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For archiving or home theater viewing, the BD9 is the practical winner. Marsha Thomason continues to ground the show. Jenn isn’t a super-cop; she’s tired, occasionally wrong, but fiercely empathetic. Her scene opposite newcomer Emmy Rose (as Leah Woods) in the second act – where Jenn gently pushes for information while Leah’s grief turns to anger – is the episode’s acting highlight.
This specific BD9 of The Bay S04E01 uses a x264 encode at ~8 Mbps with AC3 5.1 audio (448 kbps). Given the show’s muted palette – lots of grey-blue skies, dim interiors, rain-slicked streets – the encode handles gradients well. There’s no obvious banding in the fog scenes, and skin tones stay natural. Some grain is preserved, which is good for texture, but it’s not noisy. the bay s04e01 bd9
Below is a detailed, community-style post suitable for a forum, blog, or social media (e.g., Reddit or a fan page). It includes plot discussion, technical notes on the BD9 version, and viewing recommendations. Warning: Mild spoilers for S04E01 ahead. For archiving or home theater viewing, the BD9
The script by (returning writer) leans into The Bay ’s strength: family secrets ripple outward like waves. Unlike faster-paced procedurals ( Line of Duty ), this premiere takes its time. Some may find the first 20 minutes slow, but every detail pays off. ⚠️ One Technical Caveat on the BD9 If you’re playing the BD9 on a standalone Blu-ray player (as a burned disc), ensure it supports BD-R and BD-RE and that the file structure is properly authored (BDMV/CERTIFICATE folders). Some users report needing to update their player’s firmware. For PC playback, VLC or MPC-HC works perfectly. 🏁 Final Verdict The Bay S04E01 is a confident, moody premiere that rewards patient viewers. It doesn’t reinvent the genre but deepens the show’s sense of place and moral ambiguity. Rating: 8/10 Her scene opposite newcomer Emmy Rose (as Leah