Michael,
Explain to the layman (me) the romanticizing of crime family dramas like SOA, The Godfather, Sopranos, et al..
Regardless of Mario Puzo's and Coppolas writing, in the end, all the bad guys (the Corleones) ended up dead as it should be... Crime don't pay...the guidos paid the ultimate price.
What makes shows like Sons of Anarchy create such a fervor for criminals and their criminal activities so popular? In full disclosure, I've never watched SOA or the Sopranos, not a single episode, but...I'm interested to know what draws folks who wouldn't consider breaking the law to gravitate to a drama that romanticizes crime to an extreme level.
One of the things I liked about SoA was, while in the beginning it seemed to glorify criminal activity, by the time the 3rd-4th seasons rolled by it was clearly showing a cause/effect nature in its arc.
I can say, without spoiling it for those who have not watched (but may be entertaining doing so), that by the final season it clearly showed that good choices for bad reasons as well as bad choices for seemingly good reasons, have major consequences later on.
As to cable/dish/etcI'm thinking of dropping all but just the basic package. It would be cheaper to buy entire show seasons online, or even on DVD, for less than what one month of premium programming costs. Dish Network charges $103 per month for a two-room DVR and a second HD room added with their top programming package. You can get an entire season of a show like SoA on DVD, for example, for $25-$35 on Amazon or cheaper streaming online from Amazon.
Now that SoA is done and Justified is almost done, the only other channels I watch are History and Discovery...and they come with the basic package. I would miss Encore Western channel, but you can get old westerns way cheap from Amazon and many for free online.
A neighbor stopped his Dish subscription last year and he built his own digital antenna from plans he found online. He can pick up 14 local area digital channels.