For argument based on knowledge implies instruction, and there are people whom one cannot instruct - Aristotle
Tuesday, 26 January 2021
All those wasted hours
After some years of watching virtually no terrestrial television, when I do catch a glimpse it comes across as curiously depressing. Not head in hands, is it all worth it, goodbye cruel world depressing. No, television depression stems from its tendency to suppress. It is a know your place kind of suppression, a don’t step out of your social shell because you can’t kind of suppression.
What is more, it isn’t depressing until we step outside the television world and see the suppression for what it is. Until then it is a kind of latent depression, a willingly chained soul kind of depression where many things may be amusing but nothing is stimulating. Even cookery programmes have morphed into a you can’t cook like this but you can watch us version of talking down to the chained souls.
TV comedy poked fun at stereotypes but in doing so it poked fun at ordinary people.
TV soaps are populated by emotionally incontinent ineffectual losers.
TV news is relentlessly negative and this is what lingers, not the amusing snippet at the end where the presenter ekes out a faint smile.
TV weather is relentlessly negative. Even good weather carries health warnings about exposure to the sun.
TV drama is unrelentingly grim. Mostly people scowling at each other.
Even celebrity interviews show the audience what they cannot possibly be.
Television is not one hundred percent gloom of course. To many viewers would probably switch off if there no reasons to be cheerful and in any event gloom is not what it sells. What television does is to suppress the spark of individual inspiration, the joy of life, the realisation that there is a world of limitless fascination out there. Television is limited and viewers are persuaded to accept those limitations.
That’s how television suppresses and why looking back tends to depress those who escaped. All those wasted hours…
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7 comments:
Agreed. What strikes me, when I occasionally revisit the prison cell, is how utterly formulaic programmes are. This has just happened, so now we'll get the little joke, and then they'll do some more of that, and then someone will say the catchphrase, and then...
There is a horrible vertiginous sense of being sucked into some endlessly repeating pattern. I guess some people like that. It's certainly easier than thinking for yourself.
My bete noire at the moment is Ashley Banjo. The memsahib watches Britain's Gross Talent and Prancing on Ice, so I'm infected on the fringes. The tosser Banjo was allowed to inmsert a political routine into BGT, costing it viewers and is then hired as judge on an ice skating show. Whose arse shines on him, I wonde?
"TV soaps are populated by emotionally incontinent ineffectual losers"
Like it.
Heard an interesting item late one night on R5Live, where a book on British films was discussed. It would also apply to TV as you describe.
It seems that films and TV back in the sixties were on the wane, but The Beatles changed all that with 'Hard Days Night'. Much was jolly stuff for a while before a period where, instead of bright lights and happy films, a new era cropped up, called euphemistically, 'The Cardboard Box' years, where all new films and series were just gritty, with hard streets, tough guys, etc, and a car chase which always sent boxes flying in all directions!
Sorry to say, I can't remember the name of the author or even the book...
...and as James says above - excellent description!
Sam - yes the formulaic nature of it becomes too obvious to watch, although that leaves me wondering if it was always obvious. I think it probably was but it was there and it didn't matter if a bit was missed while making a cup of tea.
Jannie - I've never heard of Ashley Banjo but I bet there was internal BBC approval of his political routine. It's a pure guess, but I bet it wasn't politically incorrect.
James - the point of it defeats me. Really strange programmes.
Scrobs - I'm definitely going to hunt down "The Cardboard Box Years" if I can. Sound really low budget too.
Reminds me of this:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Year_of_the_Sex_Olympics
Andrew - that's one I missed for some reason, but as a warning about the future it doesn't seem far off.
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