Not-stalgia
Willenium tugs our sleeve and says: Tell us why the past was a bit shit. You may wish to use witty anecdotes reflecting your own personal experience.
( , Thu 29 Aug 2013, 13:06)
Willenium tugs our sleeve and says: Tell us why the past was a bit shit. You may wish to use witty anecdotes reflecting your own personal experience.
( , Thu 29 Aug 2013, 13:06)
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Two WHOLE episodes of a TV show on VHS tape.
For £13.99.
That is all.
( , Mon 2 Sep 2013, 11:07, 11 replies)
For £13.99.
That is all.
( , Mon 2 Sep 2013, 11:07, 11 replies)
Two WHOLE episodes of a TV show on nuff said.
For £13.99.
That is all.
( , Mon 2 Sep 2013, 11:11, closed)
For £13.99.
That is all.
( , Mon 2 Sep 2013, 11:11, closed)
Having bought a couple of TV shows that way
I now feel no guilt whatsoever at downloading all seven seasons
( , Mon 2 Sep 2013, 11:13, closed)
I now feel no guilt whatsoever at downloading all seven seasons
( , Mon 2 Sep 2013, 11:13, closed)
Or rather "Two badly-edited episodes of a show"
In the early days of Home Video, when it first occurred to the TV companies that people might actually like to buy TV series (rather than films), they often edited several episodes together into a single seamless program.
And when I say "seamless", I actually mean "Jammed together like a beige Metro mashed into the grille of a jack-knifed artic". The people responsible for editing the shows clearly felt that actually watching the program, or having any idea of how the story was supposed to develop, was beneath them. As was any attempt to camouflage the joins, which appeared to have been performed with a blunt axe and some used band-aids.
( , Mon 2 Sep 2013, 11:50, closed)
In the early days of Home Video, when it first occurred to the TV companies that people might actually like to buy TV series (rather than films), they often edited several episodes together into a single seamless program.
And when I say "seamless", I actually mean "Jammed together like a beige Metro mashed into the grille of a jack-knifed artic". The people responsible for editing the shows clearly felt that actually watching the program, or having any idea of how the story was supposed to develop, was beneath them. As was any attempt to camouflage the joins, which appeared to have been performed with a blunt axe and some used band-aids.
( , Mon 2 Sep 2013, 11:50, closed)
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