After hearing the news about the podcast ending, I've entered a deep suicidal depression. The only way to pull me out of it is by keeping the podcast alive.
How can you do this to me? You can't stop now. Just a couple of weeks ago Matt M. was discussing future plans for more celebrity interviews. What happened? I would pay for the podcast as well.
guys, you can't stop. I'll have to cry myself to sleep. Every weekend I wait anxiously for the new installment. I agree with the people who said that they would pay if that would let the podcast continue.
This was my all time favorite podcast and I take it as great a loss as TV shows like: Firefly, Arrested Development, Veronica Mars, Wonerfalls and many more. Please don't rob me and the other listeners of a great way to start a Monday!
As someone who is regularly mocked for being a TV major in college (I think they're all jealous), this podcast felt like a way for me to go back to sitting around a bar and arguing over terrible TV like Joe Millionnaire and wonderful TV like Six Feet Under. Please keep my fix coming. The withdrawl will not be pretty!
Yet another bad move for TV Guide. Yes, the landscape is changing, but the magazine's new format has become unreadable, the website changes untenable, and the axing of the podcast unfathomable.The only reasons I started reading Mike, Matt, and Maitland's columns was because of the podcast. Take that away, so too may the likelihood I remember to read up.Making the vodcasts real vodcasts (i.e., available for download on my iPod), may help, but the discussion was the key benefit.Sad and unfortunate, but life will go on.
I wish we knew what happened to make the higher-ups think this was a smart decision. For me, the podcast defined TVGuide.com. I don't think anyone here can safely say that they truly get these writers' personalities from the vodcasts and their writing. There's a freaking reason why these three who host the podcast are TVGuide.com's most popular writers. It's because we feel like we got to know them every week.