Inferior quality of slideshow in iMovie 08 and iDVD 08

I created two separate slideshows in iMovie 08 and then, I imported them both to an iDVD 08 project as two different chapters. After burning the disk (once in iDVD and once in Toast 8 Ti, I see three problems in both versions.
First, the opening text that plays automatically when the disk is inserted into the player is hopelessly unsharp. I created that text in Photoshop and saved it as JPEG.
Secondly, all images are way too light on my flat-screen TV (in comparison to my calibrated Cinema HD monitor).
Finally, in my first chapter - and only in the first chapter - I see "rogue" pixels missing and/or flying around on the screen and sound that is randomly broken and sometimes missing for several seconds.
I started thinking that something might be wrong with my SuperDrive, but when I play back either one of those two versions of disks on my Mac (G5), there's absolutely nothing wrong. Both image and sound are flawless. That also precludes the possibility of a faulty blank DVD disks, faulty coding or inappropriate speed of recording... Doesn't it?
I would appreciate any suggestions that would help me get rid of those problems.

I can't say that I've ever tried using an export from keynote as the source video for an imovie project and in this respect you have given me useful information in regard to the fact that keynote exports can be imported into imovie.
Without having too much knowledge in this area, may I suggest that you try to preserve the format of your keynote export in your workflow throughout imovie.
If you are not too sure about what this involves, open your keynote export in quicktime, open the inspector window and tell us what format your .mov is in and we will do our best to suggest a workflow in imovie for you.

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    If you also save the iMovie version, do you save it in DV tape of in DVD? Which one has longer duration?
    I guess if you do not keep the iMovie version, you need to re-import it if there are any subsequent changes?

    The only thing that has changed is the file extension (now .mov) and the application assigned to open it (QuickTime).
    You can drag it back to the Desktop (best way to view the file in QuickTime Player) or directly into iMovie (to any open Project). You can also open iMovie, start a new Project and "Import" the file.
    Don't forget that these are very large file sizes and import (even though no conversion is needed) may take a few minutes.
    In theory these files are identical to those you may "export" back to camera (tape). No data is lost and no "conversion" to other formats is applied.

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