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[personal profile] furtech
[Cranky Pants Mode On]

Working at home today with the TV on for company reminds me why I don't bother to watch first-run network tv. I'm watching the cable channels that run network shows (FX, Spike, TNT, USA, A&E, etc.), most of which are still running on the nets. I'm embarrassed to be a CSI fan, but if I think of the show as pure fantasy (all that "magical" science and sexy scientists and settings) I can deal with it.

Two shows I've seen that I can't stand are "Leverage" and "Supernatural". Leverage is a cross between "Mission: Impossible" and "The A-Team". The difference is that Leverage is neither as fun as A-Team, nor as clever as M:I. What bothers me about the show is that the heroes go after two-bit operations with near-infinite resources/skills to punish them. Most of these cases could have been solved by going to law enforcement with their evidence, but instead the "team" has to go way over the top to trick the bad guys. Dumb.

The show that really angers me (and represents why I so dislike Hollywood production culture) is "Supernatural". The one word for this show is "ripoff". From inception to each episode to the greater story arc, this show cavalierly rips off other shows and movies. Originally, Supernatural was to be about tabloid reporters who go around and report on urban myths (and discovering that the monsters are real), blatently ripping off the classic, beloved "Kolchak: the Night Stalker". The network (Warner/CW) didn't buy that, so they found some other show to knock off (take your pick). Each episode rips off a movie or memorable tv show in so bald a fashion that it can't even be called a spoof or satire. There's an episode where the hero has to re-live a day over and over, hundreds of times, until he figures it out. This was so outrageous that they finally have to reference reference the source ("You mean like, "Groundhog Day"?"). Every show reads like vapid fan fiction. And the writers are -proud- of this! There is not an original bone in this beast. The main, series-long arc is an uncredited rip of things that made "Dogma" such an amazing film.

This is the "New" Hollywood: producers and studios have realized that they can rip off any original work, since rarely will any of the authors actually take legal action and, more to their thinking, since writers and creators are going to complain about how the adaptation isn't anything like their book or comic or whatever -anyway-, why not just rip it off and do it "right" (ie, what Hollywood thinks is good, rather than what made the book/comic/whatever popular in the first place-- good story, good characters, etc.). ou don't even have to pay for it this way. Because the people behind Supernatural actually rub elbows with fans, they're beloved in media fandom despite the obvious moral and ethical shortcomings of their actions.

I wish that there was something that could be done, but with the studio's high-paid lawyers deconstructing all the similarities reductio ad absurdum, even a remake could be shown to be a completely different film. Even the two-bit Hollywood pitch is based on this kind of thing: "Yeah, it's like , "X-Men" meets "High School: The Musical"-- pure gold!"

And yes, I'm guilty of enabling this to go on happening every time I see a film or turn on the TV. I hate me!

Date: 2010-02-16 01:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] iisaw.livejournal.com
The only TV I watch any more is on DVD. That way I can sample a series and if I like it, watch the whole rest of the season in short order at the exact time that's convenient for me. Netflix is awesome!

The Hollywood formula (or approach or whatever you want to call it) almost guarantees that I won't like most TV. CSI is one of the few shows where a main character can be smart... most leads have to be "mainstream"... i.e. stupid and belligerent for action shows, stupid and ineffectual for dramas, or stupid, clumsy, and incompetent for comedies. Not my cup of tea.

With that said, I think the best work out there nowadays is on television. Movies are too big-budget to take risks.

Date: 2010-02-16 04:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] furtech.livejournal.com
Watching shows on cable is almost like that-- you can't flip through the basic channels without finding some version of CSI on at all times...and several channels have marathons (sci-fi and, today, TNT with Supernatural). I mostly have it on for white noise while I work, but I do follow it.

I love cable and its ability to attract talent by giving them a long creative leash. Great stuff here (I'm a Mad Men fan-- it's the only show I watch in first run!). I love Youtube even more for it's egalitarian nature: finally, anyone can get practically any creative endeavor a world-wide audience!

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