"Slider" <sli...@slide.com> wrote in message news:g238gf$7cv$1...@aioe.org...
> Is series 5 the last? Hoping so, as it's getting a little long now with
> many answers. Hope they don't drag it out for several years.
Two more years left.
--
Bev Vincent
www.BevVincent.com
What else you got to do?
Where does it say it's a US newsgroup?
It doesn't because officially it's not a US newsgroup. :-)
The problem is that anything not nailed down (in this case via a
country code, eg. alt.tv.lost.uk would be the British one, if such a
newsgroup existed) is instantly assumed to be owned by America, even
when it actually isn't.
Well, Al Gore DID invent the internets.
I don't know. My other question is if Lost has six series finales in UK. How
do you guys call the last episode of each series?
In the previous post. Didn't you read it? ;-)
--
8^)~ Sue (remove the x to email)
~~~~
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Yeah, Bob Metcalf had nothing to do with it. He was just a pawn of the
man.
The USA own everything, didn't you know. Without them the entire planet
would cease to exist.
That's why they had the "World Series" sports events that until
recently didn't actually include any other country taking part. ;-)
> On Tue, 03 Jun 2008 17:35:11 -0400, Ar Q wrote:
>
> > I don't know. My other question is if Lost has six series finales in UK.
> > How do you guys call the last episode of each series?
>
> "Last episode of the series"!
>
> I'm English but I actually prefer the US term 'season' rather than
> series. I use 'series' to describe the entire run of a show.
>
> Just my tuppence worth :-)
For that you can thank the "Americanization" of the world via TV,
magazines, books, etc. America may not currently run the world, but
simply by slow infiltration they at some stage basically will and
everyone will be misspelling "colour" and mispronouncing "aluminium"
... of course by then TXTing will have destroyed written language and
it will be "clr" and "alunm" anyway. :-(
>> The USA own everything, didn't you know. Without them the entire
>> planet would cease to exist.
>
> That's why they had the "World Series" sports events that until
> recently didn't actually include any other country taking part. ;-)
And still doesn't (one Canadian team could enter though). World Baseball
Classic is the other tournament you're thinking about :)
--
Gio
http://blog.watkijkikoptv.info
http://myanimelist.net/profile/extatix
God damn Hillbillies. That brings back memories of the 'Top gear" episode
(not sure which SERIES it was) when they all went to the states.
If America don't own something they steal it. One thing which really pisses
me off is seeing languages listed as English UK and English US. Whats the
fucking difference. The yanks stole it and are trying to dominate as usual.
Tossers!
> "McAlisters" <nos...@nospam.org> wrote in message
> news:OpF1k.1432$js1...@newsfe24.lga...
> >
> > "Slider" <sli...@slide.com> wrote in message news:g26blp$tia$1...@aioe.org...
> >>
> >> "Tim" <jmet...@yahoo.ca> wrote in message
> >> news:23753$4845843b$cef8ac46$25...@TEKSAVVY.COM...
> >>> Ar Q wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> "Slider" <sli...@slide.com> wrote in message
> >>>> news:g238gf$7cv$1...@aioe.org...
> >>>>
> >>>>>Is series 5 the last? Hoping so, as it's getting a little long now
> >>>>>with
> >>>>>many answers. Hope they don't drag it out for several years.
> >>>>
> >>>> ABC has 6 seasons planned. By the way, this is not UK newsgroup but US
> >>>> newsgroup, here we call it "season" not "series". The whole six seasons
> >>>> makes one series.
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>> Where does it say it's a US newsgroup?
> >>
> >> The USA own everything, didn't you know. Without them the entire planet
> >> would cease to exist.
> > That is correct.
>
> God damn Hillbillies. That brings back memories of the 'Top gear" episode
> (not sure which SERIES it was) when they all went to the states.
> If America don't own something they steal it.
That last sentence is Bill Gates' entire business philosophy, except
that he also has an extra bit where if he can't steal it he simply buys
it. :-(
> One thing which really pisses
> me off is seeing languages listed as English UK and English US. Whats the
> fucking difference. The yanks stole it and are trying to dominate as usual.
> Tossers!
The difference is that the "English US" is a corrupt version of English
with misspelling of words like "colour", changing the meaning of some
words an using a different word ("hood" instead of "bonnet") just to be
perverse.
