-xtm- 2 .e01.111017.hdtv.xvid-ws.avi Site
Thus, the source video was recorded (captured) on . This is critical for verifying freshness: a release with an old date when a newer episode exists would be automatically rejected by Scene dupe-checking bots.
Moreover, the naming structure is a for automated content identification. Programs like TheRenamer, FileBot, or Sonarr can parse such strings to correctly identify the series, season, episode, and quality—despite the minor irregularities in 2 .E01 . -XTM- 2 .E01.111017.HDTV.XviD-WS.avi
: The air date in YYMMDD format ( October 17, 2011 or November 10, 2017 , depending on the specific series' timeline, but most commonly associated with the 2017 broadcast for this naming convention). HDTV : The source of the video (High Definition Television). Thus, the source video was recorded (captured) on
This is the air date: (YY/MM/DD). This timestamp places the file firmly in the "Golden Age of Torrenting." In 2011, streaming services like Netflix were in their infancy (Netflix had only launched streaming in Canada one year prior, in 2010). The primary way to watch TV shows not broadcast in your country—or to archive them—was via file-sharing protocols like BitTorrent or Usenet. The date allows archivists to pinpoint exactly which TV airing this corresponds to. Programs like TheRenamer, FileBot, or Sonarr can parse
: This is the Release Group Tag . XTM is a known group that specialized in television rips. The tag is traditionally placed at the beginning or end of the filename (e.g., -XTM ) to signal which group "owns" the release. 2 : Likely refers to the Season Number (Season 2). E01 : Stands for Episode 01 .
XTM was known for two things:
: This is likely a reference to the XTM network , a South Korean cable channel known for its male-oriented lifestyle and entertainment programming. In file naming, this often identifies the source of the broadcast. 2 : This typically denotes the season number (Season 2).


