Discussion:
[NEWS] 'Green Eggs and Ham' renewed for season 2 & teaser trailer
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Your Name
2019-12-20 21:45:15 UTC
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From ComingSoon.net ...


Green Eggs and Ham renewed for a second season at Netflix
---------------------------------------------------------
It has already been more than a month since Green Eggs and Ham h
ad its series debut in November, and now Netflix has officially
announced that they have renewed their Dr. Seuss animated series
for a 10-episode second season which will be titled as Green
Eggs and Ham: The Second Serving. The announcement also came
with the newly released season two teaser that kicks off Sam and
Guy's upcoming adventure. Check out the video in the player
below!

Teaser Trailer: (57secs)


Green Eggs and Ham: The Second Serving will follow Sam and Guy
around the world and outside their comfort zones as they get
caught between two sides of a delicious conflict

Green Eggs and Ham features a star-studded voice cast led by 
Pitch Perfect alum Adam Devine and Academy Award winner Michael
Douglas (Wall Street). It will also feature voices of Ilana
Grazer (Rough Night), Oscar winner Diane Keaton (Annie Hall),
Eddie Izzard (The Lego Batman Movie), Tracy Morgan (30 Rock),
Keegan-Michael Key (Key & Peele), Jeffrey Wright (Westworld),
Jillian Bell (Goosebumps), John Turturro (Transformers) and
Daveed Diggs (Hamilton).

Based on the classic global best-selling book by Dr. Seuss
(Theodor Seuss Geisel), "Green Eggs and Ham" is adapted for
television by Jared Stern (The LEGO Movie Sequel), who will
also serve as executive producer alongside Ellen DeGeneres,
Jeff Kleeman, Mike Karz and David Dobkin. The animated family
comedy is from A Very Good Production, A Stern Talking To and
Gulfstream Television in association with Warner Bros Animation,
and distributed by Warner Bros. Television.

Season 1 is already available for streaming on Netflix.


<https://www.comingsoon.net/tv/trailers/1115973-green-eggs-and-ham-renewed-for-a-second-season>
The Great Radio Surfing Channel
2019-12-21 20:34:29 UTC
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How do you make two seasons of a Dr Seuss book?

Also, Netflix is dead to me. They continue to remove shows that are worth watching.
Your Name
2019-12-21 21:20:50 UTC
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Post by The Great Radio Surfing Channel
How do you make two seasons of a Dr Seuss book?
The same way as pretty much every other Hollyweird "adaptation" is done
... they make up a pile of stuff of their own (if not a completely
different story). Most of the time it's ill-fitting rubbish because the
movie / TV show maker is such a massive "genius" that they "know"
better than the original's creator how "it should have been done". :-\
Paul S Person
2019-12-22 18:07:46 UTC
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On Sat, 21 Dec 2019 12:34:29 -0800 (PST), The Great Radio Surfing
Post by The Great Radio Surfing Channel
How do you make two seasons of a Dr Seuss book?
Also, Netflix is dead to me. They continue to remove shows that are worth watching.
That's why I never got into online streaming services as a reliable
source of entertainment.

I figured that they would, at best, feature three classes of movie:

1. 50 or so "golden oldies" (/Casablanca/ etc)
2. The current top 20 or 30, which would last a while and then go
away.
3. A rotating group of not-so-golden oldies, packaged by the studios.

I really don't see the necessity for this. My 2TB (two /tera/ byte!)
USB 3.0 plug-in "backup" drive cost less than $200. The /entire/ body
of existing films, going back to the beginning of time and including
/all/ variants, is clearly storable in digital form on hard drives.

Of course, such storage would need things like backups, error
checking, RAID, hot swapping, and so on to ensure againsts data loss.
But those technologies are well-developed.

As are server farms to do the streaming.
--
"I begin to envy Petronius."
"I have envied him long since."
Ted Nolan <tednolan>
2019-12-22 19:18:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by Paul S Person
On Sat, 21 Dec 2019 12:34:29 -0800 (PST), The Great Radio Surfing
Post by The Great Radio Surfing Channel
How do you make two seasons of a Dr Seuss book?
Also, Netflix is dead to me. They continue to remove shows that are
worth watching.
That's why I never got into online streaming services as a reliable
source of entertainment.
1. 50 or so "golden oldies" (/Casablanca/ etc)
2. The current top 20 or 30, which would last a while and then go
away.
3. A rotating group of not-so-golden oldies, packaged by the studios.
I really don't see the necessity for this. My 2TB (two /tera/ byte!)
USB 3.0 plug-in "backup" drive cost less than $200. The /entire/ body
of existing films, going back to the beginning of time and including
/all/ variants, is clearly storable in digital form on hard drives.
Of course, such storage would need things like backups, error
checking, RAID, hot swapping, and so on to ensure againsts data loss.
But those technologies are well-developed.
It's certainly not a technical barrier. Netflix has rights issues with
a lot of its content, especially, iirc, with Disney now that Disney+ is
spinning up.
--
columbiaclosings.com
What's not in Columbia anymore..
Paul S Person
2019-12-23 18:10:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
Post by Paul S Person
On Sat, 21 Dec 2019 12:34:29 -0800 (PST), The Great Radio Surfing
Post by The Great Radio Surfing Channel
How do you make two seasons of a Dr Seuss book?
Also, Netflix is dead to me. They continue to remove shows that are
worth watching.
That's why I never got into online streaming services as a reliable
source of entertainment.
1. 50 or so "golden oldies" (/Casablanca/ etc)
2. The current top 20 or 30, which would last a while and then go
away.
3. A rotating group of not-so-golden oldies, packaged by the studios.
I really don't see the necessity for this. My 2TB (two /tera/ byte!)
USB 3.0 plug-in "backup" drive cost less than $200. The /entire/ body
of existing films, going back to the beginning of time and including
/all/ variants, is clearly storable in digital form on hard drives.
Of course, such storage would need things like backups, error
checking, RAID, hot swapping, and so on to ensure againsts data loss.
But those technologies are well-developed.
It's certainly not a technical barrier. Netflix has rights issues with
a lot of its content, especially, iirc, with Disney now that Disney+ is
spinning up.
Ah.

American capitalism at its finest!
--
"I begin to envy Petronius."
"I have envied him long since."
Your Name
2019-12-23 19:37:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by Paul S Person
Post by Ted Nolan <tednolan>
Post by Paul S Person
On Sat, 21 Dec 2019 12:34:29 -0800 (PST), The Great Radio Surfing
Post by The Great Radio Surfing Channel
How do you make two seasons of a Dr Seuss book?
Also, Netflix is dead to me. They continue to remove shows that are
worth watching.
That's why I never got into online streaming services as a reliable
source of entertainment.
1. 50 or so "golden oldies" (/Casablanca/ etc)
2. The current top 20 or 30, which would last a while and then go
away.
3. A rotating group of not-so-golden oldies, packaged by the studios.
I really don't see the necessity for this. My 2TB (two /tera/ byte!)
USB 3.0 plug-in "backup" drive cost less than $200. The /entire/ body
of existing films, going back to the beginning of time and including
/all/ variants, is clearly storable in digital form on hard drives.
Of course, such storage would need things like backups, error
checking, RAID, hot swapping, and so on to ensure againsts data loss.
But those technologies are well-developed.
It's certainly not a technical barrier. Netflix has rights issues with
a lot of its content, especially, iirc, with Disney now that Disney+ is
spinning up.
Ah.
American capitalism at its finest!
Similar happened here in New Zealand. Sky TV used to have a few Disney
channels, but with the launch of the Disney+ streaming service, all the
Disney channels on Sky TV were simply removed without any warning (no
doubt causing a few people to cancel their subscription and demand
refunds).

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