Clean up
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# TV Shows
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When organizing TV Shows I have three different types of shows, which would need their individual namingscheme.
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These types are:
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- Standard
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- Anime
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- Daily
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## Standard
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Standard shows are what most people would watch on TV. This includes shows like `Friends` and miniseries like `Band of Brothers`. Most of my TV Shows fall in the *Standard* category, which i ripped from DVDs or Blu-Rays in order to save them. I've had some bad experiences with disks, where they stopped working after some years, so now i rip all my physical media as a backup.
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Standard tv shows should be located in season folders and named for each episode. My folder structure looks something like this:
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```
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TV Shows
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│
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└───Series Title (year)
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│ │
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│ └───Season x
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│ │ Series Title - S0xE0x - Episode Title - [Quality][MediaInfo AudioChannels AudioLanguages - SUB].ext
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│ │ ...
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```
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[{Quality Title}][{MediaInfo Simple} {MediaInfo AudioChannels} {MediaInfo AudioLanguages} - SUB{MediaInfo SubtitleLanguages}]
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An example would be:
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```
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TV Shows
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│
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└───Friends (1991)
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│ │
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│ └───Season 1
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│ │ Friends - S01E01 - The One Where Monica Gets a Roommate - [Bluray-1080p][x265 AAC 5.1 [EN]].mkv
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│ │ ...
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│
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└───Game of Thrones (2011)
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│ │
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│ └───Season 1
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│ │ Game of Thrones - S01E01 - Winter Is Coming - [Bluray-1080p][x265 AAC 5.1 [EN+FR+ES] - SUB[EN+FR+ES+DA].mkv
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│ │ ...
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│
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```
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When looking at the naming of each episode, it is important for me to be able to find the show and season, if i never lose my folder structure. A nice to have into is the source, where it mostly is Bluray or DVD. With Blurays i like to to also show the resolution.
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Depending on the show, I have multiple audios available and/or subtitles. In the case of Game of Thrones, the example shows English, French and Spanish audio and English, French, Spanish and Danish subtitles.
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## Anime
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Anime is similar to *Standard* but still varies enough to not be handeled the same.
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```
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TV Shows
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│
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└───Series Title (year)
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│ │
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│ └───Season x
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│ │ Series Title - S0xE0x (Absolute numbering) - Episode Title - [Quality][MediaInfo AudioChannels VideoDynamicRange VideoBitDepth].ext
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│ │ ...
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│
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└───Fairy Tail (2009)
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│ │
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│ └───Season 1
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│ │ Fairy Tail - S01E01 (001) - The Fairy Tail - [Bluray-1080p][x265 AAC[EN+JA] [EN] 5.1][10bit].mkv
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│ │ ...
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```
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With anime i like to add the VideoDynamicRange (HDR/SDR) and VideoBitDepth (eg. 10 bit or 8 bit). Animes also often have an absolute number, which makes it easier to follow.
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## Daily
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I have no daily shows, as i really don't follow late-night shows, but a setup would be similar to the previous two:
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```
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TV Shows
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│
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└───Series Title (year)
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│ │
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│ └───Season x
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│ │ Series Title - YYYY-MM-DD - Episode Title.ext
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│ │ ...
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```
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Instead of a season and episode number, we use a year-month-day numbering, as each episode airs daily.
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## Software
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I wont go into details about ripping and converting the files, but instead just talk about the organizing.
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I used to have a bunch of bash scripts that used ffprobe and ffmpeg to determine the information for each file. This proved to be cumbersome and slow. Instead i decided to try [tinyMediaManager](https://www.tinymediamanager.org/), which works wonders. Once problem is that it is easiest to use through the GUI. After moving to a headless NAS, it was too slow to VNC to the server in order to organize my media.
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Instead i started using Sonarr purely for media management. Sonarr runs through Docker and and after ripping a disk, i add each file to my import folder and Sonarr can then be accessed through a browser for management.
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