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It's counter-intuitive, since everything else is more expensive in Britain than here, but DVDs are an exception.
If you're a fan of MI-5/Spooks, you'll know that the list price for Series 6 (soon to be released here) is around $80, $60 at websites like DeepDiscountDVD.
Well, folks, I just ordered Series 6 of Spooks for the equivalent of about $30 from Amazon UK.
If I wanted to get the entire run of Inspector Morse (which I don't, but just supposing), I could get it for around $60 through Amazon UK, a real bargain considering that Borders charges $80 for a package of just a few episodes.
In general, anything that's not absolutely new is available at a low price. Bargain sites in the U.S. occasionally have real bargains (the entire Prisoner series for $30 recently), but on the whole, you're better off buying British series from British websites.
An additional benefit is that many fine British series and European movies have never been released in Region 1 format. There they are for your viewing pleasure.
The one catch is that you have to have a region-free DVD player to play disks coded for Europe (Region 2), as most Amazon UK disks are, but you can buy those over the Internet, and they cost only about $20 more than a comparable regular U.S. (Region 1) DVD player.
If you don't want to spend that, you can use an Apple computer's disk drive, and if you don't use it for anything but European disks, the computer will automatically set itself for Region 2. (You can switch regions 5 times before the computer "locks" on one region.)
Windows owners can tell you whether the same is true for Windows computers.
I hardly ever turn the TV on for broadcast programming anymore.
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