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Spoilers Superman (2025) Grade and Discussion

How would you rate Superman?

  • You'll believe a man can fly

    Votes: 27 25.0%
  • A

    Votes: 17 15.7%
  • A-

    Votes: 17 15.7%
  • B+

    Votes: 24 22.2%
  • B

    Votes: 8 7.4%
  • B-

    Votes: 5 4.6%
  • C+

    Votes: 3 2.8%
  • C

    Votes: 1 0.9%
  • C-

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • D+

    Votes: 1 0.9%
  • D

    Votes: 1 0.9%
  • D-

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • F+

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • F

    Votes: 1 0.9%
  • A pocket full of Kryptonite

    Votes: 3 2.8%

  • Total voters
    108
Heh. I remember when it was the exact opposite back in the 80s-90s.

Then there was the vinyl shortage of the early to mid 70s, due in part to the oil crisis and England's three day work week which shuttered a lot of record pressing plants.
Paul McCartney and Wings album 'Red Rose Speedway' had to be trimmed from a double to a single album because of this.
 
This is not actually true. CDs still account for the lion’s share of physical media music releases. Vinyl’s relative increase in popularity has led to many media reports suggesting it is more popular than CDs—and that may be true in the sense of the “coolness factor” but not in actual sales of new releases. For one thing vinyl is MUCH more expensive on average (largely owing to very limited production capacity as almost all presses were gone and there still isn’t nearly enough to surpass CD production) and for another, relatively few people actually have turntables (which are also frequently expensive).

Besides which, vinyl is objectively inferior in every measurable, physical aspect to CDs in music reproduction with equivalent masters. Any better sound quality from vinyl over CDs is owing to the quality of the master used to make the respective releases. The physics of the this statement is beyond doubt. New releases are almost always from digital masters, so vinyl starts with a disadvantage anyway.

The psychological effects of “playing the vinyl” version of a recording, with its tactile features especially, are well documented but the sound quality issue is not among the benefits (again, as long as the same masters are used).
I grew up when LPs were being phased out and I never missed them. They took up a lot of space and frankly the sound wasnt all that great. The only thing I liked about LPS was the bigger canvas for the cover artwork as well as the occasional lyric sheet that was readable. Anytime classical artwork is replicated on the smaller CD casing it just doesn't feel the same. But I don't miss needles breaking, records skipping, records scratching,etc. etc. And I have no desire to go out and spend a fortune just to play music I can get on CD, download cheap or listen for free online. Its not worth the money or hassle IMO.
 
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That horrific feeling when you accidentally scratched the needle across a record hard enough to mar it. :crazy:

That's nothing. In my early teens, my audiophile father came into possession of a pair of rare Edison-type wax cylinders, and one day I got it into my head to try to MacGyver up a makeshift cylinder player, and I broke one of the cylinders in the process. I was so guilty about it, but he took it better than I feared he would.
 
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