To wit, albeit expectedly, therefore, this speech will introduce its initial start, at the beginning. Without further ado, I digress.
To wit, albeit expectedly, therefore, this speech will introduce its initial start, at the beginning. Without further ado, I digress.
These shows are written by children and I don't just mean that figuratively. Have you seen footage of the writers' strike? Most of them look like they're millennial age or younger. It's not surprising modern television/cinema is as unsophisticated as it is.It is amazing how much of their speeches are spent on pointing out the obvious.
“We explore…”
“We travel on this ship, through space…”
“We lather, rinse, and repeat…”
“We put on our pants, one leg at a time…”
“We keep our eyes open, so that we may see where we are going…”
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These shows are written by children and I don't just mean that figuratively. Have you seen footage of the writers' strike? Most of them look like they're millennial age or younger. It's not surprising modern television/cinema is as unsophisticated as it is.
Before anyone scoffs at my dismissal of the creative capabilities of our youth, I'm quite aware that some of the greatest works were made by younger people. However, that was from a time before society decided that pajamas were acceptable as evening wear.
In under 12 parsecsSo they are bringing in TNG timeline characters into a pre-TOS show.
Wow. Where's Fonzie. I think they could find a shark for him to jump somewhere.
You do know Millennials are starting to near forty, right? Ageism is ugly talk. I knew people in their teens who got legally emancipated because they could take better care of themselves than their parents could... and I know people in their seventies who still can't. Similarly, age is no guarantor of cultural "affiliation". Just because someone's in their late twenties doesn't mean they wear pajamas as eveningwear, eat avocado toast, or any of that other zeitgeist stuff. I, for one, have never "acted my age". Most people think I'm at least ten years younger than I am, until I say something about President Carter or seeing Star Wars when it came out.Most of them look like they're millennial age or younger.
I agree wholeheartedly here. We focus on hyper analyzing these major franchises and prop them up as the standard because of their popular legacy. In actuality, they’re the poorest measuring sticks because they have, as you correctly state, been co-opted by those whose interests, one might say, skew toward fiduciary efficiency rather than artistic merit. Star Wars has very obviously suffered since departing its original creator and being reduced to a corporate asset but, Star Trek for 40 years up until the Abrams era had maintained a decent standard of writing, some better than others, but nothing I would call “amateurish”, at least not consistently. And it was building on science-fiction established decades before. It may have had a slow decline in all that time but it just fell off a cliff in 2009. Why was it able to maintain itself for so long before plummeting? Did the business model really change that much? Or has the talent pool of writing shallowed in that time?It's more of an institutional problem. Any rebel outlier, if it sticks around long enough, will eventually become part of the establishment it was rebelling against. Star Trek and Star Wars got co-opted ages ago, and have been being run into the ground by workers in the trenches and execs who don't understand the properties they own in the ivory towers. The rest is just the arbitrary line where fans realize it's not their thing any more, and what they choose to do about it. Some leave, some hang on hoping against hope it'll get "good" again, some pirate it and watch it out of spite so they can tear it to shreds for anyone who will listen, some rewatch the older stuff to live in the better times...
You do know Millennials are starting to near forty, right?
Millennials are in their 30's. Wearing a tie didn't make anyone a better writer.These shows are written by children and I don't just mean that figuratively. Have you seen footage of the writers' strike? Most of them look like they're millennial age or younger. It's not surprising modern television/cinema is as unsophisticated as it is.
Before anyone scoffs at my dismissal of the creative capabilities of our youth, I'm quite aware that some of the greatest works were made by younger people. However, that was from a time before society decided that pajamas were acceptable as evening wear.
True. As I said, my jab was not targeted at their age per se as much as the maturity level of today's younger generations. I'm sure many would argue it's always been that older generations look down on younger generations. It seems to me that immaturity among adults has become more prevalent in the past 10-20 years and that's carried into the arts. Many will disagree. Fair enough.Millennials are in their 30's. Wearing a tie didn't make anyone a better writer.
But it looks like you might have to repeat yourself for the rest of 2023. I feel Taz or a mod will soon point out the continuous reposting. I would point out that you already made this point in your original post.True. As I said, my jab was not targeted at their age per say as much as the maturity level of today's younger generations. I'm sure many would argue it's always been that older generations look down on younger generations. It seems to me that immaturity among adults has become more prevalent in the past 10-20 years and that's carried into the arts. Many will disagree. Fair enough.
Sigh...lol.But it looks like you might have to repeat yourself for the rest of 2023. I feel Taz or a mod will soon point out the continuous reposting. I would point out that you already made this point in your original post.
The problem is that people don't want to grow up at all these days. Back when I was young, you were expected to have a part-time job when you turned 16. You worked nights and weekends and went to school during the day. Today, lots of people don't even have their first job until they graduate from college and they figure that by then, they have tons of debt, they need to be making a lot of money.True. As I said, my jab was not targeted at their age per say as much as the maturity level of today's younger generations. I'm sure many would argue it's always been that older generations look down on younger generations. It seems to me that immaturity among adults has become more prevalent in the past 10-20 years and that's carried into the arts. Many will disagree. Fair enough.
I tried underwater basket weaving once... never could hold my breath long enough to finish that stupid basket.Most people had families and careers by the time modern people are graduating with their degree in underwater basket-weaving.
Honestly, this is the first time I have ever heard it presented like that. A lifetime of underwater basket weaving mockery and it lives anew. Nicely done, I must say.I tried underwater basket weaving once... never could hold my breath long enough to finish that stupid basket.
And talent is exploited and consumed by ungrateful masses of adult children who think it should just be given for free.A hundred years ago, the majority of the US population lived on farms and an eighth-grade education was fine for most people, and for a variety of reasons, ~15 was considered a perfectly acceptable age to have taken on adult responsibilities in such a context.
Over the following century, the world got incredibly more complicated and complex and fast and now are children are sentenced to twelve to twenty years of school just to function in it. So even though we haven't really changed biologically from the time when sons were apprenticed at ten and adults by thirteen, societally we regard them as kids until their late teens or early twenties now. Scoffing at college degrees when any job that pays much over minimum wage (which isn't survivable on one's own) pretty much requires one is obtuse to the extreme.
A hundred years ago, the majority of the US population lived on farms and an eighth-grade education was fine for most people, and for a variety of reasons, ~15 was considered a perfectly acceptable age to have taken on adult responsibilities in such a context.
Over the following century, the world got incredibly more complicated and complex and fast and now are children are sentenced to twelve to twenty years of school just to function in it….