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This article is kinda full of it. The 24p film look is beloved because it is surreal. And the inherent motion blur (and the use of a standard 180-degree shutter in the camera) helps smooth out any jitters. 30i and 60p/i are disliked for cinema because it looks "too real", but is good for live sports, news, and reality shows. I bet the problem the writer is noticing is that some cheaper 1080p TVs use inferior video processors which may drop frames, or get out of sync with the signal from the source. Maybe it's an inferior up-sampling converter (line doubler, etc) that can't keep up. I've seen TV's at the store side by side with the same specs (1080p, 24p, etc), and with the same show on both TV's the motion artifacts and frame rates were night and day. And neither TV had any "Frame Creation" or temporal-interpolation crap.
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