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JohnBarnes
JohnBarnes
10/12/2016 7:21:45 AM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Spoilers
adi,

Also, people are dumber. Recognition vocabulary among high school grads is down 60% since 1960, usage vocabulary around 35%. The narrative arts' plot variety has all been reduced down to  boy-meets-girl, hero's-journey, and buffoon's holiday, all of which appeal mainly to younger people, from the 12-15 common plots of the middle of the last century (probably because people aren't interested in growing up anymore and nobody really wants them to).

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JohnBarnes
JohnBarnes
10/12/2016 7:17:30 AM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Spoilers
vnewman,

I still mostly don't watch TV, but I'm in a high-pressure boiler room sales environment where nobody hangs out at the water cooler (at least not if they're stayingemployed). My wife bingewatches years afterward. But both of us prefer to spend our break time at work somewhere quietly away from coworkers.

TV is much better than it used to be, which means there's more to talk about, but it's still TV; I thought hi-def would make it less annoying (I was always bothered by the unfocusing the eyes you had to do to watch old TV screens; reminded me too much of hypnosis). But as it turns out, all it's done is make me more physically comfortable while being annoyed at a higher esthetic level.

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mhhf1ve
mhhf1ve
10/11/2016 4:18:04 PM
User Rank
Platinum
409 scripted TV shows...
I wonder how much the "scripted TV show" stats have grown over the years..? Add on the "Reality TV" shows, and it's amazing how much TV is available now. 

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mhhf1ve
mhhf1ve
10/11/2016 4:03:48 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Why people lie about watching TV shows...
@afwriter - I don't think this survey is saying that people try to pretend to have a conversation about a particular show, but it's saying that people lie about having seen a few episodes. eg. "Yah, I watched the first few episodes of Game of Thrones, but I didn't really get into it." (When they in fact have never seen the show at all.)

Part of the reasoning behind these lies is.. a kind of class-ism. If you don't have an HBO account or subscribe to Netflix, then you might be finanically less well-off than your co-workers (and who wants to admit to that?). 

Try to hang out with co-workers nowadays without a smartphone... if you use a flip phone now, you're so uncool (or poor). 

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batye
batye
10/11/2016 1:35:41 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Hulu Research
@clrmoney interesting point, I would say yes and no as it all depends :) 

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batye
batye
10/11/2016 1:33:02 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Spoilers
@Adi yes as quality of tv shows become better plus better FX and it create a change in consumers mind...

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clrmoney
clrmoney
10/11/2016 10:26:25 AM
User Rank
Platinum
Hulu Research
The watercooler effect is like a magnet to get your attention which is also great for business.

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Adi
Adi
10/11/2016 9:52:34 AM
User Rank
Author
Re: Spoilers
Ha, ha - perhaps that requires a greater deviousness, and commitment to the lie than most people have. 

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Adi
Adi
10/11/2016 9:51:12 AM
User Rank
Author
Re: Spoilers
@afwriter - Yes, TV is definitely eating into film viewing. MPAA ticket sales are down (in volume, though revenues are still rising due to ticket price increases).  And to @vnewman's point as well, I think the intellectual value of arthouse cinema appears to be also threatened by conversations about TV shows. 

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afwriter
afwriter
10/10/2016 4:44:16 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Spoilers
This question opens up a whole new can of worms, but I would say that it is a cultural shift; everyone watches TV now.  It is one reason why movie theater attendence has dropped as well. 

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