Discussion:
Ruby Rose lets loose on Batwoman production
(too old to reply)
shawn
2021-10-20 14:44:23 UTC
Permalink
No idea of how much of this is accurate but Ruby Rose is telling all
the dirty secrets of what went on behind the scenes of BATWOMAN and
how she was treated in a series of tweets. Basically it sounds like
there was a hard push to keep her and everyone working no matter what
injuries were suffered along the way.

https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760137036210176
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/1
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/2
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/3
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/4
shawn
2021-10-20 14:53:55 UTC
Permalink
On Wed, 20 Oct 2021 10:44:23 -0400, shawn
Post by shawn
No idea of how much of this is accurate but Ruby Rose is telling all
the dirty secrets of what went on behind the scenes of BATWOMAN and
how she was treated in a series of tweets. Basically it sounds like
there was a hard push to keep her and everyone working no matter what
injuries were suffered along the way.
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760137036210176
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/1
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/2
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/3
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/4
Here are some links to what I think is the original posts from her on
her Instagram Stories. It's a bit of a mess because each link is to
the original page and then you have to scroll through to the next
pages. Too bad there wasn't an easy way to convert the whole thing to
text.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CVQN31PsSFY/
https://www.instagram.com/p/CVQPJ1KMYgv/
Ian J. Ball
2021-10-20 15:09:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by shawn
No idea of how much of this is accurate but Ruby Rose is telling all
the dirty secrets of what went on behind the scenes of BATWOMAN and
how she was treated in a series of tweets. Basically it sounds like
there was a hard push to keep her and everyone working no matter what
injuries were suffered along the way.
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760137036210176
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/1
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/2
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/3
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/4
Basically, from I'm reading, all CW shows are guilty of this. For
example, none of the CW productions will give their main actors
drivers, which seems crazy when you're having them do 16-hour work days.

Reading between the lines of this and the threatened IATSE strike, my
guess is that this means the era of TV seasons of more than 13 episodes
will rapidly be coming to an end.

(Note: I don't agree with this, but between this and the surge in
streaming combined the total collapse of cable TV and the continuing
collapse of broadcast TV, I think it is inevitable.)



Ian (I wonder how long it will be before TV seasons are never more
than 6-8 episodes?... >:/ )
--
"Who would ever do this to him!?" - HottCiara on DOOL (04-27-2020), asking
who would stab Victor Kirakis... How about ANYONE WHO'S EVER MET HIM??!!
shawn
2021-10-20 15:39:05 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ian J. Ball
Post by shawn
No idea of how much of this is accurate but Ruby Rose is telling all
the dirty secrets of what went on behind the scenes of BATWOMAN and
how she was treated in a series of tweets. Basically it sounds like
there was a hard push to keep her and everyone working no matter what
injuries were suffered along the way.
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760137036210176
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/1
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/2
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/3
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/4
Basically, from I'm reading, all CW shows are guilty of this. For
example, none of the CW productions will give their main actors
drivers, which seems crazy when you're having them do 16-hour work days.
Agreed. It seems like such a small cost compared to everything else
that goes into making a show that I can't understand the reason behind
the decision. It's not like they are huge ensemble shows where the
costs could get exorbitant (barring something like DC'S LEGENDS).
Post by Ian J. Ball
Reading between the lines of this and the threatened IATSE strike, my
guess is that this means the era of TV seasons of more than 13 episodes
will rapidly be coming to an end.
I don't see how you make that leap. Not to say that I think the 13
episode season is sure to last but whether a season is six or thirteen
episodes long (or 22) the weekly demands on the primary actors will be
the same. That and the demands on an action based show where they need
main actor to be involved in the stunts (and take on the risk of
bodily injury.)
Post by Ian J. Ball
(Note: I don't agree with this, but between this and the surge in
streaming combined the total collapse of cable TV and the continuing
collapse of broadcast TV, I think it is inevitable.)
Ian (I wonder how long it will be before TV seasons are never more
than 6-8 episodes?... >:/ )
The more limited seasons do seem to work well for the British shows.
At least there tends to be much less in the way of filler than we get
with the US based shows.
Adam H. Kerman
2021-10-20 16:20:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by shawn
The more limited seasons do seem to work well for the British shows.
At least there tends to be much less in the way of filler than we get
with the US based shows.
Not really. I'm watching the British series Baptiste, which has found it
necessary to continue plot points about his family from the first series
and the precursor series, which was broadcast two years and four months
earlier. It should have been completely stand alone. No viewer remembers
any of it.

