Here you go, although it’s really expensive. I was surprised when I found the entire Shaka Zulu miniseries from the 80’s for $20 in remastered 4k. Amazon is pretty good for finding obscure titles.
All the Season 1-5 episodes are on Amazon Instant to buy for a dollar, some in HD no less.
If you truly can't afford it, go ahead and pirate, but personally I pledged that if prices for hour long episodes dropped to a dollar, I would buy; don't want to go back on a promise I made to myself.
Have you seen Strange Days? It's another movie that deals with the possibilities of simstim (simulated stimulus). If you haven't seen it, it is worth checking out. Great cast and story.
Edit: Apparently James Cameron wrote it. Cool.
The DVD has dual audio (it was filmed in French). That said, I'm not a subtitle snob, but I really don't like the English dub on this.
Create a knockoff logo of the BP corporate logo resembling the big concrete thingy they were trying to cap off the undersea well with, or just use a huge buttplug icon, and have the letters be in a turd-like brown bumpy font.
Print huge color posters of these from an employer's office printer or plotter whom you dislike. Then at 3am some morning, go to your local BP with a truck that has a cherry picker and plaster that poster over their logo with contact cement or some similarly hard to remove adhesive.
You could think of this as... <em>homework</em>.
Programming has influenced my writing style by compelling me to assess stuff that should be included, and stuff that should be commented out (like comments in source code). Some things are simpler to just throw out there in a compiled, ready-to-assimilate form and let people chew on than worry about having them achieve total understanding. To quote Jack Nicholson's character in <em>A Few Good Men</em>, "You can't HANDLE the truth!"
If I was a brain in a vat, I'd be like Uncle Irvin from the City of Lost Children. That brain had panache.
One problem with this is that planning something along these lines would be considered an act of domestic terrorism. Another is that you're asking people to ditch their relatively stable and carefree workaday world for a Fight Club style cult existence, where a fanatical devotion to rebellious overlords will lead to rallying cries calling for an end to organized government. While many who are single, ideally sociopathic, might eagerly join up, those making good coin or who have loving families aren't going to be in on this.
Twister is pretty rewatchable to me, but I dunno about every day, maybe every few months at best.
I wasn't familiar with the books nor did I know there was a series based on the books on the Sci-Fi Channel at one time. When I checked Amazon for information on the books, I found a Dresden Files DVD from a series the Sci-Fi Channel had for one season based on the books. I'll mention the books and the DVD to my wife, since I think she would probably enjoy them.