There are some new discovery channels that absolutely rock. Plain old discovery just plain blows. TLC is a joke. They now have Discovery : Science and Discovery : Times. History and science documentaries 24/7, I love it.
Theres also a Discovery : Wings channel, 24/7 aviation related stuff, documentaries and other stuff.
And, a Discovery : Home & Leisure. That channel has some semi-interesting things, mostly boring though.
I caught the New York Times in two urban legends: in a story about last year’s Russian theater hostages, the Times said that some of the unconscious victims “swallowed their tongues.”
And an interview with Mrs. Connolly said that her hair “went white overnight” after the Kennedy assassination.
Whenever the Discovery Channel runs a program about something that I’ve developed an interest in, Barb steels herself for my bitching about what they got wrong or raised a variant theory to the status of standard acceptance.
Good gawd, saw that show last week when they showed it twice. I actually e-mailed them about it, but recieved an automated reply right back on the 27th, and that was the last I’d heard.
I’ll paste some of my letter for entertainment purposes:
Thought I admit I stole that last line from someplace.
Admitedly, I love the Discovery channel (and all it’s related channels: TLC, Animal Planet, History, Discovery Wings, etc), and some of their shows are top notch, ‘specially the one on ‘Utzi’ (sp?) the Iceman, and anything having to do with paleontology. Of course, like the rest of tv (including PBS) you have to take everything they do with a grain of salt. Some of their shows are purely entertainment for the masses, just like how some of PBS’ shows are completely political clap-trap.
The show that’s really bugging me is their Mythbusters show. They do some quasi-interesting stuff but they did a segment about coke removing blood stains from a sidewalk and one of the hosts said that chalk outlines are another myth and have never been done. :rolleyes:
I double checked in the Straight Dope archive to see if he was correct and lo and behold Mythbusters was creating an all new myth.
The History Channel and Discovery have a very fine line to walk. They need to try to keep the intellectuals satisfied, but keep the slackjawed polloi watching. And, frankly, it’s not usually the highbrow programming that draws in the ratings, but the UFO Conspiracy specials.
In short, I blame the audience more than the channel.
The Discovery Channel is getting worse, but in the category of good networks turned crappy, TLC is the worst offender. I was convinced they show nothing but episodes of “Trading Spaces” and guess what? I just did a search on tvguide.com to confirm my suspicions (and don’t even get me started on the TV Guide channel, by the way.) The results? They’re showing seven episodes on Sunday. Eight if you count the local station’s syndicated version. That’s in addition to two episodes of While you were Out (which is played four more times on Friday.) Sweet Jeebus! Each of those episodes is an hour long. We’re talking nine hours every weekend devoted to crappy pretentious home improvement shows. There’s only so much time you have to fill for any given day, and it’s ALL THEY SHOW on that godforsaken channel.
(Side note: This Saturday, and pretty much every Saturday, Comedy Central is playing eight episodes of SNL in one 24-hour period. A full third of their air time is devoted to SNL. I wouldn’t quite say Comedy Central’s gone down the tubes yet, but come on, 5 episodes in a row!?)
I’m wholeheartedly in favor of the Cable Science Network. It’s potentially the best thing to come out of television in decades.
I have to agree with Lissa. I’ll happily ignore the possessed children, the UFOs and the ghosts in order to get my extreme engineering, modern marvels and anceint evidence. And I’ll also take TLC’s version of reality TV with their residents and baby births over the nets version any day.
I sometimes wonder if there is a blatent disregard for truth beyond which people (or at least news organisations and authority figures) shouldn’t be protected by freedom of speach
The true-life crime shows on Discovery are very interesting, but not as cool as A&E’s “City Confidential,” “American Justice,” and “Cold Case Files.” Go Bill Kurtis, in your well-cut suits! Talk noirly to me, Paul Winfield!
I have a friend involved in an educational program which lets people test out of things they already know. I see the value of the pre-tests for things like math and basic English, but asked how effective it was for the histories and sciences. He says that he figures that many people pick up on basic science by watching the Discovery Channel.
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