Baptiste is spun off from a series The Missing originally produced for
BBC One and Starz in 2014. It stars a French actor as a French character
that's set in various countries in which the character is deliberately
out of place. The spin off series was produced for BBC One only.

In the Baptiste series 1 episodes, there was needless plot misdirection
and plenty of filler that I thought distracted hugely from the main
story. The current series is off to a more interesting start so for the
moment I'm hopeful it'll avoid pitfalls from last season.

So, no, the number of episodes in a series has little to do with whether
there will be lousy writing, needless serialization, overreliance on red
herrings, and filler. I would be shocked if we get a very special
episode letting the audience know what it's wrong to beat up Asian
ethnics, though.
shawn
2021-10-20 16:40:15 UTC
Permalink
On Wed, 20 Oct 2021 16:20:34 -0000 (UTC), "Adam H. Kerman"
Post by Adam H. Kerman
Post by shawn
The more limited seasons do seem to work well for the British shows.
At least there tends to be much less in the way of filler than we get
with the US based shows.
Not really. I'm watching the British series Baptiste, which has found it
necessary to continue plot points about his family from the first series
and the precursor series, which was broadcast two years and four months
earlier. It should have been completely stand alone. No viewer remembers
any of it.
Not familiar with this series other than hearing of it here. I can
only comment on the series that I've seen and those didn't have the
filler that is so common with US shows. Though it's likely also helped
that other than a series like Doctor Who most of the series that I
watch from the UK are also limited series so there's a clear focus on
the story since they only have one season to tell the entire story.
Post by Adam H. Kerman
Baptiste is spun off from a series The Missing originally produced for
BBC One and Starz in 2014. It stars a French actor as a French character
that's set in various countries in which the character is deliberately
out of place. The spin off series was produced for BBC One only.
In the Baptiste series 1 episodes, there was needless plot misdirection
and plenty of filler that I thought distracted hugely from the main
story. The current series is off to a more interesting start so for the
moment I'm hopeful it'll avoid pitfalls from last season.
I would have thought that building off an existing show would have
made it easier for them to avoid the filler. Though maybe it falls
into the same trap that happens with our longer seasons where the
writers didn't have enough good ideas to fill a season. Better to have
the writers take the time to lay out the stories they want to tell and
then have the season last as long as it takes to tell that story
whether that be 3 episodes or 20.
Adam H. Kerman
2021-10-20 16:48:20 UTC
Permalink
Post by shawn
Post by Adam H. Kerman
Post by shawn
The more limited seasons do seem to work well for the British shows.
At least there tends to be much less in the way of filler than we get
with the US based shows.
Not really. I'm watching the British series Baptiste, which has found it
necessary to continue plot points about his family from the first series
and the precursor series, which was broadcast two years and four months
earlier. It should have been completely stand alone. No viewer remembers
any of it.
Not familiar with this series other than hearing of it here. I can
only comment on the series that I've seen and those didn't have the
filler that is so common with US shows. Though it's likely also helped
that other than a series like Doctor Who most of the series that I
watch from the UK are also limited series so there's a clear focus on
the story since they only have one season to tell the entire story.
Post by Adam H. Kerman
Baptiste is spun off from a series The Missing originally produced for
BBC One and Starz in 2014. It stars a French actor as a French character
that's set in various countries in which the character is deliberately
out of place. The spin off series was produced for BBC One only.
In the Baptiste series 1 episodes, there was needless plot misdirection
and plenty of filler that I thought distracted hugely from the main
story. The current series is off to a more interesting start so for the
moment I'm hopeful it'll avoid pitfalls from last season.
I would have thought that building off an existing show would have
made it easier for them to avoid the filler.
They gave Baptiste an utterly melodramatic family life because a cliched
detective is haunted HAUNTED by one or more tragedies. (I got a kick out
of Haunted, the 2002 UPN tv series, in which the police detective was
literally haunted, heh.) His daughter was a drug abuser who refused
help. I just cannot recall if she's alive or dead at this point.\

