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5 votes
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'Captain Marvel' shatters stereotypes with $34M Friday in China
7 votes -
What if child care were as standard as coffee at tech conferences?
6 votes -
Fred Rogers was attracted to both men and women
10 votes -
What if you could diagnose diseases with a tampon?
7 votes -
The banality of empathy
4 votes -
Russia’s passive-aggressive reaction to SpaceX may mask a deeper truth
18 votes -
Fantasy's Widow: The fight over the legacy of Dungeons & Dragons
7 votes -
What is C-PTSD?
2 votes -
Facebook only cares about privacy because it has to
5 votes -
India’s and Pakistan’s lies thwarted a war—for now
5 votes -
Any interest in setting "scrollbar-color" in the Tildes themes
10 votes -
Microsoft rolls out new Skype for Web. Unless you use Firefox, Opera, Safari, or Linux
9 votes -
Taxed, throttled or thrown in jail: Africa's new internet paradigm
7 votes -
The best album ever
In your opinion, what was the best album ever released?
22 votes -
This, too, was history. The battle over police torture and reparations in Chicago’s schools.
7 votes -
Valve lays off thirteen employees, reportedly slashing VR hardware division
18 votes -
I barely enjoy television anymore, and it's really tiring me out
Hey folks, I thought I'd bring up something that I've been struggling with for the past few years. As the title suggests, my issue is that it's been really, really difficult for me to watch...
Hey folks, I thought I'd bring up something that I've been struggling with for the past few years. As the title suggests, my issue is that it's been really, really difficult for me to watch television lately. I rarely find anything that looks appealing to begin with, and even when I do, I almost always end up in a constant state of—for lack of a better word—cringe. This happens with some movies, but almost every single TV show I try to start.
The moments when I start getting uncomfortable are pretty consistently dialogue scenes. It's not the idea of two characters interacting that bothers me, but rather how they do it. The way that people talk on TV (especially protagonists) is unrealistic to the point where it is distracting enough to make me stop watching, because it makes literally no sense as a part of human society. I understand that no show is going to replicate real-life conversations 1:1, and that makes sense (filler words, useless tangents, etc. would just be distracting), but so many characters are direct to the point where any characterization that their words are supposed to provide seems utterly contrived, and I consequently ignore it.
I seem hyper-aware of the fact that everything that a character is doing serves a specific purpose to either stretch the plot or artificially deepen their personality, but not in a meaningful way. The somewhat cheesy premise of The 100 (as a random example) kept me watching for a little while, but literally every conflict was forced. I could tell that there was a writer behind every, "Hey, look at Mr. <humorous adjective> here" and, "I'm telling you right now, stop! Don't do this!" and, "Just leave me alone!" trying to provide multiple sides to a character. The fourth wall may as well not even exist. Yes, I understand that your characters are all very complex human beings, but only because you're using every method known to man to imply it. It's just so heavy-handed that I can't pay attention to your broader message and instead focus on how ridiculous every word out of their mouths are.
Okay, I understand that this character is supposed to be a symbol of feminine empowerment because she just kicked 14 guys and made a witty remark about having been underestimated. Okay, I understand that these scary-looking buff guys are bad because they keep explicitly saying how much they like murdering people. Are audiences really so stupid that they have to have characterization spelled out for them in dialogue? Can actions alone not be enough to convey meaning? Why does every meaningful interaction have to coincide with a ridiculously on-the-nose explanation of why it's relevant?
It's ruining almost everything I watch. My immediate thought after hearing any TV quote that's supposed to be remotely funny or attention-grabbing is, "Ugh, that is such a 'television' thing to say," and it instantly makes me think negatively of the work. I've noticed that the feeling is somewhat dampened when watching foreign TV (in a different language), although it still feels sort of formulaic. Are my standards unrealistically high? Am I being a massive elitist? If so, how would I even change the way I look at television at this point? Or am I too far down the meta TV tropes rabbit-hole to be able to enjoy the medium fully again?
24 votes -
I wrote this spoof anime episode in a fit of frustration
9 votes -
NASA captures first air-to-air images of supersonic shockwave interaction in flight
13 votes -
Paul Manafort sentenced to forty-seven months in US prison for tax and bank fraud
17 votes -
Remote Play for PlayStation 4 games is now available on iOS devices
7 votes -
An email marketing company left 809 million records exposed online
8 votes -
Israeli electoral committee bans Arab candidates, allows extreme right to run
12 votes -
What is the best ‘game within a game’ you have played?
I was playing Stardew Valley recently and ended up playing the mini arcade games in the tavern for a couple hours. I was suprised at the depth they put into a video game that is inside another...
I was playing Stardew Valley recently and ended up playing the mini arcade games in the tavern for a couple hours. I was suprised at the depth they put into a video game that is inside another video game. Truly great.
23 votes -
Kansas Catholic school rejects kindergartner with same-sex parents
6 votes -
How to fix the housing crisis
4 votes -
Slime Rancher is available for free on the Epic Store until March 21
7 votes -
CarMan - London, Good Bye! (2017)
4 votes -
Air travel for horses
4 votes -
The 32 most iconic poems in the English language.
11 votes -
Sleeping more on weekends does not make up for past sleep loss
10 votes -
Ohio Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown won't run for President
7 votes -
Airbnb signs agreement to acquire HotelTonight
4 votes -
Bigger, saltier, heavier: Fast food since 1986 in three simple charts
8 votes -
Jurassic Park | Laws Broken
3 votes -
The prototype iPhones that hackers use to research Apple’s most sensitive code
7 votes -
Apex Legends patch notes - gun balance changes, character hitboxes, battle pass update, season 1 details
8 votes -
Documents show the US government created a secret database of activists, journalists, and social media influencers tied to the migrant caravan and in some cases, placed alerts on their passports
12 votes -
Excommunicate me from the church of social justice
18 votes -
Twenty-one horses died at a single racetrack in the last ten weeks. How did it happen?
7 votes -
Kentucky approves bill to make 'doxing' illegal after Covington student's online backlash
4 votes -
'Re-Imagining Paradise' — Making plans to rebuild a town destroyed by wildfire
4 votes -
The accidental dumpling empire
10 votes -
U.S. users are leaving Facebook by the millions, Edison Research says
23 votes -
I don’t wanna do my video game chores
28 votes -
US-German clash over international order and security. The consequences for NATO’s Eastern flank
4 votes -
Waymo are making their lidar available to companies outside of self-driving
4 votes -
Hello everyone! Has anyone here had the experience of emigrating from your home country to a new one?
Hi I am 23 year old and I want leave my country. I hold work visa for Canada. I am convinced that I should leave my country due to political changes happening in my country. What was it like for...
Hi I am 23 year old and I want leave my country. I hold work visa for Canada. I am convinced that I should leave my country due to political changes happening in my country. What was it like for you? And especially how was it like when you emigrated to a country when you was adult?
15 votes -
What is the point of votes?
So, votes are supposed to be used on quality content and comments that contribute to the conversation, right? I think the problem with this is, most of the content on Tildes is to that standard,...
So, votes are supposed to be used on quality content and comments that contribute to the conversation, right? I think the problem with this is, most of the content on Tildes is to that standard, and if it isn't, we can just tag/report it. Voting feels redundant to me. What does everyone else think?
13 votes