I think your points are all valid. For me it still works since I love Fallout and Lucy for me is the player character which always had a lot of problems once you tried to make it make sense. Maximus still rubs me the wrong way - never before have I seen a retar**d psychopath. Doctor Who though, oooh boy. I‘ve long let go of my seething hatred for what they started doing with the female „Doctor“ and as far as I can tell the current incarnation is even more braindead. They successfully disneyfied DW: Diversity & Inclusion is the only thing that matters. Coherent story, character development, interesting ideas or talent are not being taken into consideration making the show. Ah, well, still got 10 new Who seasons worth of great stuff ❤
For real. I have always wondered why modern entertainment felt so off, like “over-produced” is what usually comes to mind but that isn’t really it. It’s that before, entertainment was entertaining and had substance. Now it’s a bunch of filmmakers going “Look ma, I made a show!” and forgetting to actually make a show
And the opposite is what defines some of the greatest Filmmakers; In my opinion Stanley Kubrick was the greatest of all time, he cared far more about his projects than any accolades that he might get. Peter Jackson is similar, you can really see his joy and passion for his projects.
@@DeathnoteBB The starwars film producers and directors nowadays don't even like starwars. How insane is that. People should at least enjoy media that they are creating for.
All goes back to Jurassic Park. The most important shot of the movie is not the dinosaurs, it's not being chased by a T-Rex, it's not "dino DNA", it's not Nedry stealing embryos... it's the goddamn low-angle hero shot of Grant, Ellie, and Malcolm stopping their jeep and staring out into the distance absolutely awestruck for practically half a minute before we even see what they're looking at. Because THAT'S when everyone in the audience collectively straps on their Disbelief Suspenders and they don't even consciously realize it.
My favorite part about Jurassic Park is the part where first they tell us "hey, the dinos are safe because they can't breed." Smuggling in the info about frog DNA, just as a hint for later and so that the kids who paid attention in biology class can go "hang on, wasn't there a funny fact about frogs-" Then they keep hammering the "nature finds a way" button, until finally - dino eggs! Impossible! How?! - The important part here is not that they explain it, it's that they _understand why it's necessary_ to explain it. A simpler movie would think that the *eggs themselves* were the scary part. Nono, what makes this a great, thrilling moment is that - having _set up_ the pieces of the breeding restrictions and the frog dna, they can now _pay it off_ with the sequential hermaphrodism, which is a _believable_ thing to miss. The fact that we _understand the mistake that has been committed_ *deepens* the horror, because we relate to the people in the movie, we see their misstep and in it we recognize our own foibles. It increases our immersion because it feels like we could have made _the same mistake,_ and the writing chops that got into creating that moment are key to making that movie one of the all-time greats. In Jurassic Park 2, conversely, I was cheering for the dinosaurs from the first minute. Nobody was making believable errors ever. It felt like fanfic from some kid who really liked the dinosaurs in that movie and understood nothing else about it.
The characters on modern shows ARE reacting, they just aren't reacting the way normal human beings would react. They are reacting the way the writers think they should act---in a cool way, an ideal way, or a quirky way. But the audience needs at least one person to react as a normal person would. The example of this that comes to mind is Bill Paxton's character in ALIENS. He's all gung-ho at the start of the mission, but when the aliens are mutilating people he just flips out. "That's it! We're dead! Game over, man!" (As much as I'd like to be brave, if faced with the ALIENS, I'd s*** myself)
Yeah, I honestly don't understand why it's so hard to write characters who act like humans. It was bad enough when that seemed like mainly an anime issue, because then I could at least tell myself that it might be a culture barrier thing, but now it's everywhere, and it ruins my suspension of disbelief every damn time.
I agree but this makes his Lucy point moot, she's not a "normal" person - he has a preconceived notion of how a character would have their life "defined"
Disney doesn't actually produce Doctor Who by the way. The BBC still produces it, but outside of the UK and Ireland broadcast rights have been sold to Disney.
@rustledjimmz8967 Disney also invested in the show itself, so they had a say. Plus I would be surprised if they didn't have a say when they're the one broadcasting it outside of the UK, they'd want to make sure that it fits their needs and brand.
