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It's not just Trek nowadays, it's freaking everything.The whole show is nothing but cheap drama and generic inspirational monologue, it's shocking really.
I genuinely do not understand how anyone could watch this crap, I mean, really watching it, not just as background noise while doing chores, and still enjoying it.
The plot is incoherent as fuck, it's thematically and narratively retarded, the characters are shit, the plot makes no sense. All you get is really cheap use of insanely vapid and generic tropes. You can replace all the "emotional" character moments with a giant white square of paper with "Drama goes here" for how blatant it is. They do not tie into anything, are based on off-screen stuff or make no sense whatsoever.
Same with the "inspirational" speeches, that are actively hurting my brain and make me bleed from the ears for how utterly crap they are. Especially that whimsy tone in Picard's voice is pissing me off, since you could literally read a shopping list and it would have the same effect.
This is also my theory. These new shows hinge on the audience being distracted some of the time, so the audience will assume that whatever's going on only doesn't make sense to them cause they didn't pay full attention.We got a younger bot down at the factory, when we're doing movie lunches I'll notice he's often on his cell phone and barely looks up at the screen. I guess that's how it is for the youth now. It was a "good" movie or TV show for the 3 minutes they looked up and actually watched. That's certainly the impression I get when I see one of those YouTube clip channels for Picard and read the comments on it.
I think there might be some blank canvas storytelling too where our hypothetical audience here is filling in the story they missed with their own imagination and so then it "makes sense."This is also my theory. These new shows hinge on the audience being distracted some of the time, so the audience will assume that whatever's going on only doesn't make sense to them cause they didn't pay full attention.
If there's suddenly a shot of Picard dancing the Mambo dressed as Harley Quinn with leFUNNEH music, they look up, chortle at the absurdity, assume there was something preceding this scene to explain why it exists and go back to posting selfies or photos of their food or whatever. Or when there's action. Or when there's an emotional moment.
You have storytelling that replaces showing and demonstrating with straight out stating things.
And the worst thing is that the audience seem not even to care. These programms are just background noise. People do not expect them to really make sense start to finish and for things to carry on logically from one scene or episode to the next. It's simply surreal, how terrible the writing of these shows is and people still lap it up.
As Jay Baumann said, franchises have taken the place of actors.
In the past, you'd have been an Arnold Schwarzenegger fan, so you watched his movies and enjoyed them, even if they were subpar. But now people are fans of franchises and they enjoy them, no matter how terrible they are.
I don't wanna sound like an elitist snob, there is plenty of garbage stuff I watch as guilty pleasures, but for fuck's sake: How can you watch nuTrek without being a total moron?
Unpopular opinion, but this is a downside of serialization. It means the audience can be forgiven for not having paid attention watching one episode. They can either play it over again or ask anyone who also watches it what happened if they weren’t paying attention.This is also my theory. These new shows hinge on the audience being distracted some of the time, so the audience will assume that whatever's going on only doesn't make sense to them cause they didn't pay full attention.
If there's suddenly a shot of Picard dancing the Mambo dressed as Harley Quinn with leFUNNEH music, they look up, chortle at the absurdity, assume there was something preceding this scene to explain why it exists and go back to posting selfies or photos of their food or whatever. Or when there's action. Or when there's an emotional moment.
You have storytelling that replaces showing and demonstrating with straight out stating things.
And the worst thing is that the audience seem not even to care. These programms are just background noise. People do not expect them to really make sense start to finish and for things to carry on logically from one scene or episode to the next. It's simply surreal, how terrible the writing of these shows is and people still lap it up.
As Jay Baumann said, franchises have taken the place of actors.
In the past, you'd have been an Arnold Schwarzenegger fan, so you watched his movies and enjoyed them, even if they were subpar. But now people are fans of franchises and they enjoy them, no matter how terrible they are.
I don't wanna sound like an elitist snob, there is plenty of garbage stuff I watch as guilty pleasures, but for fuck's sake: How can you watch nuTrek without being a total moron?
Wouldn't this be more of an issue of VOD-streaming vs. TV though?Unpopular opinion, but this is a downside of serialization. It means the audience can be forgiven for not having paid attention watching one episode. They can either play it over again or ask anyone who also watches it what happened if they weren’t paying attention.
Plot of the week TV forces you to pay attention if you actually are watching. If you aren’t, then you won’t see it again until either re runs or it comes out on DVD.
I know some people will disagree, and yes good serialized TV requires you pay attention, as much as not more-but it punishes you even harder if you aren’t, because you’ll have no idea what’s going on.
