...And, "Family Guy" will be all wrapped up, "Cosmos" will have already come out to rave reviews, meaning Seth McFarlane will be primed and ready to launch the newest Star Trek television series.



...And, "Family Guy" will be all wrapped up, "Cosmos" will have already come out to rave reviews, meaning Seth McFarlane will be primed and ready to launch the newest Star Trek television series.
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A gag reel would be nice too.
One of the comments for Amazon's entry for The Next Level says that the original TNG broadcasts were 48 minutes each, and TNG-R will only be 43. Is either of this true? I find it hard to believe they'd cut 5 minutes out of each episode for the remastering...
If your visual comparison was right, and NTSC has an extra 7 seconds per minute, then your 45 minute PAL episode would wind up being 50 minutes 15 seconds long.Most TNG episodes were between 44 and 45 mins in PAL format, some a bit shorter. NTSC would be slightly longer, probably not much more than 90 seconds so due to differing frame rates.
I did a visual PAL/NTSC comparison once and timed one minute of NTSC to be about 7 seconds longer than one minute of PAL if that makes sense. I've just reminded myself of that scene with Data staring at the boiling kettle.
Actually, 2:3 pull down is a technique for converting 24fps to 30fps. I don't think there is a similar process for converting to 25fps.PAL regions run at 50Hz electricity, 50 fields per second which equates to 25 fps on PAL TVs. Rather than the maths that makes 24 go into 30, it's far more convenient to just display the extra frame every second. Of course some people do use all sorts of magic, 2:3 pulldown and whatnot to make 24 go into 25, but that results in blended frames, judder, and ghosting, but maintains the original runtime and the correct audio pitch, whereas native 25 fps is smooth, but runs 4% faster than NTSC, and the audio is 4% higher in pitch.
Actually, 2:3 pull down is a technique for converting 24fps to 30fps. I don't think there is a similar process for converting to 25fps.PAL regions run at 50Hz electricity, 50 fields per second which equates to 25 fps on PAL TVs. Rather than the maths that makes 24 go into 30, it's far more convenient to just display the extra frame every second. Of course some people do use all sorts of magic, 2:3 pulldown and whatnot to make 24 go into 25, but that results in blended frames, judder, and ghosting, but maintains the original runtime and the correct audio pitch, whereas native 25 fps is smooth, but runs 4% faster than NTSC, and the audio is 4% higher in pitch.
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