@@charlestownsend9280 Except they have no idea what Doctor Who is. It's weird that massive companies want a part in the success of something, but they also want to remove what makes it successful. They care so much about money that they make stupid decisions that make them lose money...
I noticed this trend with writing advice in general, where people are always talking about cutting everything to be as efficient as possible. You need to let people breathe and take things in though. On screen reactions are especially important because there is almost never any internal thoughts for the characters given, so you literally have nothing to go off if they don't react.
Yeah a lot of writing advice these days has become “Efficiency is required and if your writing is inefficient it’s bad.” It’s really confusing to me as a writer. I write things in just because it’s immersive. Yeah if we just went “They did this. Then they did that. The enemies did this so they countered and won.” it would be efficient but that’s… not a story. It’s a checklist of story beats.
@@DeathnoteBB Efficiency applied to writing sounds so weird... Granted, you don't put out of place stuff in a story, but it's not out of place if it actually serves a purpose.
@@wandy8842 Exactly. The thing is people at some point forgot “Just being there to make the world seem lived in” is a purpose. Now everyone insists “But it doesn’t serve the plot so it’s bad”. Like part of why writing is so hard for me nowadays is because a lot of writing advice recently is just “If it’s not relevant to the story, cut it.” which as I said earlier just leaves a bare bones explanation of the beats in the story. Which you know, isn’t a story, it’s an outline.
It's especially weird because there isn't really a standardized method of making a story, honestly. I've always see people shouting about efficient writing, being to the point, but what for? A story is not a textbook, so why the obsession with efficency of feedin information to the consumer? Long-winded descriptions have their place, as does flowery language, yet some see them as the ultimate sin of writing. Things should have a reason to be in a story, of course. However, who said that the reason shouldn't be immersion? Most things aren't stageplays - we don't need the actors to trip over Chekov's guns all the time. The best stories have times of low tension, where we see characters in their private spaces, or just watch them do anything else other than progress the story, and these are some of the most important parts of the story. If you make a graph of the tension, and its a straight line going up the entire time, then that's just bad pacing.
I never realized how ironic that in the very first reboot episode the Eccleston Doctor says "all that counts is here and now" as the guy/gal that can and will go any time any place... and yet it makes perfect sense for the Doctor in general and this one in particular.
@@DeathnoteBB I think he was literally just making a meta joke. He's talking about the rule about not adding anything that doesn't serve the larger narrative while he literally does and says something that's completely unrelated to the rest of the entire video. If he was really just thirsty, he could have just taken a drink, thrown away that take and refilmed another one. The fact that it's the only shot where he has the water bottle in camera and takes a drink right when he's talking about the rule of not having anything unrelated to the larger narrative just reinforces the point, while simultaneously humanizes him for the fact that he's a person who needs to drink. He's breaking the normal illusion of videos for hiding imperfections because they usually detract from the quality of the video. In this case, it actually adds to it, demonstrating how to successfully break that rule.
One quick point on your Fallout critique and its probably born from expectations and only watching 2 episodes but they don't drop the vault from the story after Lucy leaves, Norm remains a secondary POV character back home.
Yeah his whole Fallout thing was crazy to see after watching the show and him not watching it - Lucy goes through a lot and characters react to an awful lot of things. Case and point, The Ghoul killing his friend after tricking him into having a happy memory, Lucy is awe struck by the weight of the moment. It could be said that it's undercut by the "ass jerky" choice of wording, but that further cements how fucking twisted and irreverent The Ghoul is while Lucy is still reeling from the unbelievable lack of morals this world has.
He is just totally wrong about her character too: she is objectively naive, being terrified by everything. She goes on about the golden rule as though that would help and clings (at first) to the inherent goodness of humanity
This is honestly top notch writing advice. People confuse show don’t tell by thinking it only means showing things happening, when you’re right that showing reactions is perhaps more important. Looking forward to more of your long form thoughts on story telling, even if there is a raid shadow legends plug at the end! Just blink twice.
