lirazel: An outdoor scene from the film Picnic at Hanging Rock ([btvs] ask me how)
lirazel ([personal profile] lirazel) wrote2011-05-12 12:57 pm

16-year-old!Lauren was a snob. 24-year-old!Lauren knows better

Do you think that back in the day when humans first developed writing, there were some pretentious pseudo-intellectual snobs sitting around going, “Writing? Oh, I don’t use writing. I prefer the oral tradition—it’s so much more pure.” Or during the time of Gutenburg, he had friends rolling his eyes telling him that printed books were for the unwashed masses who couldn’t be bothered to unlock the secrets of the meaning of life through the use of hand-written texts? Did our great-great-grandparents expect to be praised for eschewing radio?

Because, I’m sorry: I am not at all impressed by people who are too good for television.

Yes, there are connections between a medium and the work created in that medium. There are some things that are so deeply tied to their medium that the idea of separating them is ridiculous—movies of Faulkner’s more complicated novels tend to be awful because the narrative form and the language he uses is so tied to what he’s trying to communicate and the filmmakers aren't innovative enough to try to play to film's strengths to communicate those ideas instead. A novelized version of The Fall wouldn’t be nearly as powerful as the film, and it certainly wouldn’t be able to communicate the same ideas about the nature of film and storytelling as the movie does. There are strengths and weaknesses to each medium—there are some stories that will be stronger in when depicted visually—in film, theater, or television—and others that are more suited to text. And there are some that have different things to say in each medium, and isn’t that cool? (No, the book isn’t always better than the movie, you’re just more used to one than the other. The Godfather is a better movie. It’s okay. You can admit it.)

But the idea that one medium is inherently better than another is so ridiculous that I can’t take people who feel this way seriously. I have to laugh because a lot of the people I know who think they’re too good for television are huge film buffs, and they don’t see the hypocrisy at all.

[All of this snobbery is not unrelated to the idea of “literary” fiction versus “genre” fiction. Just because you’re writing in a realistic style about a middle-aged New England professor going through a midlife crisis and lusting after one of his students with an ambiguous ending and a general mood of malaise doesn’t mean that your story’s going to be better than a Western or a romance or a sci-fi novel. SCREW. YOU. for thinking so.]

You know that law that says that 90% of everything is crap? It’s true. It’s true of published books. It’s true of television shows. Goodness knows it’s true of fanfiction. And let me repeat: it’s true of television. I am not defending the mindless crap. I’m not defending bad reality shows, daytime talk shows, those endless 24 news channels that have no sense of priorities and are really made up of people yelling at each other and not listening and so they don’t further the political discussion at all. I'm definitely not defending Two and a Half Men. There is so much junk on TV, it’s not even funny.

But there are also powerful shows. Important shows. Funny ones and delightful ones and beautiful ones and moving ones. The odds of you happening on one if you just randomly turn on the tube now and then are pretty low, but they are there. They are worth it. They’re just as much art as Bergman film or a Dostoevsky novel. And we’re really moving into the golden age of television, where show runners are figuring out things like continuity and the importance of character arcs. It’s excellent, and my to-watch list is always long, and I’ll never catch up on everything, and I love it.

So, person who told me in that self-satisfied voice “Oh, I don’t watch TV,” as though you were talking about that area of town you’d never set foot in: oh, yeah, I really think so highly of you because you’ve made the decision not to allow The Wire or Parks and Recreation or Nova or something into your life. Go ahead. Bask in your own superiority. I’m going to watch the first season of Justified.

Yay blackfrancine!

[identity profile] sarahlovesa.livejournal.com 2011-05-12 08:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Yay! blackfrancine mentioned Terry Pratchett! Last week I was having an email conversation with the writer of a fanfic I had reviewed. We were talking books and when I said that he was one of my favourite writers I could hear the disparaging tone in her email when she wrote 'TP? Really?' Just because we had been talking about more high-falutin' 'literature'.

As if the fact that I read those means I should not enjoy something more 'populist'. I tried to explain to her that TP is vastly underrated by literary snobs and he has so much to say about what it means to be human. Even if it is through the medium of comic fantasy, he taps into the important truths of our existence and his stories are morality tales of great heart and substance. And hey, even if that were not true, his books are funny,charming and well written. What's not to love?

Then, yesterday, I was discussing an arty French movie I love with someone else, and that led to me saying that BtVS is my fav tv show of all time and probably means more to me than any film, much as I love movies. Again, the raised eyebrow and the patronising smile. I could see her mentally lowering her estimate of my IQ.
You know what, these so-called 'deep' types are the shallow ones. Because they can't go below the surface and see all that Buffy had to teach and show us.

Re: Yay blackfrancine!

[identity profile] penny-lane-42.livejournal.com 2011-05-12 09:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I get that sort of thing all the time, too. The fact that I love a lot of the classics and that I also read lots of YA fantasy confuses people. A lot. But people are complex! It's okay!

You know what, these so-called 'deep' types are the shallow ones. Because they can't go below the surface and see all that Buffy had to teach and show us.


Totally agreed.