yellow_rose1 : oh Dave, I just love it when he says YUCK!!!
DonaldPearson : this is the previous episode.
Rix : Well no season 2 does stink! Just no fair at all..I hope someone from prime does pick this...
Sally : Been chomping at the bit here.........
Farmboy41 : That's only because you didn't try her crackers that were in her other pants.
Twixtid : It was kinda cute at first but I turned it off half way through, that being said, this sta...
Toonaholic : oh your god...hahahahah!
Toonaholic : Trump is comedy cannon fodder for comedians all over the entire planet... says somethin hu...
Toonaholic : The meter on my cringe-factor overloaded.
I have no issue with reading subtitles whatsoever. Music has gotten so loud and sound has gotten so murky that I usually turn English on for everything if it is not already there. I also appreciate hearing the language something was acted in so I get the emotional communication. Dubbing destroys that. Dubbing is trash. I’m one of Those People.
I’m avoiding work at the moment so here is TLDR Subtitles 101 for those of you who are not experienced with the world of subtitles and dubbing.
—Subs on videos on streaming sites like Primewire happen in one of three ways.
—Subs can be in a separate file (srt), those are merged in by the player while the video is streaming. They may be out of sync (a little or badly) for technical reasons that are beyond Subtitles 101. It is a pain to find them and upload them yourself.
—Subs can be included as part of the video file being streamed, as part of the non-image information. Only certain file types are like this, usually the extension is “mkv”.
—Subs can be hard coded on the video.
—VidSrc gives you content that may be any of these three types. If the subs aren’t automatically part of the video file, VidSrc performs the service of going out and looking for srt files to match with the show, and tees it up for you to select one under “CC” at the start of the stream.
—PrimeWire can similarly look for and may be able to find srt files for links in the list (if you know where the secret Subtitles link is hiding).
—Subs in separate srt files will only work if the hoster uses a player that has the ability to merge an srt file while the video is streaming. Look under settings. Examples are voe, lulu, wish, dood, streamtape etc.
—Those hosters also have players with the ability to turn on subs if they are still included as non-video parts of the file being streamed (usually an “mkv” file).
—Even if a player has the ability to handle embedded mkv subs, or separate srt files, you may not see a CC option at all when you open it, if the video file type is wrong.
—Hard coded subs are always there. You can’t turn them off. Someone made a copy of the video with the subs turned on while it was playing. That copy is what was uploaded.