Hm. Cannot decide if that sounds better or worse than Turkey & Gravy Soda.
Thought tax: for someone who doesn't actually watch a lot of TV, I have a lot of thoughts about it.
Any procedural drama - police, medical, whatever - is going to inevitably collapse under its own weight eventually, because the situations the characters deal with have to constantly escalate in order to keep interest. By season four the paramedics can't just respond to a car crash, it has to be a car that crashed into a school bus full of kids and also a tanker truck that's on fire next to a gas station. Does it count as jumping the shark, or a variant of X-Files Syndrome (show has X - pun acknowledged and ignored - seasons worth of decent story; show is popular enough to get +Y additional seasons that are thus full of hastily contrived filler)?
And something that kind of follows from that. I recently read (again, A Blog Post I Now Can't Find) a thing that really resonates with why I get so annoyed by modern TV shows - most modern shows have no chill. It's constant ActionActionActionPlotPlotPlotDramaDramaDrama. The characters get no downtime, there's never a literal or metaphorical beach episode. The viewers never have a chill episode to actually think about all the action, plot, and drama being shoved into their faces before more of it arrives.
Ten thousand channels, and still nothing on...
Thought tax: for someone who doesn't actually watch a lot of TV, I have a lot of thoughts about it.
Any procedural drama - police, medical, whatever - is going to inevitably collapse under its own weight eventually, because the situations the characters deal with have to constantly escalate in order to keep interest. By season four the paramedics can't just respond to a car crash, it has to be a car that crashed into a school bus full of kids and also a tanker truck that's on fire next to a gas station. Does it count as jumping the shark, or a variant of X-Files Syndrome (show has X - pun acknowledged and ignored - seasons worth of decent story; show is popular enough to get +Y additional seasons that are thus full of hastily contrived filler)?
And something that kind of follows from that. I recently read (again, A Blog Post I Now Can't Find) a thing that really resonates with why I get so annoyed by modern TV shows - most modern shows have no chill. It's constant ActionActionActionPlotPlotPlotDramaDramaDrama. The characters get no downtime, there's never a literal or metaphorical beach episode. The viewers never have a chill episode to actually think about all the action, plot, and drama being shoved into their faces before more of it arrives.
Ten thousand channels, and still nothing on...
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