News0 min ago
BBC announces 'pay to keep' service.
7 Answers
http://www.dailymail....Player-treatment.html
A good idea or just another money making exercise for the BBC?
£1.89 an episode seems a little steep, when the whole series of some of these old programmes can be purchased quite cheap on DVD.
I wonder how they came up with the price of £1.89? £1,99 or even £2 are more usual.
A good idea or just another money making exercise for the BBC?
£1.89 an episode seems a little steep, when the whole series of some of these old programmes can be purchased quite cheap on DVD.
I wonder how they came up with the price of £1.89? £1,99 or even £2 are more usual.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.iTunes sell most tracks at either 79p or 99p, so I don't suppose £1.89 is all that erratic. The price is only a rumour, anyway.
Sounds like an excellent idea to me. Presumably nobody will buy the stuff they can get cheaper already, but prices of available DVDs rise and fall. It may even be that they stop producing DVDs and let the public buy just what it wants. After all, you might want to buy just one episode of "It Ain't Half Hot, Mum" without forking out for an entire series, which is what you'd get on a DVD.
Sounds like an excellent idea to me. Presumably nobody will buy the stuff they can get cheaper already, but prices of available DVDs rise and fall. It may even be that they stop producing DVDs and let the public buy just what it wants. After all, you might want to buy just one episode of "It Ain't Half Hot, Mum" without forking out for an entire series, which is what you'd get on a DVD.
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