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Justin Morrison (he/him, Richmond, VT) has been a part of song and dance communities in Canada and the US for as long as he can remember. He earned his first Pinewoods crew t-shirt around age 7, and has taught Morris classes there in (much) later years. During a tour with the dance collective he co-founded, Maple Morris, Justin won the Best New Entrant prize at the Sidmouth Folkweek Morris jig competition in 2011 and respectfully declines to mention how many other new entrants were performing that year. In 2013, he was an organizer and artistic director of an international Morris stage show for Maple, which brought together dancers from Canada, the US, and the UK. He currently travels various distances to enjoy English, Contra, and song, and dances Morris with the Toronto Morris Men, Pinewoods Morris Men, and Thames Valley International.
The average life cycle of a television program is a known quantity: birth, first-run, repeats, death, syndication, DVD release. For some shows, the steps get jumbled a bit (with repeats and first-run episodes interspersed and DVD releases preceding syndication), but that's pretty much the way things go. No matter how successful the program, it will eventually lose viewers and be exiled to a place where it fades from memory. American Idol may be huge now but there will be a day in the not-too-distant future when it will be a dimly recalled blip on the pop culture radar. Just as it was with Friends and Seinfeld and Cheers and The Cosby Show and MASH.
There are always anomalies - shows with fan bases so large and so loyal that they get the bigwigs to take notice. The most obvious example of this was Star Trek. The series ran on NBC for three years in the late 1960s and was canceled because of poor ratings. In syndication, however, it thrived, bolstered by a die-hard core that swelled as more viewers discovered the series. After Star Wars made science fiction hip, Paramount decided to try out a big-screen Star Trek movie. This led to a film series and a rebirth of the show on television, albeit radically re-imagined (but with hooks to the original). "New" Star Trek survived for about 18 years on television, spanning four series (some better liked than others) before eroding popularity removed it from first-run existence. Yet Star Trek isn't dead. Paramount is using CGI to modernize the original episodes and is planning another movie for next year. (The question of whether or not overexposure damaged Star Trek will be left for another column; I believe that's the case.)
Rumor has it that season 3 will debut on SciFi in early July, shortly after it ends its run on the BBC. Die-hard fans, however, will not wait that long. In this era of on-demand viewing for programs with die-hard fan bases, any delay is unacceptable. Within 24 hours after anything has been broadcast somewhere in the world, it will be available to everyone. New Who episodes are widely circulated via Bit Torrent and YouTube shortly after their Saturday evening airings on BBC1. Roughly 50,000 U.S. fans download the Doctor's latest adventures every Saturday night. (The number doesn't substantially impact SciFi's ratings, as it represents only about 3% of Doctor Who's audience, and there's good reason to believe many fans who have downloaded the episodes still watch them on SciFi and buy the DVDs - this is one reason why neither the BBC nor SciFi has become aggressive in killing Who torrents and YouTube postings.)
Regarding the rest, lots of people (but still a minority I would bet) try lifestyle changes like that, of that minority how many are successful? Take a look at studies showing how good(bad) people are at following diets, most people commit to something for a couple of months and then revert back to their old lifestyle
Curious what people here think of the Kickass Torrents bust ( -piracy-case/). This site seemed particularly decent to me: tasteful advertising, friendly community (not that I knowingly used it for anything illegal, obviously), which would make it all the more unfortunate if the owner were charged. Are there people here who know about the case? Is there something that could be done to help financially with the defense? Also curious what people think about torrent culture more generally.
There have been studies that show that simply doing a fecal transplant from a skinny person to a fat one will cause the fat person to lose weight. Although it is very early days on that front, and the mechanism is very much not clear, as I understand it.
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