Night sir, pleasant dreams.

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Oh, the US 'data centre' recently got upgrades. In fact, during the last housekeeping round, we had to shift some data over there to comply with IT's constraints. We had to sidestep asking IT if is was acceptable in case the answer was no, which would have been kind-of ironic seeing that they set the English site limits.

Black and white, as originally shot, is always my preference. Colourising, naah; there's a reason films become classics.
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Ah, sorry. Divided by a common language, etc. :)
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Relative inaction, looking after others' needs first, lack of hydration?

Oh. Our company has the same policy. A couple of years ago we got down to under 50MB (megabytes) free despite my repeated warnings. The solution? Delete recent versions (Windows server), delete user files above a certain size without prior notice. The site server is 1.8TB, no budget available for upgrades.

The IT guy we had at the time was an arse, a cretin, moron (informal usage), a knobhead of the first order. I could safely say more here, right? ;)

I'd love it if the original film certificate was more restricted than a simple 18 or R (not sure what US classifications are.) 52 sounds good. :)
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I so want the original certificate to be 52. :)
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Do it. My wife-to-be named mine. Later we found a uniquely British product with the same name, which brings mirth every time we see it. Not telling, and you'd never guess.

:)

The word 'weird' doesn't come close. :) I can't use the word 'subversive' as some do to describe the TV of my childhood and youth, but I can see how later shifts in attitude might have brought that impression on. How long though until 'The Walking Dead' is classed as family entertainment (or historical documentary series)? The slapstick of 'Uncle Grandpa' and the casual violence of 'Adventure Time' are taking their toll on me. ;)

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