It's unnecessary crap that distracts from the story that should be told
about the main mystery.
Post by shawn
Though maybe it falls into the same trap that happens with our longer
seasons where the writers didn't have enough good ideas to fill a
season. Better to have the writers take the time to lay out the stories
they want to tell and then have the season last as long as it takes to
tell that story whether that be 3 episodes or 20.
If only that were a choice that had anything to do with resulting quality.
BTR1701
2021-10-20 17:57:05 UTC
Permalink
Post by shawn
Post by Ian J. Ball
Post by shawn
No idea of how much of this is accurate but Ruby Rose is telling all
the dirty secrets of what went on behind the scenes of BATWOMAN and
how she was treated in a series of tweets. Basically it sounds like
there was a hard push to keep her and everyone working no matter what
injuries were suffered along the way.
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760137036210176
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/1
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/2
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/3
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/4
Basically, from I'm reading, all CW shows are guilty of this. For
example, none of the CW productions will give their main actors
drivers, which seems crazy when you're having them do 16-hour work days.
Agreed. It seems like such a small cost compared to everything else
that goes into making a show that I can't understand the reason behind
the decision. It's not like they are huge ensemble shows where the
costs could get exorbitant (barring something like DC'S LEGENDS).
Post by Ian J. Ball
Reading between the lines of this and the threatened IATSE strike, my
guess is that this means the era of TV seasons of more than 13 episodes
will rapidly be coming to an end.
I don't see how you make that leap. Not to say that I think the 13
episode season is sure to last
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
anim8rfsk
2021-10-20 18:37:57 UTC
Permalink
Post by BTR1701
Post by shawn
Post by Ian J. Ball
Post by shawn
No idea of how much of this is accurate but Ruby Rose is telling all
the dirty secrets of what went on behind the scenes of BATWOMAN and
how she was treated in a series of tweets. Basically it sounds like
there was a hard push to keep her and everyone working no matter what
injuries were suffered along the way.
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760137036210176
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/1
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/2
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/3
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/4
Basically, from I'm reading, all CW shows are guilty of this. For
example, none of the CW productions will give their main actors
drivers, which seems crazy when you're having them do 16-hour work days.
Agreed. It seems like such a small cost compared to everything else
that goes into making a show that I can't understand the reason behind
the decision. It's not like they are huge ensemble shows where the
costs could get exorbitant (barring something like DC'S LEGENDS).
Post by Ian J. Ball
Reading between the lines of this and the threatened IATSE strike, my
guess is that this means the era of TV seasons of more than 13 episodes
will rapidly be coming to an end.
I don't see how you make that leap. Not to say that I think the 13
episode season is sure to last
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
39
--
“The last thing I want to do is hurt you, but it’s still on my list.”
shawn
2021-10-20 19:33:45 UTC
Permalink
Post by BTR1701
Post by shawn
Post by Ian J. Ball
Post by shawn
No idea of how much of this is accurate but Ruby Rose is telling all
the dirty secrets of what went on behind the scenes of BATWOMAN and
how she was treated in a series of tweets. Basically it sounds like
there was a hard push to keep her and everyone working no matter what
injuries were suffered along the way.
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760137036210176
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/1
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/2
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/3
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/4
Basically, from I'm reading, all CW shows are guilty of this. For
example, none of the CW productions will give their main actors
drivers, which seems crazy when you're having them do 16-hour work days.
Agreed. It seems like such a small cost compared to everything else
that goes into making a show that I can't understand the reason behind
the decision. It's not like they are huge ensemble shows where the
costs could get exorbitant (barring something like DC'S LEGENDS).
Post by Ian J. Ball
Reading between the lines of this and the threatened IATSE strike, my
guess is that this means the era of TV seasons of more than 13 episodes
will rapidly be coming to an end.
I don't see how you make that leap. Not to say that I think the 13
episode season is sure to last
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
39
I saw some of this with the original run of Doctor Who. Though long
after the episodes actually aired in the UK but they had the longer
seasons for the first seven year or so and then dropped back to 25
episodes per season.
BTR1701
2021-10-20 20:50:18 UTC
Permalink
Post by shawn
Post by BTR1701
Post by shawn
Post by Ian J. Ball
Post by shawn
No idea of how much of this is accurate but Ruby Rose is telling all
the dirty secrets of what went on behind the scenes of BATWOMAN and
how she was treated in a series of tweets. Basically it sounds like
there was a hard push to keep her and everyone working no matter what
injuries were suffered along the way.
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760137036210176
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/1
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/2
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/3
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/4
Basically, from I'm reading, all CW shows are guilty of this. For
example, none of the CW productions will give their main actors
drivers, which seems crazy when you're having them do 16-hour work days.
Agreed. It seems like such a small cost compared to everything else
that goes into making a show that I can't understand the reason behind
the decision. It's not like they are huge ensemble shows where the
costs could get exorbitant (barring something like DC'S LEGENDS).
Post by Ian J. Ball
Reading between the lines of this and the threatened IATSE strike, my
guess is that this means the era of TV seasons of more than 13 episodes
will rapidly be coming to an end.
I don't see how you make that leap. Not to say that I think the 13
episode season is sure to last
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
39
I saw some of this with the original run of Doctor Who. Though long
after the episodes actually aired in the UK but they had the longer
seasons for the first seven year or so and then dropped back to 25
episodes per season.
Watching old episodes of KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER on DVD, not only wer
there more episodes, each hour-long episode had a run time of 51-53 minutes
Now they're down to about 39-40 minutes for an hour-long episode.
anim8rfsk
2021-10-20 23:25:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by shawn
Post by BTR1701
Post by shawn
Post by Ian J. Ball
Post by shawn
No idea of how much of this is accurate but Ruby Rose is telling all
the dirty secrets of what went on behind the scenes of BATWOMAN and
how she was treated in a series of tweets. Basically it sounds like
there was a hard push to keep her and everyone working no matter what
injuries were suffered along the way.
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760137036210176
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/1
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/2
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/3
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/4
Basically, from I'm reading, all CW shows are guilty of this. For
example, none of the CW productions will give their main actors
drivers, which seems crazy when you're having them do 16-hour work days.
Agreed. It seems like such a small cost compared to everything else
that goes into making a show that I can't understand the reason behind
the decision. It's not like they are huge ensemble shows where the
costs could get exorbitant (barring something like DC'S LEGENDS).
Post by Ian J. Ball
Reading between the lines of this and the threatened IATSE strike, my
guess is that this means the era of TV seasons of more than 13 episodes
will rapidly be coming to an end.
I don't see how you make that leap. Not to say that I think the 13
episode season is sure to last
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
39
I saw some of this with the original run of Doctor Who. Though long
after the episodes actually aired in the UK but they had the longer
seasons for the first seven year or so and then dropped back to 25
episodes per season.
Watching old episodes of KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER on DVD, not only were
there more episodes, each hour-long episode had a run time of 51-53
minutes.
Now they're down to about 39-40 minutes for an hour-long episode.
It takes extra time and money to put that horrible yellow filter over NCIS
Hawaii.