It's because a lot of software ships with "English US" spellcheckers as
the default (if tnot the only choice!) that their version is slowly
becoming the standard.
Between America and TXT-speak they're slowly corrupting the proper
Queen's English like what we speak. Eventually everyone will simply be
using "English US". :-(
Chill.
In ten years time it will all be Chinese.
Not likely since most of the Asian countries want to be American as
well. :-\
Hey, idiot, this is simply a newsgroup. No country owns it, moron.
For US shows, I usually call them seasons. Most of my friends do as
well, and a common vocabulary is really what's important.
I think a main difference is that British TV never really had clearly
differentiated seasons. There certainly never has been a big "new
season" thing here, probably because we handle ratings differently.
You might get a series of six or ten shows each year, and another
series the next year, but another show might have a smattering of
episodes spread along the year, and another may be made continuously.
Some shows start and stop several times a year.
> I think a main difference is that British TV never really had clearly
> differentiated seasons. There certainly never has been a big "new
> season" thing here, probably because we handle ratings differently.
> You might get a series of six or ten shows each year, and another
> series the next year, but another show might have a smattering of
> episodes spread along the year, and another may be made continuously.
> Some shows start and stop several times a year.
In the U.S., seasons started to coincide with the advertising
practices of the car makers, who would roll out their new models in
the Fall. Totally advertiser driven, which must be different when a TV
tax is involved.
Mmmm That's the tastiest kind!
No, you got that wrong. Has nothing to do with advertising cars. Has
to do with Americans taking summer vacations which in its' self has to
do with the American school system.
Most American schools would start the new school year/semester in mid
September and end in mid June. Families would then use the summer
months to take vacations. The major TV networks decided to started
their seasons to coincide with the school year became more Americans
would be home to watch TV and most likely traveling during the summmer
months. And since TV shows are paid through advertising dollars based
on the number of viewers it made sense to broadcast shows when people
would be available to watch.
Prior to TV shows there were radio programs. I believe they also used
the same set up with a new season starting in the fall and ending in
late spring.
The school year came about because the predominate rural America at that
time. The school year started out in late fall after the harvest and
run until early spring. The children then would be free to help out on
the family farm during the rest of the year. Over a period of time the
school year got longer until it started in early fall and ran until late
spring.
(Ryan, if I've got this wrong, please feel free to correct me.)
Fred Ellis
--
Who do you serve. . . . And who do you trust?
(To e-mail me, remove the X from my address)
You'd think that someone over the course of the last 30 years would have
tipped network programmers off about the invention of VCR's and DVR's. Given
the tremendous success of a couple of programs that premiered in the summer
(American Idol and Survivor), I'm rather surprised that networks still
essentially take the summer off.
Many answers? Where did we get any answers?
I'm sure what you really meant to ask is -- how many spinoffs? Well,
you see what they might do is have the island break into chunks...
> imagine this: i am neiter american nor british, but i can understand
> BOTH terms!
But 'how to quote' is beyond your limits?
Thats funny I heard last year that they were only doing 2 more
seasons.
But they could do another Series about the lost guys on that raft,
Daniels group. they are now nowhere near the Dharma island and could
find another magic island for "Lost II".
to satisfy your curiosity:
"But 'how to quote' is beyond your limits?"
-Giovanni Wassen, Great Defender of the English Grammar
to satisfy my curiosity:
please explain why i should use quotation marks. I did not want to use
any of the cases when quotation marks should be used (as explained in
wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quotation_mark). But Wiki is not
authoritative. So, would you like to explain the grammar to me?
> the original post of this thread is so very laughable that i wanted to
> add something silly.
correction: Ar Q´s reply is silly, not the original post.
> please explain why i should use quotation marks. I did not want to use
> any of the cases when quotation marks should be used (as explained in
> wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quotation_mark). But Wiki is not
> authoritative. So, would you like to explain the grammar to me?
Good lord, never used usenet before?
http://www.netmeister.org/news/learn2quote.html
Not everybody reads posts threaded, how on earth should they know what your
reply was all about?
Oh, and btw, English isn't my native language either.
> Not everybody reads posts threaded, how on earth should they know what your
> reply was all about?
so i annoyed some people? too bad. i was not aware of this. they?ll get
over it. thanks for the advice.
he was on the team that developed it
relax there Reginald, Britain laid claim to half the planet at one
point
You sir, are a true Renaissance man.