There's a writing craft book called The Emotional Craft of Fiction by Donald Maass that goes into this exact thing. You can't just throw a scene or a character at the audience expect them to magically emotionally connect with your story. You need to build audience emotion through sympathetic reaction within the scene. In a movie that means you don't just show a character in a traumatic event, you show how it effects and changes them from that point on and how the people around them react to it. In a novel you can't expect to make someone scared just because you said the monster is scary, you need to build the feeling with both environmental detail, action, AND emotional reaction from the characters.
"Show, don't tell." really has got to be one of the most misunderstood and overly used bits of advice out there. Sometimes it's perfectly valid to tell and let the audience fill in the blanks. Sometimes it's more ominous to not be shown something. Sometimes it can be used to great thematic effect that you're only told of a great plot point.
I don't think this is particularly "fantastic", more like people are ALL THE TIME misunderstanding what "show don't tell" means. And it seems most take it as literally "visual, no text", which they then take into practice as "descriptions, no dialogue".
@@Momo_Minomothis is the key. These high impact moments are the result of careful setup, they are the punchline. Then the money people and the focus groups come in and demand more of those moments that people liked, and less of that boring stuff that came before it.
Nah, þat's too specific. Most countries don't put people's faces on coins, but a symbol þat represents þe nation. So instead of a heads side, we have an emblem side, which is usually cooler, but it does depend a lot on execution.
@cohobast5263 even worse where I live, we have the face of an unelected person who only has their wealth, power and position due to an accident of birth and for some bizarre reason everyone loves them for being born into it.
@@e1123581321345589144 Unrelated, but if you're doing þe þorn þing, might I embolden you to go full Anglish and boot those outland loanwords altogether?
I totally agree about Ruby. All of the companions in RTD’s first era were lovable because they felt like genuine human beings with complex emotions and believable reactions. In comparison, Ruby just seems so weirdly unfazed by literally everything.
The problem with modern movies for the mythical "modern audience" is that their mindset is "you cannot identify with anyone who isn't exactly like you."
Back in February when I tried to switch plans, there was somehow always an error occuring. This wasn't just once, I tried it a week later and it still happened. But today things worked just fine. It might have to do something with yearly vs monthly billing? My personal theory is that the yearly billing thing wasn't available for Klubbhus (I think that was the case, at least), and I had it in Tillgang, and Patreon didn't know what to do in order to switch.
Writing feels like it's got the same problem machine floors used to and still are having. The old guy who's been working there for his entire life and knows everything about the tools and the secrets of the trade is retiring. The company didn't decide to train a replacement, so an apprenticeship is just shoved in who doesn't really know what they're doing. The old guy had a connection with the machine and was an artisan, but the new kid doesn't know the intricacies of the job yet. The product is in theory okay, but never as good as what people expect.
We do have loads of hobbyists looking over the machine and drawing up new tools from the sidelines. Maybe in a while when that apprentice finally gets kicked out, there'll be more machine shops than we thought in this wonderful extended metaphor.
@@localhearthian2387 I guess in this metaphor the true artisans who are the hobbyists become the people on UA-cam, while the "real" products are made in the Chinese Disney factory.
@@localhearthian2387 we also have more hobbyists than ever looking over the shoulder of the apprentice and constantly telling him they could do better.
I disagree, I think the issue they have is exactly what Kyle said, they want to be filmmakers/series leads without the drive and desire and passion for making film and tv and stories. I look at the old BTS of the lord of the rings trilogy and remember Peter Jackson doing 7 day weeks, 20 hour days for months on end before, during and even after filming. I can’t say for certain modern writers do that or are even allowed to do that anymore because they have to look for the next gig to come along. It’s factory filmmaking at its worst.
I wish it was that. No, they're deliberately hiring people who are incompetent now because they will do what they're told. How else do you think two guys who essentially have never had a script accepted in a decade ever got Ring of Power? AKA the most expensive TV show in history.
There are so many series that I have been a fan of which I have dropped because of these basic reasons. It's particularly big for female characters. They want them to start out perfect and have nothing they can't do, and it seems to stem from fear of the perception of being weak or rather, a fear or any of the audience being able to claim that women are weak. It just ends up making the characters flat and uninteresting.
