Get on old VHS player and a DVD player. You can buy 3 VHS for $1 at most thrift stores and DVDs for a buck or less. There are literally decades and millions of hours of entertainment on every topic and genre created over 100 years. They are physical recordings that cannot be altered over time and were made before globohomo flattened history and the world.
Save the past because it will survive into the future. The technological present will leave no history outside of dead Ipads and heavy wall-sized bricks wherever the internet dies.
A single series of a major TV show would probably take most people only watching a handful after work weeks to months to get through. There are dozens, hundreds if you include anime like a weeb, of quality ones to pick from to a point where by the time you finish them all you can restart from the top. The full set is often expensive, but not as much as it seems once you realize that's a month of entertainment.
That's without even adding in movies or games on top of it to fill your probably much more limited than you think free time, which would probably put you at years before you need to repeat.
You could schedule your programming. 11 seasons can last 11 years watched once a week, along with a few other shows. For movies you could own 1000 and they would last you 3 years minimum. Watching even 1 a day with no repeats.
Exactly, the options are there but people always want to be participating in the current and new, instead of enjoying the mass amount that already exists.
Get on old VHS player and a DVD player. You can buy 3 VHS for $1 at most thrift stores and DVDs for a buck or less. There are literally decades and millions of hours of entertainment on every topic and genre created over 100 years. They are physical recordings that cannot be altered over time and were made before globohomo flattened history and the world.
Save the past because it will survive into the future. The technological present will leave no history outside of dead Ipads and heavy wall-sized bricks wherever the internet dies.
rip ipods. Maybe apple got rid of them to push more people to streaming services? where they can change 'problematic' availability.
A single series of a major TV show would probably take most people only watching a handful after work weeks to months to get through. There are dozens, hundreds if you include anime like a weeb, of quality ones to pick from to a point where by the time you finish them all you can restart from the top. The full set is often expensive, but not as much as it seems once you realize that's a month of entertainment.
That's without even adding in movies or games on top of it to fill your probably much more limited than you think free time, which would probably put you at years before you need to repeat.
You could schedule your programming. 11 seasons can last 11 years watched once a week, along with a few other shows. For movies you could own 1000 and they would last you 3 years minimum. Watching even 1 a day with no repeats.
Exactly, the options are there but people always want to be participating in the current and new, instead of enjoying the mass amount that already exists.
One day, VHS will be currency.