I can't believe it has been that long!
Is it just me or has (technical) quality simply stagnated so that 20 years feel like nothing? The gap between 70s and 80s, and 80s and 90s felt way wider than the gap between 90s and, like, now.
Just saw a HD remastered episode of X Files. It looks like new. Minus the camera shaking.
Also true, but I think part of it is the cultural specificity of most television shows.
Most shows are designed around the exact way people are thinking at a given point in time, and the exact way they iconify family and culture. But those cultural concepts change so quickly, when you write a show like that it dates immediately.
Whereas when a show is designed around the writer's own personal feelings and experience as in the case of most scifi, it doesn't age as fast because the concepts are more universally relatable.
I think it's also because Star Trek truly was ahead of its time.Is it just me or has (technical) quality simply stagnated so that 20 years feel like nothing? The gap between 70s and 80s, and 80s and 90s felt way wider than the gap between 90s and, like, now.
All the Jemmies in that episode would have died of old age by now.![]()
Well later in DS9 the Galaxy class weren't so weak
Is it just me or has (technical) quality simply stagnated so that 20 years feel like nothing? The gap between 70s and 80s, and 80s and 90s felt way wider than the gap between 90s and, like, now.
Just saw a HD remastered episode of X Files. It looks like new. Minus the camera shaking.
Is it just me or has (technical) quality simply stagnated so that 20 years feel like nothing? The gap between 70s and 80s, and 80s and 90s felt way wider than the gap between 90s and, like, now.
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