Quite true, Speed, if you're talking about the '60s and '70s, as well as some sitcoms in the '80s, like Who's the Boss, Family Ties, etc. However, Seinfeld, Everybody Loves Raymond and the X Files were all shot on film.
The bigger issue is the 4x3 to 16x9 conversion (top to bottom cropping). You're quite right about using what would be the safe area in the old 4x3 TV days to show more wide-screen in the 16x9 TV era. Even with the wider safe area, there's still top to bottom cropping required, head and foot-room shot-to-shot have to be carefully monitored to make sure all the essential story information is included, and titles have to either be included in the 16x9 crop area or re-generated entirely from scratch. Thankfully, from what I've seen of the Seinfeld episodes in 16x9 HD, the show's producers and/or transfer engineers have handled this expertly.
Battlestar Galactica (the original 1978 TV series) and the TV series Galactica 1980 were recently scanned from their film negatives, in 2k, not 4k resolution the documentary says (2k was apparently all that was needed to capture all the resolution information in the film, presumably 16mm), for 1080p blu-ray in a box set called The Definitive Collection. The resolution, color and contrast of all the transfers in this set look superb (the black level is amazing and you can really see all the glints in the actors' eyes, as well as all the grain in the white of Viper turbos and all of John Dykstra and his company Apogee's then-groundbreaking, state-of-the-art, multi-pass through an optical printer visual-effects), and for the most part, transfer engineers did a great job with the re-framing of the cropped 4x3 compositions, with most of the primary actors' faces and action centered around the center of the 4x3 screen anyway during original filming. There are a few exceptions: There are a few closing titles in one episode that should have been re-oriented up a bit because they're too close to the bottom of the frame, some shots during a paratrooper sequence down into a Cylon compound during The Living Legend-Part II episode has actors' heads cut off, as well as Lorne Greene as Commander Adama's jawline being cut off when he was communicating with Colonel Tigh via viewscreen I believe, when he was too close to the bottom of the 4x3 frame during original filming. Bad, re-framers, bad. You should have taken a little more time and care there to correct such issues, especially since, due to expense and the fact that technology can't possibly show any more than what is there in the original film, this will undoubtedly be the LAST version of these shows.
Thankfully, also included in this Definitive Collection set are the original broadcast 4x3 versions of Battlestar Glactica and Galactica 1980, which are the same terrific transfers as the 16x9 versions, and are naturally properly formatted in their original 4x3. This the way it should be done for all such shows. Of course, at $80, this box set is not cheap, but considering all you get, it's pretty fair.
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