LOL. It's actually, "Lord look after my son, don't let him get stuffed in a gym bag".
Yep, I got all of the BBT too... except this year's episodes. Haven't collected the new season yet. Usually at the point I've missed a couple episodes, I look for places (even underground) to download & save all the new ones I don't have yet. Usually when they start re-running stuff in December, & in late spring, I know it's time to download all of the new ones so I can catch the ones I missed.
I could never schedule my time to when a show was on, unless it was an absolute favorite. More often than not, I had better things to do when a show came on that I liked so would skip it rather than drop everything to watch it.
From about 14 until I was 22 I literally watched almost no TV. There was a TV around, & I was good fixing them so they were cheap for me. It's just none of us ever got around to turning it on much. I was also heavily involved with music, bands, the pipe organ business (in churches), & DJing so TV had little attraction anymore. I do remember turning on a few late-night concerts though.
That was from about 1969 to around 1977. Did I miss anything?
Then when they invented the VCR & it came down in price, the opposite happened. I stockpiled tons of tapes & recorded everything that peaked my interest even a little bit. I could pick & choose what to watch & when to watch it. I also had a blockbuster account to rent movies. Even then, I knew how to bypass the simple copy protection, & copy the rented tapes. But things were different by then. I was no longer just a DJ, but my town's first & only music VJ on a nightclub's widescreen TV over the dance floor.
So it was different priorities. It was suddenly essential to have a couple VCRs, be able to mix, edit, copy on them, or produce material with them. If no music video of a song existed I was producing my own video graphics or edited video clips to run with the music. By 1981 I was doing video graphics on a computer to music too. But rather than haul computers to work, I taped the graphics. I also had a small computer installed at work (got it from a Goodwill thrift store cheap). I'd run text announcements over the videos live, like the club's specials, events, dedicate a song to Sue & Joe, or text happy birthday to a customer on the screen.
By about 1982 I had just about every TV show or movie I liked on tape. New movies were available to rent on tapes 6-18 months after they were at the cinema. It got to be that I rarely went out to see a movie. I would just wait until I could rent it or when it would be on cable to tape.
I had one whole wall of shelves of video tape. Lost those all in the fire. I was lucky I had a few dozen stored in my office at work. After the fire, most of what I owned that I had left was just in my office downtown. To this day except for the bed & a few other items, my small newer place is still mostly furnished with what I had in my office/shop downtown.
I still can't get used to dropping everything & stopping what I'm doing just to catch a TV show. As long as I know it exists, I know I can find it somewhere to watch later. I don't have cable, but thanks to digital TV & their sub-channels, I get around 35 digital channels -- over 40 on a good day with an ordinary simple indoor TV antenna. I get all the main networks, some Canadian channels, plus lots of channels running old stuff all the time. If I include all the religious, shopping & infomercials that I have locked out, I get over 50 channels.
I Dream of Jeanne is on. This morning I enjoyed Green Acres & The Addams Family after the news. I have about 40, 2017 movies on a hard drive, half of which I haven't got around to seeing yet.
I have compressed versions of the last 10 seasons of BBT too. They're really compressed a lot so don't look good on a big screen. But they look good enough on portables & laptops. There isn't much dazzling video in sitcoms anyway. So for low bandwidth streaming they're good enough. You can even watch the streams or download them on a slow dialup connection, or if you're on a public wifi, they won't cut you off because the files are so small.
I have 7 seasons of the BBT in our private Television section here. I should get the last 3 up someday but it takes a long time to upload an entire season on my DSL connection, & usually I can't tie up my connection long. I have no cable & budget phone service, so everything comes through my DSL connection.