Alas, the days of the printed magazine in general are in the past, more or less. The internet has pretty much rendered magazines redundant and obsolete. Just the price of progress, unfortunately.
Balls.Just the price of progress, unfortunately.
Well.
Fuck.
I haven't had a subscription in years because I didn't make enough time to regularly read them but it was always my favorite magazine by far.
End of an era.![]()
Does the article mention which 70 movies/series, or is a hypothetical?
A partial list includes - the tv series Willow, Y: The Last Man, The Mighty Ducks, Turner and Hooch, The Mysterious Benedict Society, Artemis Fowl, Earth to Ned, Black Beauty (2020) and Cheaper by the Dozen (2022), all pulled May 26th.
That purchase is gonna result in a lot of crappy reality and game shows. I am thankful that I cancelled my subscription to HBO Max, when it was called that.
As for National Geographic, I stopped reading it years ago. It felt to me that it had changed under the new ownership and had lost some of what it had previously.
It is getting harder and harder to find magazines. I remember going to a bookstore many years ago and seeing row after row of magazines. Now, you will be lucky if you find more than a half-dozen rows of magazines.
Have they replaced those newspapers and magazines with access through a database, or a digital service like Hoopla or Flipster?It's pretty sad at my local library. The newspaper and magazine section is about half of what it used to be pre-COVID. Took out the shelves and replaced them with tables and computers.
Have they replaced those newspapers and magazines with access through a database, or a digital service like Hoopla or Flipster?
As far as network shows go, I don't expect them to have more than 13 episodes for the 23-24 season, and that's assuming the strikes are resolved in time for them to have a premiere sometime in February or March. Which I'm certainly not holding my breath on. Hell, I wouldn't be too surprised if a majority of network shows end up not having any new episodes for the 23-24 season.I wonder what the impact will be from the current strike.
This is what I found for the impact of the previous one.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effect_of_the_2007–08_Writers_Guild_of_America_strike_on_television
As far as network shows go, I don't expect them to have more than 13 episodes for the 23-24 season, and that's assuming the strikes are resolved in time for them to have a premiere sometime in February or March. Which I'm certainly not holding my breath on. Hell, I wouldn't be too surprised if a majority of network shows end up not having any new episodes for the 23-24 season.
IIRC, filming of network dramas starts in July these days, and I think it still ends in March, maybe early April.It's probably changed somewhat since the 50s-60s, but on my behind the scenes books on 'The Twilight Zone', 'The Outer Limits', and 'Mission: Impossible', most filming for a regular season began in June and usually ended in March of the following year in order to get a full compliment of 26 or so episodes.
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