Eric Paddon
December 14th, 2004, 01:20 PM
Those who were planning on getting the Season 2 Quantum Leap DVD set, be forewarned. A number of episodes that used specific songs have had them replaced with generic music apparently because of music rights clearance issues that Universal never bothered to provide fans with any warning about (unlike another company's warning about dropping the theme song from the Season 3 DVD release of the sitcom "Married With Children"). Fans are especially upset that the episode "MIA" is missing the song "Georgia On My Mind".
I am not a major QL fan so this issue doesn't affect me personally (and I wasn't planning on getting it anyway), but this issue highlights an increasingly disturbing trend in TV on DVD releases where no effort is being done in many cases to insure the best quality product is available. Music replacement has become one problem, but so too have companies in their ignorance using syndicated cut versions of episodes ("ALF", "Too Close For Comfort"), or deleting episode main title openings except for one time only at the start ("Little House On The Prairie", "The Joey Bishop Show"). And then even those that are released uncut and complete aren't always mastered from the best available elements ("Lost In Space"-Season 1). Let's also not forget Universal's failure to include the TV version of the "Buck Rogers" pilot movie.
With all that in mind, consider how fortunate we are that "Battlestar Galactica" didn't fall victim to any of this kind of shoddy treatment, and had more extras than we could have hoped to receive (especially since Universal is becoming more determined to save costs by releasing bare-bones only versions of the shows they're putting out now).
I am not a major QL fan so this issue doesn't affect me personally (and I wasn't planning on getting it anyway), but this issue highlights an increasingly disturbing trend in TV on DVD releases where no effort is being done in many cases to insure the best quality product is available. Music replacement has become one problem, but so too have companies in their ignorance using syndicated cut versions of episodes ("ALF", "Too Close For Comfort"), or deleting episode main title openings except for one time only at the start ("Little House On The Prairie", "The Joey Bishop Show"). And then even those that are released uncut and complete aren't always mastered from the best available elements ("Lost In Space"-Season 1). Let's also not forget Universal's failure to include the TV version of the "Buck Rogers" pilot movie.
With all that in mind, consider how fortunate we are that "Battlestar Galactica" didn't fall victim to any of this kind of shoddy treatment, and had more extras than we could have hoped to receive (especially since Universal is becoming more determined to save costs by releasing bare-bones only versions of the shows they're putting out now).