If you don't have some standard to abide by, then you are guaranteed chaos. This is why there are standards for film presentation, standards for speaker placement, standards for proper calibration of your speakers and video display devices. With a standard, you can make recordings that are transferable from speaker to speaker.

One of the best things I learned from Bob Hoda is that you use identical equalization curves for every listening room you have, and regardless of the speakers you use. That way you are much closer to what is heard in the recording studio no matter what system you play the recording on, and no matter which room it sits in.[/QUOTE]

Are you talking about EQ of the master? At first read your comment sounds absurd If I analyse my room and set the EQ, the same EQ curve would make havoc in your room. That's sort of the point of EQ is to attempt to correct room interactions and since not many rooms are the same a single EQ curve defeats that purpose. I believe a single EQ curve would equate to no tone controls at all.