I've just had Chromecast TV a few weeks and some Apple TV+ shows produce horrible static type audio buzz on right channel when using bt headphones (Bose QC 35 with bt adapter on Philips TV /optical output). Any idea what causes this? Other streaming services like HBO Max and Netflix function ok.
Hey there ToV1000,
I apologize about the late response on your thread, thank you for being patient! Were you able to fix that audio buzz? If not, I'd be happy to help out, as I can imagine that makes your content hard to watch. Now, does this issue only occur in the Apple TV app? If so, you may need to go into the Apple TV sound settings and change them around to see if that helps, or even go into the advanced sound settings on Google TV and enabled and disable different settings to see if the problem persists. If that still doesn't help, disconnect the headphones and reconnect them.
Just checking in to make sure that you've seen our response. Please let us know if you have other questions or concerns as we will be locking this in 24 hours if we won't hear back from you again. Feel free to start a new thread and we'll be happy to help.
It's impossible not to notice that while the success of the Fallout TV show is getting lots of people excited about Fallout, there's no new Fallout game to play. Fallout 76 is over five years old, and Fallout 4 turns nine this year. Bethesda is going to make a Fallout 5, but you might lose your money if you bet that it'll be out by 2030.
The observation that Bethesda might've missed an opportunity has been made many times on social media, and yeah, I assume it would've been prudent business-doing to have dropped a new Fallout game somewhere in the vicinity of all this buzz. But I'm not convinced that Bethesda Game Studios has made some huge blunder here. Its leisurely pace is one of the things I like about it.
Bethesda gets poked fun at for rereleasing old games more often than it makes new ones, but can you blame it? Thanks to the Fallout show's popularity and some strategically timed discounts, Fallout 4, Fallout 4: Game of the Year Edition, Fallout 76, Fallout: New Vegas, Fallout 3, Fallout 4 VR, Fallout Tactics: Brotherhood of Steel, and the Fallout Franchise Bundle have all jumped onto Steam's top 100 bestsellers list this week. The original two Fallouts are also on sale.
I'd also contend that Bethesda Game Studios' slow rate of releases allows its games' modding scenes to mature, since there's no temptation to switch to the next sequel every couple years. Not many games have as many big ambitious mods in progress as Fallout 4 does.
I don't think it's such a bad thing that we wound up in the universe where the success of the Fallout show has people downloading Fallout: New Vegas, as opposed to the one where we're on Fallout 11: Fresno.
There's something to be said for iterating on ideas with lots of easy-to-digest small plates instead of hiding in the kitchen all day cooking up one enormous main course. Ubisoft's recent Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown and upcoming Prince of Persia roguelite are good examples of the former approach. And Bethesda did release a good Fallout spinoff in Fallout Shelter (which, granted, is almost a decade old itself).
But I don't think the world really needs multiple new, giant, open world Bethesda Game Studios games at the same time. Starfield is enough for a while. I didn't click with it, but with The Elder Scrolls 6 years out still, I'm curious to see how the developer responds to Starfield feedback, and everything else it's learned since Skyrim came out.
In an alternate universe, Bethesda Game Studios blew itself up into a Fallout and Elder Scrolls-producing machine after Fallout 3 and Skyrim, the way Ubisoft turned itself into a semi-auto Assassin's Creed gun. I don't think it's such a bad thing that we wound up in the universe where the success of the Fallout show has people downloading Fallout: New Vegas, as opposed to the one where we're on Fallout 11: Fresno.
Here's the buzz currently whipping Twitter up into a frenzy: According to TV Line and The Hollywood Reporter, Netflix has reportedly closed a deal with Warner Bros. for a limited-series revival of Gilmore Girls, penned by series creator Amy Sherman-Palladino and exec producer Daniel Palladino. Instead of a typical 10-episode series, reports says the Netflix deal involves four 90-minute episodes/mini-movies.
This would mean Amy, who did not write the last season of GG due to a contract dispute, would finally get to have the last word (or four) on her series. But here's the thing: All the big stars, including Lauren Graham, Alexis Bledel, Kelly Bishop and Scott Patterson, haven't signed the dotted line yet.
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