HDTV Listings for July 27, 2007
What we're watching: Friday Night Fights or HDNet Boxing is probably our best choice tonight.Our traditional high-def listings continue below.
Here are some other HDTV programs showing on selected networks today. All times are Eastern reruns are in italics:
ABC (720p): Greek (9 p.m.)
CBS (1080i): Ghost Whisperer (8 p.m.), Jericho (9 p.m.), Numb3rs (10 p.m.)
NBC (1080i): Las Vegas (9 p.m.), Law & Order: CI (10 p.m.), The Tonight Show with Jay Leno (12:05 p.m.)
Fox (720p): Austin Powers in Goldmember (8 p.m.)
CW (1080i): N/A
MYNTV (1080i): N/A
Discovery-HD (1080i): Planet's Best (7 p.m.), The Desert Speaks (8, 8:30, 11 & 11:30 p.m.), Secrets of Zion & Bryce (9 p.m.), Beach Bites (10 p.m.)
TNT-HD (1080i): Charmed (7 p.m.), The Fifth Element (8 p.m.), Reign of Fire (10:30 p.m.)
ESPN-HD (720p): SportsCenter (6 & 11 p.m.), College Football Live (7:30 p.m.), ESPN Ultimate NASCAR (8 p.m.),
ESPN2-HD (720p): NASCAR Now (6:30 p.m.), The Bronx is Burning (7 & 8 p.m.), Friday Night Fights: Berto vs. Rivera (9 p.m.)
Mojo HD (1080i): London Live (7, 7:30, 9 & 9:30 p.m.), I Bet You (8 p.m.), King of Miami (8:30 & 11:30 p.m.), Decades Rock Live: Lynyrd Skynyrd & Friends (10 p.m.)
Universal HD (1080i): Law & Order: SVU (7 p.m.), Surface (8 p.m.), Babe (9 p.m.), Babe: Pig in the City (10:30 p.m.)
HDNet (1080i): HDNet World Report (7 p.m.), Geek to Freak with Dennis Rodman (8 & 11 p.m.), Deadline! (8:30 p.m.), Art Mann Presents (9 p.m.), Get Out! (9:30 p.m.), HDNet Boxing (10 p.m.)
HDNet Movies (1080i): Another 48 Hrs (6:15 p.m.), The Blues Brothers (8 p.m.), Chinatown (10:15 p.m.)
HBO-HD (1080i): Fantastic Four (7:30 p.m.), Entourage (10 & 10:30 p.m.)
MAX-HD (1080i): Beerfest (8 p.m.), X-Men: The Last Stand (10 p.m.)
STZ HD (1080i): Stay Alive (7:30 p.m.), The Illusionist (9 p.m.), Little Man (11 p.m.)
Showtime (1080i): The Weather Man (7:15 p.m.), Meadowlands (9 p.m.)





















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Steven B @ Sep 18th 2007 6:44PM
Dejavue all over again. IBM, Microsoft, Intel, Sony and many others have tried to control the market by brute force instead of consumer needs in the past. An in-expensive player that plays equal quality images has more consumer draw then a system that costs as much as a lcd tv and has more capability then is needed. HD DVD fills the need for consumers to use the capabilities of the new HD TV leaving money to buy DVD's. The Blue Ray is a advanced technology that meets the needs of high storage requirements in other markets. When HD technology advances to need more storage (unlikely in the next five years) Blue Ray technology might be more justified. I for one am going the HD DVD route.