Bd25: The Pitt S01

A proper Blu-ray would include a 5.1 or Atmos track at 3-4 Mbps. On a BD-25, the audio is the first organ to be cut to save the patient. To fit 15 hours onto one disc, the studio would likely default to lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 at 448 kbps or, worse, stereo.

Do the math: 15 hours of AVC or MPEG-4 video, plus (hopefully) a DTS-HD Master Audio or TrueHD track. On a BD-50, you can allocate a healthy 20-25 Mbps for video. On a BD-25? You are looking at an average video bitrate of . the pitt s01 bd25

That is streaming quality. Sometimes worse. Cinematographer Michael Berlucchi (known for his work on The West Wing and ER ) shoots The Pitt with a specific visual language: handheld verisimilitude, harsh fluorescent lighting in the trauma bays, and subtle shifts in color temperature as the shift moves from dawn to dusk to the dead of night. A proper Blu-ray would include a 5

This is a trap. You are paying $20-30 for a disc that performs worse than a 4K stream from Max. The stream will offer higher dynamic range (Dolby Vision) and a higher, adaptive bitrate. The BD-25 offers only the illusion of ownership. Do the math: 15 hours of AVC or