I don't think it's just one thing, but this is on the top of the list. Another could be power fantasy, like self-insert for the authors. Another could be very weak "genderbend" shenanigans, where people will write female characters just as male ones and then swap the gender. Many gives this exact advice for writing GOOD female characters, but there are real differences between how men and women act and what is more desirable and reasonable between them. A stoic man might be cool and their coldness excused, while a stoic woman comes out as rude and selfish. Or a man who stammers and cries all the time as weak and pathetic while a woman like that as endearing and cute. Are these double standards? Kinda yeah. But they reflect reality. If one wants to "subvert" the gender roles, it should also come with some kind of commentary on how people are expected to behave and how that is cringe. But it seems nowadays it's almost solely about "women should never be expected to do anything" and "men should be expected to do this and that and not this and not that". And then a third one: It's this weird attempt to... Wash of any accountability and responsibility female characters should have, but still get all the power and fame and money and love interests by just being a strong woman with agency because that's enough...? That the world is happening TO them, instead of them making things happen. Yet it's also then spun as them somehow being super important and changing the world by just... existing? And proving that they have a chip on their shoulder. It's super weird and hard to verbalize, but so many stories just revel in this... Participation trophy entitlement.
1:19 this is what Dr Who has become for me because I slowly felt myself becoming less and less entertained or invested in it and thought exactly that, it was ME becoming too short attention-spanned or too snobby and some old grouchy "back in my day" person who hates the newer series because i'm some racist sexist and a terrible human... so I rewatched the older series and I can guarantee it wasn't 100% nostalgia because there were plenty of cringy moments and boring or useless plot lines but it was so FUN. Watching the older series from Eccleston, Tenant and the start of Matt Smith were genuinely entertaining in a way shows don't do for me anymore. I enjoyed them as much if not more now as an adult as I did then, probably because I understood more, related to more as i've experienced more etc and it was good! Same with Sherlock and Merlin, greta BBC shows which seem to be lost to time in their 'faith' knowing there would be another series and more to see of these characters and settings so we can mess around a little bit and have fun.
You're not alone in feeling 'weird' about a lot of modern movies and shows. The feeling is dissected excellently in Emperor Lemon's video "The Matrix: De-booted" where he goes over some of the stuff you mentioned and highlights how the original creators of the matrix were pressured into making a soulless, sequel/reboot which they filled with criticisms about modern studio filmmaking.
>Seeing righteous Neil critique. YEAH We are an AMY HENNIG HOUSEHOLD. I hope the Captain America game she's working on goes well, seeing T'challa's father as the Black Panther (+sick cape) seemingly going to beef over the shield looked promising.
9:20 dude great summary of the issue I have felt with many new shows. No character respresents the 'normal' perspective with understandable fear and surprise and anger etc. Everybody is already 'in on it'
@@aiedenoldstien9751 I think you are missing some points though. There are a lot of subtle shifts, when she accepts human meat and contaminated water for instance, or realises peace and diplomacy were never an option against ghouls and organ traffickers... She even forgoes her "Vaults will rebuild America" idea in the monster/human hybrid vault. I think it's simply that she was more of a comedic device for the writers than anything, by sending her happy-go-lucky self into a dystopian future
@@turoni314 Because the outcome of the trolley problem wasn't a character moment for any of the vault people. It was character development for Moldaver. But you have to finish the show to realize that.
The problem is that by the end of episode one you are so over the concept of caring for any of those one dimensional caricatures of characters that they could do something amazingly impactful later on and it would not do anything.
Okay the water jug gag at 25:45 is probably the best-balanced meta-joke I've ever seen, because I feel like exactly 50% of people will get it and the other 50% won't. Gave me a good laugh and appreciation for your skill at this!
@@ethanalienx he was just commenting on unneccassary things occasionally being good to make the scene/world seem more 'real' and less like actors just reciting lines at you. Hence, an unneccasary scene of him drinking water is an example of that type of thing. (at least thats my understanding🙂)
@@Pasta_Pirate That makes a lot of sense. I thought there was some long-standing jug-of-water bit that I wasn't in on, which would be weird because I feel like I've seen like, *most* Doormonster stuff.
@@Pasta_Pirate I didn't even catch that he was making a point in that bit, I was just watching a guy get a drink because he got thirsty while he was talking and being a tad funny about it. Which I guess actually hits home his point pretty well.
