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The Water Cooler
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<blockquote data-quote="OKNewshawk" data-source="post: 1989455" data-attributes="member: 6592"><p>This is a very bad thing, JB. It used to be that TV attracted some of the fines writers of the time (Rod Sterling and Paddy Chayefsky are two that come to mind immediately.) Then came the writer's strike. To get around that, the networks turned to "non-scripted" programming-reality series. What used to be the staple of low budget cable networks now was in prime time. TV has never been the same.</p><p></p><p>As for Jesse Ventura, I regard him as much as I regard Alec Baldwin or Barbara Streisand-they should stay in the realm they're best in-the fantasy realm of Hollywood.</p><p></p><p>Oh, yes-I remember Omni (BTW, it was in dead tree from from October 1978 to the winter of 1995 and then online only until 1998). JB, do you remember <em>Vertex</em>?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="OKNewshawk, post: 1989455, member: 6592"] This is a very bad thing, JB. It used to be that TV attracted some of the fines writers of the time (Rod Sterling and Paddy Chayefsky are two that come to mind immediately.) Then came the writer's strike. To get around that, the networks turned to "non-scripted" programming-reality series. What used to be the staple of low budget cable networks now was in prime time. TV has never been the same. As for Jesse Ventura, I regard him as much as I regard Alec Baldwin or Barbara Streisand-they should stay in the realm they're best in-the fantasy realm of Hollywood. Oh, yes-I remember Omni (BTW, it was in dead tree from from October 1978 to the winter of 1995 and then online only until 1998). JB, do you remember [I]Vertex[/I]? [/QUOTE]
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