Wondering if anyone can answer this about SAP?English programs have SAP for the Spanish audience then why can't I hit SAP on a spanish channel to hear it in English?There are some some shows on Univision I would like to know what's going on
landtuna said:Spanish-language game shows and soccer matches don't need translation.
Once while I was staying a motel I watched "Sabado Gigante" to see what all the fuss was about. In Raleigh they wouldn't pre-empt that even for a tornado outbreak, so I figured it must be really popular. In analog days I could pick this up at home. Now, I guess I would get the same signal quality since cable channels I don't pay for look like distant analog channels once did.mrschimpf said:Quite simply, Univision has its own audience and it doesn't want to be seen as appealing away from that, so there's no extra things they try to do in order to try to lure in English-speaking viewers. It definitely saves on costs for acquiring programming since the only requirement they must adhere to is the usual mandatory closed captioning. Even then, there are telenovela sites that are sure to help the English speaker understand what's going on.
Telemundo meanwhile is owned by NBC and trying to get over Univision, so thus, CC3 English captions and on their cable channel Mun2, a mix of Spanish and English (thankfully not to the appalling heights of MTV Tres, which might as well be 'regular MTV junk with subtitles').
vchimpanzee said:Once while I was staying a motel I watched "Sabado Gigante" to see what all the fuss was about.
Enter Fox Soccer Channel.....Joe_Capitano said:landtuna said:Spanish-language game shows and soccer matches don't need translation.
Plus, in the case of soccer at minimum, contractural restrictions may forbid english translation - visual or verbal.
landtuna said:You ever notice on those Mexican "game" shows the host is always a dirty old man surrounded by hot young things?