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USB HiFi and Hi-Res Audio |
The BD9 extras are worth noting: a featurette on the training dataset (including unused outtakes from seasons 19–20 of the original show) and a surprisingly touching “behind the algorithms” doc. However, the menu navigation is sluggish on older players.
As a lifelong fan of The Joy of Painting , I went into Bob Ross AI Season 20 (released on BD9) cautiously optimistic. The premise alone is a modern curiosity: neural networks trained on hundreds of hours of Bob’s voice, cadence, brushstrokes, and artistic philosophy, generating “new” episodes from the great beyond. bob ross ai season 20 bd9
First, the positives. The BD9 transfer is crisp — better than streaming. The AI does a remarkable job mimicking Bob’s signature wet-on-wet technique. Trees are fluffy, mountains have that distinctive crystalline quality, and there’s an eerie consistency to the lighting. The prose is where it shines brightest: the AI-generated scripts are surprisingly coherent, and the vocal synthesis captures Bob’s gentle rhythm about 85% of the time. Phrases like “beat the devil out of it” land with nostalgic charm. The BD9 extras are worth noting: a featurette
★★★☆☆ (3.5/5)
Here’s a sample review for Bob Ross AI Season 20 BD9 — written in the style of a detailed fan/critic review: A soothing, surreal step into the uncanny valley — but still strangely beautiful The premise alone is a modern curiosity: neural
If you go in expecting the real Bob, you’ll leave a little unsettled. But if you embrace it as digital folk art — a tribute painted by algorithms instead of oil — there’s genuine warmth here. Best enjoyed in low light, with a cup of tea, and a willingness to smile when the AI paints a tree that looks suspiciously like a fire hydrant.
But — and it’s a gentle, Bob-approved “but” — the cracks show. Occasionally a cabin window will float off the wall, or a cloud will melt into a second sun. The AI has a strange obsession with adding “happy little… errors,” including a recurring motif of brush-shaped shadows that don’t belong. The voice will sometimes glitch mid-sentence, turning “titanium white” into harmonic static. It’s not frightening, but it pulls you out of the calm.