“The last thing I want to do is hurt you, but it’s still on my list.”
trotsky
2021-10-21 09:41:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by anim8rfsk
It takes extra time and money to put that horrible yellow filter over NCIS
Hawaii.
Is that some kind of racist bullshit towards Polynesians?

trotsky
2021-10-21 08:59:00 UTC
Permalink
Watching old episodes of KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER on DVD, not only were
there more episodes, each hour-long episode had a run time of 51-53 minutes.
Now they're down to about 39-40 minutes for an hour-long episode.
Another lie.
trotsky
2021-10-20 20:43:24 UTC
Permalink
Post by BTR1701
Post by shawn
Post by Ian J. Ball
Post by shawn
No idea of how much of this is accurate but Ruby Rose is telling all
the dirty secrets of what went on behind the scenes of BATWOMAN and
how she was treated in a series of tweets. Basically it sounds like
there was a hard push to keep her and everyone working no matter what
injuries were suffered along the way.
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760137036210176
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/1
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/2
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/3
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/4
Basically, from I'm reading, all CW shows are guilty of this. For
example, none of the CW productions will give their main actors
drivers, which seems crazy when you're having them do 16-hour work days.
Agreed. It seems like such a small cost compared to everything else
that goes into making a show that I can't understand the reason behind
the decision. It's not like they are huge ensemble shows where the
costs could get exorbitant (barring something like DC'S LEGENDS).
Post by Ian J. Ball
Reading between the lines of this and the threatened IATSE strike, my
guess is that this means the era of TV seasons of more than 13 episodes
will rapidly be coming to an end.
I don't see how you make that leap. Not to say that I think the 13
episode season is sure to last
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
39
Nobody asked for your IQ.
trotsky
2021-10-20 20:39:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by BTR1701
Post by shawn
Post by Ian J. Ball
Post by shawn
No idea of how much of this is accurate but Ruby Rose is telling all
the dirty secrets of what went on behind the scenes of BATWOMAN and
how she was treated in a series of tweets. Basically it sounds like
there was a hard push to keep her and everyone working no matter what
injuries were suffered along the way.
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760137036210176
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/1
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/2
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/3
https://twitter.com/DiscussingFilm/status/1450760148037812229/photo/4
Basically, from I'm reading, all CW shows are guilty of this. For
example, none of the CW productions will give their main actors
drivers, which seems crazy when you're having them do 16-hour work days.
Agreed. It seems like such a small cost compared to everything else
that goes into making a show that I can't understand the reason behind
the decision. It's not like they are huge ensemble shows where the
costs could get exorbitant (barring something like DC'S LEGENDS).
Post by Ian J. Ball
Reading between the lines of this and the threatened IATSE strike, my
guess is that this means the era of TV seasons of more than 13 episodes
will rapidly be coming to an end.
I don't see how you make that leap. Not to say that I think the 13
episode season is sure to last
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
How much have production costs changed then you motherfucking moron?
Ed Stasiak
2021-10-20 21:10:39 UTC
Permalink
BTR1701
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
At one point, we were getting 24+ episodes of Star Trek Deep Shit 9
and 24+ episodes of Star Trek Voyageur at the same time.

Nowadays, the latest “season” of Endeavor was three (3) episodes…
BTR1701
2021-10-20 21:30:57 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ed Stasiak
BTR1701
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
At one point, we were getting 24+ episodes of Star Trek Deep Shit 9
and 24+ episodes of Star Trek Voyageur at the same time.
Nowadays, the latest “season” of Endeavor was three (3) episodes…
Yeah, they really can't legitimately call anything with four or less episode
a "season" or a "TV series". At that point, it's just a mini-series.
Ed Stasiak
2021-10-20 22:05:40 UTC
Permalink
BTR1701
Ed Stasiak
Nowadays, the latest “season” of Endeavor was three (3) episodes…
Yeah, they really can't legitimately call anything with four or less episodes
a "season" or a "TV series". At that point, it's just a mini-series.
The episodes are 1.5 hours long but still, that ain't a "season" IMO.
anim8rfsk
2021-10-20 23:25:29 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ed Stasiak
BTR1701
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
At one point, we were getting 24+ episodes of Star Trek Deep Shit 9
and 24+ episodes of Star Trek Voyageur at the same time.
Nowadays, the latest “season” of Endeavor was three (3) episodes…
Yeah, they really can't legitimately call anything with four or less episodes
a "season" or a "TV series". At that point, it's just a mini-series.
You can’t legitimately call Star Trek Voyager a TV series no matter how
many episodes they made.


