Mine is set the same way - stretched images drive me up the wall. I live
with black bars on 4:3 source. Same thing with anything that's not 16:9.
On Mon, Nov 11, 2013 at 4:24 PM, Steve Troy <sctroy@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> That's true for native 4:3 source material, but not for native 16:9
> broadcasts, and only if you have your TV set to stretch the 4:3 signal.
> Mine are set *not* to do that - I'd rather see the black bars on each side
> rather than see everyone look like Chris Christie..
>
> Steve Troy
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Bob Benson" <bob.benson91@xxxxxxxxx>
> To: olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Sent: Monday, November 11, 2013 5:20:47 PM
> Subject: [OM] Carrie Underwood
>
> About Bob W's comment about Carrie looking trimmer in the magazine compared
> to the TV . perhaps you all know more about this than I do . but don't most
> of us have 16x9 perspective big screen TVs, and that to fill that
> landscape
> out fully, we use a feature (on mine) named wide-screen, which has the
> effect of broadening the broadcast image? Without this feature, we get a
> more 4x3 broadcast image, which is contains the true sized image ?
>
> Bob B
> --
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>
--
Paul Braun
Certified Music Junkie
"Music washes from the soul the dust of everyday life." -- Harlan Howard
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