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-   -   Does it bother you that poeple Americanise our Big Brother (https://www.thisisbigbrother.com/forums/showthread.php?t=200791)

Niamh. 08-05-2012 03:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by daniel-lewis-1985 (Post 5125606)
Erm...no.

Its a forum, i may be in the minority but looking at the pole a few other people do agree.

Poll* :pipe:

daniel-lewis-1985 08-05-2012 03:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by InOne (Post 5125612)
But I'm pretty sure that wouldn't bother you would it.

Its just something i wouldnt do as i use the correct terminology.

Like i call the new Desperate Housewives the final SEASON not series because thats what it is.

daniel-lewis-1985 08-05-2012 03:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Niamh. (Post 5125620)
Poll* :pipe:

DAMMIT! LOL

Sorry ive got sex on my mind.

Niamh. 08-05-2012 03:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by daniel-lewis-1985 (Post 5125627)
DAMMIT! LOL

Sorry ive got sex on my mind.

:laugh:

InOne 08-05-2012 03:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by daniel-lewis-1985 (Post 5125623)
Its just something i wouldnt do as i use the correct terminology.

Like i call the new Desperate Housewives the final SEASON not series because thats what it is.

I think you only need to start being worried when Brian and co start doing it.

Marsh. 08-05-2012 04:00 PM

That's what I thought. If the show itself starts Americanising then we can worry. But for now, it's not.

MTVN 08-05-2012 04:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Firewire (Post 5125428)
And fyi, you're complaining about people "Americanizing" our Big Brother (which I don't think many people do) but yet you've Americanised the title of this thread. Oops.

Lmao good point, it's a bit rich to complain about American terms being used when you're using them yourself

daniel-lewis-1985 08-05-2012 04:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MTVN (Post 5125645)
Lmao good point, it's a bit rich to complain about American terms being used when you're using them yourself

Its not that i was using an American term its the fact that i cant spell lol.

iRyan 08-05-2012 07:40 PM

For the record, SEASON is actually the correct terminology.

Quote:

series plural of se·ries (Noun)
Noun:
A number of things, events, or people of a similar kind or related nature coming one after another: "a series of lectures".
A set of related television or radio programs, esp. of a specified kind: "a new drama series".
Series should refer to Big Brother as a whole.
Season should refer to a specific Big Brother, ie Big Brother 13. Because television seasons are usually run for a specific season (Fall, Winter, Spring, or Summer).

Though i've gotten in a habit of referring to Big Brother 13 as a series and not a season.

emmetmcl 08-05-2012 07:44 PM

I HATE it.

Though it does add a bit color to the forums.

Marsh. 08-05-2012 07:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by iRyan (Post 5125994)
For the record, SEASON is actually the correct terminology.



Series should refer to Big Brother as a whole.
Season should refer to a specific Big Brother, ie Big Brother 13. Because television seasons are usually run for a specific season (Fall, Winter, Spring, or Summer).

Though i've gotten in a habit of referring to Big Brother 13 as a series and not a season.

But that's where British TV differs from American. We don't have pilot season and all the rest, all our shows don't return in the fall and have "mid-season" and all of that. Shows can literally start at any time of the year, and different runs of the same show won't start at the same time every year. So, technically, we don't have "television seasons".

nicole_burks 08-05-2012 07:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by daniel-lewis-1985 (Post 5125472)
I know right (in dumb blonde American accent).

"dumb blonde American Accent"
Seriously? :joker:

Quote:

Originally Posted by daniel-lewis-1985 (Post 5125587)
LOL at everyone getting all angry

Doesn't seem like they're the only ones tbh :pipe:

Marc 08-05-2012 07:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Niamh. (Post 5125620)
Poll* :pipe:

ROFL I was waiting for you to pick up on that :tongue:

iRyan 08-05-2012 08:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 08marsh (Post 5126008)
But that's where British TV differs from American. We don't have pilot season and all the rest, all our shows don't return in the fall and have "mid-season" and all of that. Shows can literally start at any time of the year, and different runs of the same show won't start at the same time every year. So, technically, we don't have "television seasons".

True, I didn't think about that. However - it still doesn't make sense to refer to a new, individual continuation of the show as a "new series", because calling it a new series seems to be describing an entirely new show.

MTVN 08-05-2012 08:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by iRyan (Post 5126049)
True, I didn't think about that. However - it still doesn't make sense to refer to a new, individual continuation of the show as a "new series", because calling it a new series seems to be describing an entirely new show.

Isn't each Big Brother episode it's own show? So therefore each Big Brother is "a set of related television or radio programs" and thus a series?

Firewire 08-05-2012 08:14 PM

In Britain we refer to a show as a series as a whole as well as it's individual series.
In America, I believe, they refer to a show as a series and it has individual seasons.

nicole_burks 08-05-2012 08:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MTVN (Post 5126054)
Isn't each Big Brother episode it's own show? So therefore each Big Brother is "a set of related television or radio programs" and thus a series?

Our terminology for things is:
A show is something that comes on frequently, usually once a week. I.e. Big Brother, NCIS, CSI
A Season is a show that is on for months, like Jan-May and then again in Aug-Nov, our shows aren't usually year round
A series is several seasons put together like Season 1, Season 2, Season 3 would all be a series.
You call several books i.e. Harry Potter a series don't you? Why wouldn't you call shows/seasons that too?

nicole_burks 08-05-2012 08:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Firewire (Post 5126059)
In Britain we refer to a show as a series as a whole as well as it's individual series.
In America, I believe, they refer to a show as a series and it has individual seasons.

.

MTVN 08-05-2012 08:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nicole_burks (Post 5126062)
Our terminology for things is:
A show is something that comes on frequently, usually once a week. I.e. Big Brother, NCIS, CSI
A Season is a show that is on for months, like Jan-May and then again in Aug-Nov, our shows aren't usually year round
A series is several seasons put together like Season 1, Season 2, Season 3 would all be a series.
You call several books i.e. Harry Potter a series don't you? Why wouldn't you call shows/seasons that too?

Yeah, I would call several books a series, that's why I call several shows a series as well :tongue:

nicole_burks 08-05-2012 08:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MTVN (Post 5126079)
Yeah, I would call several books a series, that's why I call several shows a series as well :tongue:

We call several seasons a series :joker:

They way I think about it is, seasons change with the seasons(summer, spring, fall, winter). Our television seasons change with our Seasons

Samuel. 08-05-2012 08:36 PM

Blows my mind that anyone could care in the slightest.

Marc 08-05-2012 08:47 PM

Season/Series are interchangeable to me. It's cool how it means different things for America

Scotty07 08-05-2012 08:50 PM

I will always call British programmes series 1, 2, 3 etc. and American ones seasons 1, 2, 3 etc.:idc:

Petershaw1984 08-05-2012 08:57 PM

Doesn't bother me at all because in the grand scheme of things they are only words.

daniel-lewis-1985 08-05-2012 10:14 PM

Most intellectual thread ever?


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