“The last thing I want to do is hurt you, but it’s still on my list.”
trotsky
2021-10-21 09:05:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ed Stasiak
BTR1701
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
At one point, we were getting 24+ episodes of Star Trek Deep Shit 9
and 24+ episodes of Star Trek Voyageur at the same time.
Nowadays, the latest “season” of Endeavor was three (3) episodes…
Yeah, they really can't legitimately call anything with four or less episodes
a "season" or a "TV series". At that point, it's just a mini-series.
Well sure, if you and your sockpuppet feels qualified to comment on what
the Brits do. Sounds like you're talking out your ass again though.
anim8rfsk
2021-10-20 23:25:28 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ed Stasiak
BTR1701
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
At one point, we were getting 24+ episodes of Star Trek Deep Shit 9
and 24+ episodes of Star Trek Voyageur at the same time.
Nowadays, the latest “season” of Endeavor was three (3) episodes…
What’s endeavor?
--
“The last thing I want to do is hurt you, but it’s still on my list.”
Adam H. Kerman
2021-10-20 23:46:28 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ed Stasiak
BTR1701
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
At one point, we were getting 24+ episodes of Star Trek Deep Shit 9
and 24+ episodes of Star Trek Voyageur at the same time.
Nowadays, the latest "season" of Endeavor was three (3) episodes...
What's endeavor?
Someone with your speel chucker doesn't get to do spelling flames.

Endeavour, the ITV tv series about baby Inspector Morse starring Shaun
Evans.
anim8rfsk
2021-10-21 01:43:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by Adam H. Kerman
Post by Ed Stasiak
BTR1701
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
At one point, we were getting 24+ episodes of Star Trek Deep Shit 9
and 24+ episodes of Star Trek Voyageur at the same time.
Nowadays, the latest "season" of Endeavor was three (3) episodes...
What's endeavor?
Someone with your speel chucker doesn't get to do spelling flames.
Endeavour, the ITV tv series about baby Inspector Morse starring Shaun
Evans.
Thanks. Given the context I thought maybe it was about a spaceship.


“The last thing I want to do is hurt you, but it’s still on my list.”
Adam H. Kerman
2021-10-21 01:51:18 UTC
Permalink
Post by anim8rfsk
Post by Adam H. Kerman
Post by Ed Stasiak
BTR1701
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
At one point, we were getting 24+ episodes of Star Trek Deep Shit 9
and 24+ episodes of Star Trek Voyageur at the same time.
Nowadays, the latest "season" of Endeavor was three (3) episodes...
What's endeavor?
Someone with your speel chucker doesn't get to do spelling flames.
Endeavour, the ITV tv series about baby Inspector Morse starring Shaun
Evans.
Thanks. Given the context I thought maybe it was about a spaceship.
https://www.kcet.org/tv-talk/space-shuttle-endeavour-programming
anim8rfsk
2021-10-21 03:38:57 UTC
Permalink
Post by Adam H. Kerman
Post by anim8rfsk
Post by Adam H. Kerman
Post by Ed Stasiak
BTR1701
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
At one point, we were getting 24+ episodes of Star Trek Deep Shit 9
and 24+ episodes of Star Trek Voyageur at the same time.
Nowadays, the latest "season" of Endeavor was three (3) episodes...
What's endeavor?
Someone with your speel chucker doesn't get to do spelling flames.
Endeavour, the ITV tv series about baby Inspector Morse starring Shaun
Evans.
Thanks. Given the context I thought maybe it was about a spaceship.
https://www.kcet.org/tv-talk/space-shuttle-endeavour-programming
:)
--
“The last thing I want to do is hurt you, but it’s still on my list.”
trotsky
2021-10-21 09:38:11 UTC
Permalink
Post by anim8rfsk
Post by Ed Stasiak
BTR1701
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
At one point, we were getting 24+ episodes of Star Trek Deep Shit 9
and 24+ episodes of Star Trek Voyageur at the same time.
Nowadays, the latest “season” of Endeavor was three (3) episodes…
What’s endeavor?
OMFG
The Horny Goat
2021-10-21 00:12:52 UTC
Permalink
Post by BTR1701
Post by shawn
I don't see how you make that leap. Not to say that I think the 13
episode season is sure to last
I'm old enough to remember when the season standard was 24 episodes.
Heck the 3 seasons of the original Star Trek were 29, 26 and 24
episodes....
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