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A little bit of trivia for anyone who might be interested:
When we think of "film quality," we base it largely on the filmed motion effects do to a frame rate of 24 frames per second. This frame rate is not actually an ideal frame rate for motion pictures. A faster frame rate would actually give better motion quality and better images. The primary reason the motion picture industry settled on 24fps was economy. Film is expensive to buy, process and print. The higher the frame rate used, the greater the film footage per second needed and the more expensive any given production becomes.
In the dawn of motion pictures (the silent era), 16fps was the slowest frame rate that could be used and still give acceptable results. 16fps causes the image on the screen to flicker a bit, though, and this is where the word "flick" comes from.
When "talkies" appeared, 16fps was not adequately compatible with synchronized sound. 24fps was the slowest frame rate the could be used for this purpose and this became the new industry standard for motion pictures. Even then, when being projected onto a screen, each frame was (and still is) projected twice to reduce flicker to a minimum.
30fps is a better frame rate for motion effects and would give better results when viewed on an interlaced, 60i TV screen. Back in the '50s, a few movies were shot in 30fps but it never caught on.
We think 24p gives our videos a film-like quality because we have become accustomed to the look of 24fps, not because it is a superior frame rate.
Just my two cents.
No search is necessary. I wasn't asking a question---I was merely offering a bit of film history trivia for anyone who might be interested. No more, no less. Don't get me wrong, I like (and use) 24p as much as the next guy. But if, back in the day, the motion picture industry had chosen 30fps as the standard, we wouldn't even be having this discussion and pulldown wouldn't be necessary.