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General Hospital prescribes itself a daily dose of 720p

General Hospital logoIt's been three years since we wished for General Hospital to deliver us some medical melodrama in HD, and in a couple of weeks it'll be coming. Just in time for the May sweeps that are now only partially screwed up due to the delayed DTV transition, the longest running soap in the biz -- 46 years and 11,500 episodes -- will be getting a 720p makeover on April 23rd. ABC has spent a tidy $3 million to equip the production facilities for HD, including seven HD cameras and five Panasonic professional plasmas that keep our hearts warm. ABC is hoping the jump to HD will help increase the realism of the show, and while we're never ones to underestimate the power of HD picture quality, we suspect the story lines might need a little more than 720p to get us to suspend our disbelief.

Live with Regis and Kelly headed to HD next year

From the "They're still not in in HD?" files, Live With Regis & Kelly announced on-air yesterday that the show is going high definition on January 5, 2009. Apparently a makeup has been located that will make Regis watchable in high-res (he looked good in a How I Met Your Mother cameo earlier this fall), and with brand new sets all the rage in daytime TV, there's no time like the present. How it took so long is still a mystery to us, after Regis & Kelly jumped into 3-D over two years ago, you'd think moving to HD would be nothing.

ABC's The View going high-def September 5

One of the two TV shows needed to bring women to high definition is now going 720p. The View will switch to HDTV format September 5 as they add new host Rosie O'Donnell. While Oprah is still in SD, ABC also broadcasts Good Morning America in high def. Jessica Simpson will be a special guest on the episode, in case you needed a better reason to get up before noon other than seeing Barbara Walters (but not Star Jones) in 720 stunning vertical lines of resolution. With MHD, Food Network and now daytime television following primetime programming to HDTVs, the day when your mother/daughter/sister calls you to ask "What do you think about LCD vs. plasma TVs?" draws that much closer.




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