KeyTimes950 said:
I find it hard to watch a lot of old TV because my taste in TV has changed somewhat since the days when many of those shows were first-run. If I could watch those shows the way they were presented in those days, once a week, even if one chose to run the entire series that way rather than have them for 39 weeks then run reruns the rest of the year, it might not be so tiring. However, it's hard to flip on those oldies and be at the point where I can turn down the volume and recite the scripts. I'm not a couch potato. I try to live a life with a job and workouts and family and so forth. It just happens that one can turn on the TV and find shows that are running ad nauseam, on so many networks.
You make a very interesting point; I'll take it a little further...I don't like the idea where stations (and even cable networks) are double-running episodes of certain shows everyday, some even more than twice a day. Not only do I think it's lazy programming by the stations and networks, but it also burns shows out a lot quicker. However, there could be certain exceptions, especially for series with at least 200 or more episodes (such as The Simpsons, Cheers, Friends, etc.).
I know we're in an age of where television operations are cutting costs so they can keep profits, but I would like to see a bit more variety in programming scheduling.