I don't watch a lot of TV. But it would be in internet archives if anything. Don't try streaming services, they pick and choose series anyway. A lot of talk shows/news shows aren't on the big streaming services
But it's the world's largest storehouse of web pages, books, video, and audio.
One of the neatest things they have there is the complete broadcast day of the major networks, including BBC, for 9/11/2001. You can still see the BBC person saying Building 7 had collapsed, when you could still see it behind her. She read her script around 45 minutes early.
I keep my personal archive, which no one else can tamper with. And multiple backups in multiple locations.
I don't watch a lot of TV. But it would be in internet archives if anything. Don't try streaming services, they pick and choose series anyway. A lot of talk shows/news shows aren't on the big streaming services
People can request that Archive.org delete pages they own. That's why I save everything, as Q directed.
?
Okay great. Archive.org isn’t the only archive out there lol
But it's the world's largest storehouse of web pages, books, video, and audio.
One of the neatest things they have there is the complete broadcast day of the major networks, including BBC, for 9/11/2001. You can still see the BBC person saying Building 7 had collapsed, when you could still see it behind her. She read her script around 45 minutes early.
I keep my personal archive, which no one else can tamper with. And multiple backups in multiple locations.
Mkay. Well the episode in question appears to just be on youtube anyway.