It’s a really weird point because he says unnecessary things should be in stories before immediately explaining how examples of “unnecessary” things are necessary for the plot.
This actually gives me some interesting ideas for a story I'm working on. I'll be vague because it's a UA-cam comment but basically I have three main characters traveling through an unfamiliar environment. One character is someone who's already seen it all but been gone so long he doesn't know what's changed and he needs to relearn it. One character hasn't seen it but has prepared themselves with a bunch of training and research, and one character is going into everything with no experience and preparation but cares about the journey more than the other two. This video helped me realize that I can probably add a lot of depth to my story by emphasizing those differences so thanks this video is good brainstorming.
This is quite a great video highlighting a problem I've noticed in a lot of shows and movies. It always takes you out of a film or show when the characters show little reaction to things that most normal humans would react to, especially grief.
25:50 This idea that all dialogue must serve the main plot being what makes good cinema is dead wrong. Proof of this is Stephen King and his works, which are deeply character driven. He puts so much focus on characters that are sometimes used for less than a narrative scene, that it lets you understand the impact of main characters actions much more deeply. In king's works, nobody is just an npc, they are written as people. That is largely why his works are so compelling
Yeah like, not everything in a story, whether it be a movie, book, game, etc, has to be big and important and plot focused. Sometimes, especially if you want to, in some ways, worldbuild, things such as referencing books, foods, events, etc, can help ,make the world feel more alive
It's as same as wrong as the modern idea of filler episodes being wrong. I just watched the Star Trek Next Generation Episode with Picard on the vacation planet. It didn't serve anything really, it was just a silly Episode centered around Picard who just wanted to relax. Or there this X-Files Episode about a disfigured character and genetic experiments. Or pretty much any sitcom episode. No it does not enhance some grand plot where something threatens mankind, it doesn't serve a purpose of defeating the Borg or a bunch of guys conpsiring with aliens - but it does not have to. When I hear that people are bored of Andor or annoyed at an Episode of Game of Thrones or some other show because it does not advance the plot, i roll my eyes. The plot is important but all this stuff mentioned is fun and watching a movie or a tv series should be fun (or entertaining). Personally as a reader or viewer or player I want to have the possibility to know more about the world and characters. I would even go as far as to say, that it is more important to have unnecessary stuff, because it shapes world/characters. If a villain does not want to drink alcohol but specifically orders milk it shows us an invidual with principles, with things they like and dislike, maybe even a history attached to it. As chris said, the world feels more alive. Yes some people might find it boring but I say: So what? I liked it more when TV shows had 20+ episodes then 8 episodes, because these characters today feel a lot closer to me simply because I got to know them better and I rather watch a random old episode of Stargate then of a lot of modern series.
@@valeriacaissa4552 Thank you, but yeah, it makes a world feel more alive. Like not everything has to serve the plot. Like, have characters be people, rather than like, super plot heavy NPCs and PCs and whatever. And better yet, it gives viewers, players, readers, etc, time to breathe, absorb info, and just give them a respite
I think you're missing the point. You say King's dialog often doesn't serve the main plot. That's not at all true. The Stand as an example is 98% about the characters. There kind of isn't a plot. It's a situation, an inciting incident. King often has terrible endings for this reason. Characters can kind of only wrap up when they die. Anything else is just not the end for them. This can be fine, but it hinges on the characters being likeable or interesting or different. Imagine a King book about GirlBoss, who is perfect and has no flaws except that she's just so good at everything. Bo-ring. Novice writers should cut the fluff, because if you can't write a woman to begin with, at least don't constantly assault us with your lack of ability. Or your James Gunn dialog. Oh my god did I just say that? What am I even doing right now? This is crazy! (Runs around giving strangers high fives.)
@@valeriacaissa4552TNG doesn't really count because it was trying to fill a network schedule. Every story had to be able to be bottled because it would re-run endlessly on broadcast television out of order. You had to be able to watch any episode without much context. This is a weakness to the show that nobody is really defending. The writers though were smart and worked with it. Like you watch some episode about Picard having a side quest where he learns to play a flute. And it seems like a throwaway episode. But then maybe five episodes later someone is poking around his office and they're like wtf is this flute. You saw that episode, so you have context other viewers don't. It's not perfect. If you want something a little less episodic try Babylon 5. Literally things in the first episode don't pay off until Season 5.
My two points here: 1) I think we never fully understand what "era" we are in as things are happening. But this detached style of character feels like it somehow makes sense with the rise if doomerist philosophy among many of the target demographics, the don't want to take things seriously and "be a main character" so it makes sense that idea would birth characters that are detached and just "along for the ride" and maybe (for better or worse) that's what defines this era of entertainment 2) I also haven't watched Fallout (just haven't had the chance to do so) but from the way people have described it to me, i was told the MC was designed with a sense of detachment to mimic the video games to create a specific style for the show. I'll eventually get around to watching it and judging it myself
A detached character works for a video game because you, as the player, have the option to make choices for the character so it is good for immersion if your own character does not disagree with you. That, however, does not work for non-interactive media like TV series or movies.
Regarding the second point: In my opinion, the detachment is the only logical outcome from a serious lack of world-building on the surface. The sets all look really, really good, but the internal logic behind them is never explained, and this inherently causes a sense of detachment. For example, the first town on the surface that the protagonist visits has a ton of people roaming through it, with lots of little storefronts available. But why? Is it actually a large urban center? And if so, what is so special about it that made people live there? Does it have access to clean water or agriculture? If so, we never see or hear any evidence of this. Is it just a large trading center in the middle of a trade route between larger towns? No clue, because they never explain anything about it. We get a name for the town, and a pretty cool looking set, and that's about it. It just exists as a place for a scene to happen in the narrative, and then serves no other purpose. It's not expanded upon in any way, and nothing is ever offered to allow it to make sense in the fictional universe in which it exists. And this happens all the time throughout the series. The Vaults get explained fairly well, but nothing on the surface has any real substance to it, and basically only exist as set-pieces for a scene to occur. So how can characters appear to be logically consistent in a setting wherein there is no logic? The show generally looks good, but it all falls apart as soon as you stop and think, and when you start asking questions. And you might be right that it's done so in order to mimic a video game - because these are the same criticisms that people complained about in Fallout 3. (Why would people live next to an atomic bomb? Where does Megaton get food? How does Rivet City get enough clean water to supply its population and run a hydroponics lab, in a game wherein the entire plot revolves around a lack of clean water? How does Little Lamplight or the Republic of Dave maintain a sustainable population across multiple generations? All these places look cool and make very memorable locations, but also make no sense in-universe.) But if that's the case, I would have hoped that they would mimic the good parts of a game, and not the uncanny valley aspect of poor writing within a game.
@@vdt952 Its very simple. People that have a creative personality tend to go to university and then work in entertainment. Rarely have they ever seen a farm, or a coal mine, or water plant, or oil rig. Because of that theyre not conscious of how society is sustained. Electricity comes from a socket and food comes from groceries. Thats the depth of appreciation people have for their modern lifestyle.
@@zztopz7090Is this really a creative person thing or are you just talking down the industry of entertainment?You think a retail worker or any common worker knows more about how the world is ran than people like those? Especially when one motivating factor to pursue art in any form is because of first-hand life exprience? Farmers and coal miners can easily be as creative. It's not exclusive to just those creatives, especially when those kinds of people aren't always guaranteed success.
Speaking of the MCU and writing convenience the... I think they're calling it the blip (unsnap)? It's convenient to solve the big plot thing at the end of infinity war with a snap and does track as possible but like did nobody think of the ramifications of bringing everyone back? We see in one of the Spiderman movies a whole ass marching band pops back in the middle of a basketball game. So like did thousands of people who were on planes rain from the sky? Were the highways painted red? The oceans filled with stranded souls? Then we have the societal implications. The huge hit to production of food and water that'd follow from losing half of all life must have been devastating and the world likely adapted to only feeding half the population and now there's double the people with half the food. Like there are so many implications that just don't get addressed.
They do touch on the double displacement somewhat in the Falcon and Winter Soldier series. They also directly show the shock of coming back for multiple characters like Yelena and Monica Rambeau... but they could definitely have done more with it.
