DVDs on a Stormy Night
Mar. 12th, 2007 12:31 am♠
A loud storm has actually broken over the area. Months since the last time? It would happen when we've set our boxes outside to be collected by the rubbish collectors.
Monk is not sleepy enough to sleep through the thunder and lashings. So, he finished the first disc of "Cheers." He wanted to experiment with putting DVDs on his rotation for his movie thing, and to see if it would be alright to leave a disc in the machine in the same way that you can leave a video tape in the machine, and I suppose that is fine.
Though, a DVD is not as convenient for this movie thing. You have to remember where you left off and navigate to it, as anticipated. But it helps that you at least do not have to unload and load the disc everytime you want to watch a little something.
"Cheers" was seen as a throwaway DVD, in case the experiment messed the disc up, but Monk ended up being charmed by the show and enjoyed getting back into the old story and the Sam & Diane romance along with the whole gang, and the program is not without its sentimental value, remembering how it was his must-see TV in his UTSA days. Indeed, we might end up buying season two (sometime).
xXx
A loud storm has actually broken over the area. Months since the last time? It would happen when we've set our boxes outside to be collected by the rubbish collectors.
Monk is not sleepy enough to sleep through the thunder and lashings. So, he finished the first disc of "Cheers." He wanted to experiment with putting DVDs on his rotation for his movie thing, and to see if it would be alright to leave a disc in the machine in the same way that you can leave a video tape in the machine, and I suppose that is fine.
Though, a DVD is not as convenient for this movie thing. You have to remember where you left off and navigate to it, as anticipated. But it helps that you at least do not have to unload and load the disc everytime you want to watch a little something.
"Cheers" was seen as a throwaway DVD, in case the experiment messed the disc up, but Monk ended up being charmed by the show and enjoyed getting back into the old story and the Sam & Diane romance along with the whole gang, and the program is not without its sentimental value, remembering how it was his must-see TV in his UTSA days. Indeed, we might end up buying season two (sometime).