Yeah, in America we're evidently too stupid to watch serialized TV that 
requires shows to be watched in order. And the studios like standalone stuff so 
they can carve up shows and rebroadcast them as they see fit. A prime example 
in recent years was Star Trek TNG on TNT (or was it Spike TV?) They started 
having theme weeks: one week would be five shows dealing only with Data, the 
next week would be a Worf week, then a Riker week, etc. The shows were from all 
over the seven year run of the series. I found it annoying, but that's what 
they like. 
It's another reason DS9 never gets the love it deserves: the studios don't like 
having to keep it in one slot in reruns, and having to deal with the task of 
showing the eps in order. 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Mr. Worf" <hellomahog...@gmail.com> 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Saturday, August 8, 2009 1:27:10 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] Exo Squad and other Good Stuff - For Mr. Worf 






Thanks for the link! I couldn't remember the correct name for some reason. I 
missed some episodes of the show. TV stations seem to play fast and loose with 
episodes sometimes. 


On Fri, Aug 7, 2009 at 9:46 PM, Keith Johnson < keithbjohn...@comcast.net > 
wrote: 






Here you go, I posted this back in March. As I said in the G.I. Joe post, I've 
never found ExoSquad in an official DVD set. My DVD is homemade via eBay, but 
it is online... 

******************************** 
< keithbjohn...@comcast.net wrote> 

Wow, this is pretty cool! Frustrated at having missed back-to-back eps of 
"Legend of the Seeker" yesterday, I went to the series' website to watch it 
online. As I clicked on one of the eps, I noticed that it was a Hulu feed. 

Hulu, perhaps you've heard of it? :) 

I haven't done much with it past glancing at a few things. Not currently owning 
a nice widescreen computer monitor or flatscreen TV, I never much saw the need 
to watch programs on my 14" laptop screen. But I have to admit, the speed with 
which "Seeker" streamed surprised me. And the clarity--wow! Even on my old IBM 
T42 laptop running pokey WinXP, the picture looked great. Intrigued, i then 
navigated to the Hulu website. Wow. 

One reason I haven't been as much of a You Tube nut as some people--such as my 
brother, who's always on me for not watching movies there--is that a lot of the 
stuff on You Tube is not all that great quality. I especially hate going full 
screen with an animated clip, only to get a pixelated, blurry image. Other 
sites like Apple have great looking trailers, but sometimes the download speed 
is a bit slow. Hulu impressed me by offering the best of both aspects. I found 
myself going to the Animation section (of course), and was greeted with a 
wealth of choices. Too many to mention them all, but not everything I could 
want (no old Looney Tunes or Popeye, Felix the Cat seems to be the inferiour 
version from the late 20th Century). But still, enough things to keep me very, 
very happy. Let me mention just a few things that caught my eye: 

Exosquad! 
http://www.hulu.com/exosquad?c=Animation-and-Cartoons 
The late great cartoon that showed Americans could actually make a good, 
serious 'toon. Fifty-one eps (a handful are missing). Makes me very, very 
happy! I will note the quality isn't the greatest--not that it's bad, but the 
series itself never had the sharpness and beauty of something like Robotech or 
any other Japanese 'toon. But still, it looks the same on Hulu as I remember it 
on broadcast TV. If you've never watched this show do yourself a favor and 
check it out. 

Rocky and Bullwinkle 
http://www.hulu.com/rocky-and-bullwinkle-and-friends?c=Animation-and-Cartoons 
The classic, satirical 'toon from the '60s, which even includes great stuff 
like Mr. Peabody and his boy Sherman! Haven't seen yet if my fave, Fractured 
Fairy Tales, is included as well. But with thirteen twenty-two minute eps, I 
think it must be there. Talk about a blast from the past! 

Speed Racer 
http://www.hulu.com/speed-racer?c=Animation-and-Cartoons 
The Monster Car! The Great Race! The Supersonic Car! All the great, 
horribly/amusingly dubbed episodes you remember loving as a child. I don't care 
how many times I see 'em (and I own several), hearing that theme, watching that 
cool car jump across a chasm or roll along the bottom of a lake, and listening 
to the characters' hyper speech--it's still great fun! 

Fat Albert and The Cosby Kids 
http://www.hulu.com/fat-albert?c=Animation-and-Cartoons 
This 'toon is like a snowy day in January: too cool for school! 

And even.... 

Bravestarr 
http://www.hulu.com/bravestarr?c=Animation-and-Cartoons 
the adventures of Marshall Bravestarr, the Native with animal-based powers who 
protects the people of the planet New Texas. Like Exosquad and many 
American-made 'toons of that time, it's not exactly the sharpest, finely 
detailed cartoon around, but it has nice pastels. And I still get a kick of of 
"Equestroid" Thirty-thirty speaking fondly of his beloved gun Sarah Jane! 


Now, if only they could pick up eps of the awesome 'toon "The Real 
Ghostbusters", "Battle of the Planets", and "Starblazers", I'd be ecstatic! 






-- 
Bringing diversity to perversity for 9 years! 
Mahogany at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mahogany_pleasures_of_darkness/ 



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