It's an ex-television series. It has ceased to be.Outside of the premiere...barely. Towards the end the ratings were as high as early ENT. Every season had fewer viewers than the season before.
It's dead.
drugsSome type of stats that show this?
It's expired and gone to meet 'is maker.It's an ex-television series. It has ceased to be.
I'm empathicSome type of stats that show this?
TOS was popular in its original run as well. If TOS had syndication, then the other shows have Netflix. They've been on there for like 7 years now. Enterprise has certainly risen in popularity. I would say likewise for DS9 and Voyager. They've since been added to other popular streaming services.20 year old shows don't grow in popularity without SOMETHING helping them reach a cult status. TOS has syndication during the 70s which lead to the movies with lead to TNG which lead to yada yada yada.
Some type of stats that show this?
Doubt it. Most TV manufacturers are phasing out 1080p sets already. Be surprised if any mainstream brand isn't totally 4K by Xmas 2018. Perhaps in sub 40" models 1080p will last a bit longer (extra year or two). The biggest improvement is not 4K but HDR--however, no one is making an HDR set that isn't 4K. 4K is decidedly NOT like 3D in the TV market.
It was cancelled. Twice.TOS was popular in its original run as well.
Syndication and Netflix are two different things. One was to fill holes in programming and required some sort of rating to justify the cost and to sell ads on. The other is a modern Blockbuster where Netflix pays the same fee for a 20 year old show regardless of who watches it.If TOS had syndication, then the other shows have Netflix.
So is Cheers. I don't know this but, Paramount might be giving it away in order to carry some other programming.They've been on there for like 7 years now.
Based on all those Enterprise fan groups I see popping on up Myspace?Enterprise has certainly risen in popularity.
You're basing your assertion on data that doesn't exist.I would say likewise for DS9 and Voyager. They've since been added to other popular streaming services.
If the nuMovies increased demand to the point where TNG -by comparison - cheap and easy process wasn't worth while, how successful is Discovery going to have to be to make a show watched by fewer people suddenly worth the time or money?And yes, discovery has most likely already contributed to greater interest in the currently streaming shows. If it becomes a hit series, this will increase all the more.
If wishes were horses, beggars would ride.So with all that, there is room for some hope. I personally couldn't care less if they're remastered or not. I don't think I own any Blu-Rays period, and while I have a nice new TV and BR player, I still have a VHS player hooked up to it as well.
What is your point? It wasn't canceled because of viewership ratings, at least the first time before it was changed to air at 10pm. NBC just wanted it gone for reasons not quite known. And what is the relevance?It was cancelled. Twice.
Syndication and Netflix are two different things. One was to fill holes in programming and required some sort of rating to justify the cost and to sell ads on. The other is a modern Blockbuster where Netflix pays the same fee for a 20 year old show regardless of who watches it.
So is Cheers. I don't know this but, Paramount might be giving it away in order to carry some other programming.
If you were so inclined you could order Ishtar on DVD from Netflix. The fact they offer it doesn't mean it's popular.
Based on all those Enterprise fan groups I see popping on up Myspace?
You're basing your assertion on data that doesn't exist.
If the nuMovies increased demand to the point where TNG -by comparison - cheap and easy process wasn't worth while, how successful is Discovery going to have to be to make a show watched by fewer people suddenly worth the time or money?
If wishes were horses, beggars would ride.
I don't disagree with the resolution issue and practical viewing distances from screens. I bought a 1080p projector when I could have gone 4K (and above 80", there is a visible difference--though it's rather marginal until 100", which is a common size in a dedicated cinema room like mine). However, none of this changes the fact that TV manufacturers are moving to 4K for anything 40" and above (except for a few very low end brands). And remaining 1080p models are stripped of the good video processing and other performance qualities--especially things that improve contrast and black levels. Moreover, the most important development is not resolution but HDR--and no one is making a 1080p set with HDR. A very close second is the wider colour gamut available on 4K sets and NOT on 1080p sets. HDR could be abused (not all releases benefit from it and it can be gimmicky, like early stereo sometimes was) but the benefits of the wider colour gamut are readily visible even at sizes where 4K resolution is irrelevant. But only 4K sets are getting those improvements. C'est la vie.All the TV distance/size calculators that show the technical benefit of 4K sets readily explain why TNG was remastered in 1080P. 4K does pretty much nothing unless you have a 200" screen inside a McMansion's living room large enough for another McMansion. Please forgive the hyperbole for intended comedic effect... But by then, anything 480i would really look bad and 1080P would still be quite passable and 6K or higher will never truly hit home markets, for reasons of resolution or distance, though for football games on a 1000" screen from x but not z feet away - that's where it would look better... I'm amazed at what certain brand/model 1080P sets can do to improve image quality, which only goes so far - especially regarding deinterlacing...
It was ABC, NBC, and CBS at the time (PBS doesn't count here). Those local affiliates were all attached to one of those 3 networks and some larger cities had a 4th or 5th independent channel. There also was no home media or cable yet so if you didn't like one of those three options, you were out of luck.There were, what, three network channels in the seventies, plus maybe local affiliates? I'm not 100% on the US market.
Or so they say. At 20-30 Mbps, it is garbage 4K. The X265 is like VHS at SP for 4K. It's decent for the average person, but garbage when compared to the original master.
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