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How many TV shows are worth owning?
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<blockquote data-quote="delericho" data-source="post: 3047116" data-attributes="member: 22424"><p>Hard to answer.</p><p></p><p>I've found that a lot of modern shows, most notably 24, Lost and the new Battlestar Galactica, work far better on DVD than on TV, because of the strong continuity. Watching several episodes at a time seems to make the whole thing fit better, leads to me forgetting fewer key details between episodes, and removes the frustration of having to wait a week to find out what happens next. Additionally, it allows me to block my time as I wish, rather than having to assign the same timeslot every week to TV watching (less of an issue since I got Sky+, and can now record shows).</p><p></p><p>On the other hand, most shows don't really warrant a second (or third) viewing, which removes a lot of the value of DVD. I think my ideal solution is something like TV on demand, where I could download a whole season at a time, and view it at my leisure, paying on a per-viewing basis.</p><p></p><p>In reality, I have lots of TV on DVD, ranging from Buffy and Babylon 5 to the original Transformers series. I guess the answer (for me) is probably 'about 20'.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="delericho, post: 3047116, member: 22424"] Hard to answer. I've found that a lot of modern shows, most notably 24, Lost and the new Battlestar Galactica, work far better on DVD than on TV, because of the strong continuity. Watching several episodes at a time seems to make the whole thing fit better, leads to me forgetting fewer key details between episodes, and removes the frustration of having to wait a week to find out what happens next. Additionally, it allows me to block my time as I wish, rather than having to assign the same timeslot every week to TV watching (less of an issue since I got Sky+, and can now record shows). On the other hand, most shows don't really warrant a second (or third) viewing, which removes a lot of the value of DVD. I think my ideal solution is something like TV on demand, where I could download a whole season at a time, and view it at my leisure, paying on a per-viewing basis. In reality, I have lots of TV on DVD, ranging from Buffy and Babylon 5 to the original Transformers series. I guess the answer (for me) is probably 'about 20'. [/QUOTE]
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