Dear programmers and executives at Turner networks --

Dear programmers and executives at Turner networks --

Congratulations on chasing away viewers like myself. Your channels were recently added to the High Definition offerings of DirecTV, but unfortunately your channels continue to exhibit poor judgement in distorting the video images that you send to your customers.

These distortions cause motion sickness and grossly change the images that are sent to customers such that the actors and actresses and other materials that are shown during non-sporting events are unwatchable.

While I would love to support your programming and watch your networks, until you end this insanity and pass along an unmolested image, I can not and will not watch your channels in either HD or standard definition.

I am also encouraging everyone else that I can to write in with similar concerns and complaints in the hopes that perhaps you will finally realize that airing these horrible distortions is not what your customers are looking for on your channels.

 

terpfan1980
{ my full name }
DirecTV customer and current NON-Turner network viewer
{ my address }
{ my phone number }

11,303 views 4 replies
Reply #1 Top
Yeah, they're listening   

I have to ask; why would anyone watch such a network which edits content of classic movies and shows and bombards one with commercials?
Reply #2 Top

why would anyone watch such a network which edits content of classic movies and shows and bombards one with commercials?

Because it's not just classic movies that are shown.  TBS has run original programming and made a mockery of those programs by warping the images as well.

Until they hear that customers won't tolerate the crap they are providing, they aren't likely to change.

Reply #3 Top
Warping the images? What exactly do you mean?
Reply #4 Top

Warping the images? What exactly do you mean?

The Turner networks (TBS, TNT, etc.) and other Time-Warner channels take the image and stretch it to make it fill a 16x9 type rectangular image completely, no matter how the image was originally created.

As an example, they take a film that is shot in 2.35:1 or similar aspect ratio, and stretch it along the edges, top and bottom, or left and right edges (or both top and bottom and left and right) so it looks you like you are watching an image that is like the type you would see on a funhouse mirror.  People look taller than they should, or fatter than they should, depending on where they are in the original image.  Objects in the center of the screen look close to normal, but as you move away from the center of the screen the image is warped.

Reported the executives at Turner Broadcasting are quite pleased with the images they get and the results they get from wasting their time stretching things.  They feel that customers will complain if they leave black or gray bars along the edges of the screen and preserve the original aspect ratio.  That was probably true during the times that many customers went out of their way to get Full Screen DVDs, but there's just no excuse for it now that many customers have TVs that can reproduce the correct aspect ratio with little or no lost space on their TV (they may lose some space along the top and bottom, or sides of the screen for material that wasn't filmed as 16x9, but it's very little relatively speaking).

Turner's version of things is pretty nasty though as if you watch for a while you get a strange motion sickness effect and as you watch you really pick up on the different results and images.  I tried to watch Armageddon (Bruce Willis and company) and couldn't figure out why some characters looked downright strange, especially on the outter edges of the image.  After reading a bit about how Turner stretches the material they broadcast it made sense, and yes, it was making me nauseous.