WOW! Liese, you look amazing.
The Minearverse 3: The Network Is a Harsh Mistress
[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls and The Inside), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath.
Excellent haircut, Liese.
how long do the Brit shows air (minutes) in the UK?
Anything you see on BBCAmerica originally aired without ads at all.
I know you have all been in suspense about how my hair turned out. Whaddya think?
Where's Hec? The new cut looks great, Liese.
t Nattery
Stuff is off-topic in this thread? Huh.
t /Nattery
Liese, I love it! It's fun and hip and very cute! Unless, of course, you're one of those women who thinks the word "cute" is a negative in which case it's stunning and beautiful and definitely-not-cute! Also looks very easy to take care of and you can tuck it behind your ears so it won't be in your face all day. Also, great highlights! Is that enough exclamation points? No!
Do they have fewer commercials per show than the US?If I remember correctly from when I was there, total amount of time is the same but the commercials air in bigger chunks so it just feels different. I really should let one of the Brits answer this, though, because I'm very likely wrong.
Yay Liese, very cool! Did you donate all that hair you got cut off? That's a lot of hair!
t /able to catch up on Minearverse cause it's a new thread
Thanks! I'm pretty happy with it. Coulda been a little chunkier, but on the whole, of the good.
Yup, donated the whole whack of it. Stylist estimated it at 16" for the cut braid.
Very interesting about the BBCAmerica airing times.
Liese!! It's just lovely!
Liese, Coupling aired Season 4 ep 4 (The Cirucus of the Epidurals) on sunday.
As for Brit shows, the BBC is commercial free. I don't get time to watch an awful lot of actual TV as it airs, but they generally produce/air either 30 or 60 minute episodes of dramas (or 90-120 minute TV movie type things). When airing foreign product such as US shows (They had the rights to '24' for the first two seasons) The BBC would make the 42-ish minutes up to 45 with trailers for upcoming shows, weather bulletins etc.
Aside from the BBC stations, pretty much everything else is commercial based, so as in the US a 42 minute show such as Angel would run in a one hour slot. (Though SKy which airs Angel over here is (or at least was last time I checked) notoriously bad for butting commercials in the wrong place! (as opposed to the creators intended commercial gaps).
Edited as my referencing 'hour-long' dramas as more accurately 42 minutes (though it seems to be slowly decreasing over time as the commercials cut into the programming) makes me think of the answer to the question of Life, The Universe, and Everything....
Forgot all about Black Adder - that's out on DVD right? I only caught a couple episodes of BA IV, I think it was. The one set in World War I? Laughed my ass off.
Yes, they're available on DVD in North America now. The first season was a bit ropey, but they got better and better with each one.
Most BBC programmes are 50-55 minutes long. They get edited down for North American markets to permit more commercials. It used to be very noticeable how Star Trek would end after 45 minutes when it was shown on BBC2. The 15 minute timeslot did allow some interesting short programmes to be aired though.
The first thing I noticed about US TV was how a commercial was shown before the programme begins, then another after the title sequence. That's not normally done on British commercial TV (or at least it wasn't a few years ago). The frequency of commercial breaks also took time to get used to. As ellemarie noted, we're used to longer chunks of content.
Looking very stylish Liese.
edit differentiate between BBC and commercial TV.
a commercial was shown before the programme begins, then another after the title sequence
Semantically, isn't it after the previous show ends? Top of the hour starts with the show. Most go to ads after the opening credits -- I'm rewatching Another World from 1988, and I keep forgetting to not FF through them, since they're short and there's TV right on the other side.
Then there are shows like Alias which sometimes have more than ten minutes of show before the opening credits.