Bad serialization on the other hand allows the audience to disengage their faculties, on the presumption that whatever their seeing has some logic or basis behind it in the narrative. After all it’s part of an overarching plot right? So why not look at your phone when it isn’t doing spectacle.
So he was basically just like Shatner in these regards?Yea Patric stuart is a cunt and a stage actor to boot he demanded he get's more monologues and speeches as part of his contract for reviving the roll (along side a dump truck of cash) to make use of his full "Range" they are just sensless shite that can be made up on the fly as Red Letter Media proved, all the saccerine with all the depth and meaning of of a Glory Hole.
Those Marvel movies are coated in CGI Vaseline so there's a good chance his whole performance has been digitally enhanced. Picard doesn't have that kind of money since it's all going to Sir Patrick's wallet.He showed in Dr. Strange that he can still act and not sound like a worn out old man
The other downside is serialization doesn't require the writers to craft a good self contained story for each episode, they can just string the audience along until the unsatisfying payoff for the season then forget it all and move onto the next one.Unpopular opinion, but this is a downside of serialization. It means the audience can be forgiven for not having paid attention watching one episode. They can either play it over again or ask anyone who also watches it what happened if they weren’t paying attention.
Plot of the week TV forces you to pay attention if you actually are watching. If you aren’t, then you won’t see it again until either re runs or it comes out on DVD.
I know some people will disagree, and yes good serialized TV requires you pay attention, as much as not more-but it punishes you even harder if you aren’t, because you’ll have no idea what’s going on.
Bad serialization on the other hand allows the audience to disengage their faculties, on the presumption that whatever their seeing has some logic or basis behind it in the narrative. After all it’s part of an overarching plot right? So why not look at your phone when it isn’t doing spectacle.
What you're describing isn't a flaw of serialization, it's a flaw of shitty writing.Unpopular opinion, but this is a downside of serialization. It means the audience can be forgiven for not having paid attention watching one episode. They can either play it over again or ask anyone who also watches it what happened if they weren’t paying attention.
Plot of the week TV forces you to pay attention if you actually are watching. If you aren’t, then you won’t see it again until either re runs or it comes out on DVD.
I know some people will disagree, and yes good serialized TV requires you pay attention, as much as not more-but it punishes you even harder if you aren’t, because you’ll have no idea what’s going on.
Bad serialization on the other hand allows the audience to disengage their faculties, on the presumption that whatever their seeing has some logic or basis behind it in the narrative. After all it’s part of an overarching plot right? So why not look at your phone when it isn’t doing spectacle.
What you’re describing sums up the last four seasons of game of thrones.The other downside is serialization doesn't require the writers to craft a good self contained story for each episode, they can just string the audience along until the unsatisfying payoff for the season then forget it all and move onto the next one.
many such cases.What you’re describing sums up the last four seasons of game of thrones.
Ira Behr just dug a grave for himself for the sole purpose of turning over in it.The other downside is serialization doesn't require the writers to craft a good self contained story for each episode, they can just string the audience along until the unsatisfying payoff
This is why I like the later seasons of DS9 so much, they benefit from both being episodic while having an overarching storyIn the same vein as GOT, the audience can always be promised that whatever the nonsense or poor writing they’re seeing, it will all make sense and work out in the end. So long as the audience is convinced the showrunners and writers have a plan, and there are episodes left to see, they can be fooled into accepting garbage if they are told they’ll get a diamond at the end of it.
A self contained episode doesn’t have this problem-it stands or falls on its own. You can’t say “but the end of the season will vindicate it!” to cover your ass.
The inverse is true as well-a good episode in an otherwise poor season is marred by being associated with crap. You can’t simply appreciate the episode if the overall story it’s in sucks(at least not as much anyway).
Episodic TV doesn’t have this problem.
Can't spread The Message (tm) if no one's listening to it.GoT ended in a big massive cope. "Just because our theories didn't happen, doesn't mean it wasn't good." Those "theories" being simple storytelling.
That's an important aspect of new shows too, and I blame youtubers. For them, it's enough to have enough material to sperg and craft elaborate ideas that are never gonna happen but that viewers will consume. It makes them money and that's good enough. Then they cover their disappointed with "well, we know it wasn't going to be just as we wanted, but it was fine" because their e x p e c t a t i o n s were s u b v e r t e d.
It makes money for the critics too: Critical Drinker, Quartering, Cullen, etc. That's why these terrible shows never end and they keep producing them (and that's why I say we shouldn't even watch them, good or not). I honestly think they cancelled Batwoman not because it was bad, but because nobody was talking about it.