Ken wrote:
<snip>
As much as I love warbirds I don't think I will watch another episode of Great Planes - it is just too painful. It's like watching Tiger Woods on a putt-putt course ... you know the skills are there and that better equipment is available ... you just can't figure out why they aren't using it.
The reason is cost. Splicing together a bunch of archived footage has a very low cost. Sending a camera guy, a few lights, a camera, and a host to play Q&A at a museum for a few hours is very inexpensive too. Given that several of these were filmed at this same facility, I'd guess they set up shop there for a week or two and filmed the interviews almost back to back, again reducing their investment.
The other place you can reduce your investment is in writers and/or fact checkers. I'm sure there are a hundred WIXers who could point out the inaccuracies in most of the shows. The question is whether they had an expert who let 'em down, or if the expert said "fix this, fix that, etc.", and the producers didn't want to invest the time to fix the oopses. Either way, it smacks of a cheap production.
That said, it is/was still better than 98% of the junk on TV. At least *someone* stood a chance of learning useful information from the show. I can't say the same for American Idol or Dancing with the Stars, which are two high profile examples of pure brain rot...