on it was clear that this to give him a place to develop from, and he grew as a character over time. It’s been the biggest pleasant surprise of the current-era Trek shows for me.
Fully agree. Thought it was pretty bad at first, but was hooked by the mid-season finale. Then I started rewatching it from the beginning, actually with my 6-year-old, and realized I was wrong about it being bad - is is (was) such a good show, and a really nice way to get a kid into ST
As I’ve said before, streaming is bringing back the world that existed before VCRs, DVRs, and DVDs. Five or six years from now, someone will be like, “Hey, wasn’t there a show with Sarah Michelle Gellar and werewolves?” And no one will be able to find it anywhere, not even the outback of Tubi.
Local Plex server ftw.
Never let reality get in the way of a clickbait headline.
Damn. I know it’s a kid show and I’m 40-something, but Prodigy was really starting to grow on me.
It’s almost like the guys in charge don’t give a shit about great art or even straightforward entertainment.
Shit, I still buy CDs.
This is actual nonsense. Sun Tea is brewed before any sugar - necessary to fuel any bacterial growth - is added. Unsweatened tea is simply not a viable growth media. There is one professor that cites one patent (not even a scientific study) that is regularly quoted here. The patent is public record, there was no…
Especially when it seems like Trek is the only thing anyone watches on Paramount+ anyway.
It feels really weird to cut out a Trek show when Trek is getting a revival of sorts.
It says a lot about our fucked up tax laws that it is cheaper for companies to make a show like this or Snowpiercer or Batwoman and never release it than it is to just release it. Especially when we are in the middle of a writers strike and the pool of new content has to be drying up.
I remember when streaming really kicked in and everyone was all, “Why are you still buying DVDs?!”
And keep a rip of them stored locally and in the cloud.
Yeah, so keep buying physical media of shows you like as long as you can. It might not always save the shows from cancellation... but it’ll keep them from being just a memory.