120346
This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.
I think that the idea to have people resemble other people was decided when they showed the past. Otherwise they would have had Barnabas commenting to Willie that Liz looked like his Mother, etc.
... Carolyn, Roger and Liz are admiring the work that Barnabas has done so far. He offers them claret cup, then nearly slips and says Liz looks just like his mother, then almost slips again and refers to Roger as his father. ...
Does Miss Winthrop know when it was that Robert Gerringer was being considered for the Jeremiah role? Maybe it was before it was established that Burke bore a resemblance to Barnabas's uncle.
Further update - I installed the drivers that came with the card. It offered a lot of options for adjusting all sorts of settings. For resolution I found that 848 x 480 (which wasn't available under plain Windows) fixed the problem. However, I had to use buttons on the monitor to adjust vertical and horizontal to get things right.
So, that problem is solved, but now a lot of the fonts are too big. I can't see as much of a document at once, some other things appear a bit distorted. The pictures here for the daily "scenes" are too long. I can't see the whole picture and the caption at the same time, as I did before.
Latest update - it's back to the way it was. Apparently the video card didn't help at all!!
The latest from Gateway is that there is a problem on the motherboard. ... (By the way, she said it was the AGP slot on the motherboard. However, I pointed out that the original video card is integrated on the motherboard. That AGP slot wasn't used until I got the new card. She still thinks it's the motherboard. I don't know whether to believe it or not.)
Anyone have any suggestions?
"Yet I think nostalgia of any kind is a double-edged sword," adds (Frank) Spotnitz (an executive producer and writer on "The X-Files" (both the show and the 1998 movie), whose fall show, "The Night Stalker," is an update of a cult early '70s program). "When people see a TV show title from their youth, they're looking for a piece of that old experience to come back, and the truth is, they'll never recapture it."
"Sitcoms, which are based on character relationships, build a rapport with audiences over many seasons in a way that movies just can't do," says Tim Brooks, author of "The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows."