Thank you. As a nearly twenty year veteran of this forum, I don't appreciate being insulted like that. Especially twice in a post seemingly written only for that purpose.
You're welcome to your opinion, even if your entirely reply is subjective. And my opinion is that if you believe single discs will crawl us to a complete collection before becoming unprofitable - something that never happened in home video even during its heyday in the 2000s - you're being...
Well, let's really compare the cost of a large set to the likelihood of finishing the series one disc at a time. I would guess all 1,000 cartoons could fit on a set of about 20 or 30 Blu-rays, which is large but not unprecedented and certainly wouldn't be $1,000 SRP. How many more Collector's...
If this is the case, and George is full steam ahead on Looney Tunes, and so much Looney Tunes has already been restored in HD... I wonder if a complete collection may be possible someday. Do we know how many Looney Tunes cartoons have been fully restored in HD, going back to the Platinum...
This isn't surprising. CD-Rs have always fared better because their capacity is lower, allowing for more space between the data tracks and therefore fewer errors occur when burning.
There has been anecdotal evidence for some time that burned discs are proving more reliable than pressed ones, at least in some instances. Many times people believe their self-burned discs fail due to burn speed or disc quality, but it's often because they didn't confirm their disc burned...
Can't remember where it was advised, but if they're releasing these titles it's likely because of those qualities. Lesser known = less handling of materials = easier remaster. Short, B&W. All positives for spending less.