When I check my referrer logs, I keep seeing searches for some of the movies and television series I mention. The searches include the word "torrent". I know exactly what you're looking for but you won't find it here. I do not host torrents of any kind (which doesn't mean I will never host them). I will lend you a hand, though, so to speak.

A brief description of a torrent is in order. A torrent is a small file with the extension of ".torrent" on the end of it. Torrent aggregators and indexes store the torrent files on websites that are easily searched. Each torrent points to a file (or files) at another location. In order to use a torrent file, you need a client which understands the bittorrent protocol. The client reads the torrent file, locates the file(s) and then does the downloading to your computer. I realize this is a simplistic description, but it's really all you need to know about torrents if you've never heard of them before.

Google is a good way to find torrents that are hosted at personal websites, but not a good way to find them on places that index them. I recommend you visit Scrapetorrent and other torrent search engines to find what you want or need. Of course, you need a good client. I recommend you visit µTorrent and get their client. It's simple and uses very little memory compared to other clients. It's only for Windows, I believe, but I hear Azureus is a very good client for Linux users. Don't ask me about other platforms because I have absolutely no idea about clients they use.

People reading this may get the mistaken impression that I'm advocating illegal file sharing. To the contrary, I advocate LEGAL file sharing. The bittorrent protocol is designed to spread out bandwidth utilization over multiple computers but that doesn't mean that it facilitates illegal sharing. A bittorrent client is just a tool, much like a web server or an FTP server, and a very good one at that.