For sure, I've been thinking this as well. After five years it feels almost more unethical to bring everyone back and let chaos ensue instead of leaving it as is, but none of that is ever addressed and everything almost continues like half the population was never actually gone 😅
"It'd be so cool if her brother was the main character" ........I'm glad you've decided to finish Fallout because, he *is* a main character, increasingly so as the series progresses. Hes my favorite character, too, cause he actually does stuff instead of have stuff happen to him.
Doesn't the stuff happening around the other 3 main characters make sense tho? All this stuff is happening because the 3 main characters are willingly trying to go after the artifact that many factions want, sure you could say how some of them actually survive in the wasteland is because of bs dumbluck but luck is a literal stat in the games so I don't really mind it.
@@Razumen We follow his perspective as to what's happening back at the vault and he singlehandedly figures out what the experiment of their vault is, which ties in other characters' stories. That makes him more than a side character. He's not the lead character, but he's definitely one of the main characters that we see the story through.
On the Doctor Comparison, I love how Doc snaps about where he is from, which really sets up the future reveal of exactly what has happened not that long ago from his perspective. It's great characterization. Also sets up the Fury Of The Time Lord running theme as well.
I'd like to say with your discussion about fallout that they do continue the story with the vault, and Norm and I'd say that you should give the show another chance... or don't idk 😅
I don't have a direct problem with the new female, black and LGBT characters in modern media. I have a problem with incompetent writers using race, gender and sexuality as a last minute shield to declare any criticism of their characters to be bigotry and not their inept butchering pre-existing characters.
i mean, to put this in even clearer terms, i personally think it's most heartbreaking when nowadays, every instance of potentially good representation is just brutally butchered by terrible writing. the actors behind the characters in the current season are good actors, particularly the doctor. but whatever on earth disney is doing makes it feel so inauthentic, which is just crushing, because the casting and costuming is genuinely delightful.
i don't think the writers purposefully use their casting as a shield; i think some people are legitimately directing bigotry at actors instead of rightfully slinging their complaints at the writing quality and production choices. actors are people with lines who, yes, can absolutely add or detract from their characters - but what the writers tell them to do definitely has the largest impact on the outcome.
@@nobodyimportant1968 I don't think they are intentionally using their casting as a shield. They think that giving a male character boobs, making a white character black, or making someone LGBT inherently improves a character so they don't need things like nobility, humility or any character trait that could be perceived as good. This is while at the same time giving a female character feminine traits = all women belong as subservient to men, a black character doing something naughty = all black people are criminal scum, a gay man having a masculine trait = denial of their existence and other bull like that. Simply put they don't write a character, they write an identity and due to the fact that they could only see their identity that must be the only thing anyone else can see. In summary, the writers are racist, sexist, homophobic bigots but think they are champions because that is all they see and they portray those traits as inherently positive to the point of absurdity.
Something I think about alot is the original stargate series and how they tried to handle adding more to a universe that was really only meant as the movie.
Yeah, I am struggling a lot with the whole Chekhov's gun idea, that everything introduced needs to be significant or it shouldn't have been introduced in the first place. Casual mentionings, red herrings, character introductions for characters that end up not really mattering. That's stuff that builds the world creates context and distracts you into getting invested. I am not saying you should always stick a bunch of unnecessary stuff into every scene or even every movie, in fact that would just be annoying. Like Han Solo's dice is a great example, did they put them there because they're a significant part of the story in any way? No, they put them there because Han Solo is a person and people like decorating their areas. If you think about it, his line of work makes him basically a space truck-driver, and spend most of his time in the cockpit of his truck. With that being such a big part of his life, of course he decorates it, most truckdrivers do as well if they're allowed to.
Yeah same. I think the issue is people took a solid piece of advice “A gun presented in the first act must be fired in the third” and extrapolated that to *everything a story can include.* Like it’s called Chekov’s *gun* not Chekov’s Everything for a reason There’s a reason “sometimes the curtains are just blue” is a popular saying these days. Because it is true. Sometimes something is just there. It doesn’t always have to come back around, sometimes it’s set-dressing. Imagine a play with no backgrounds because it’s “not relevant to the plot”?
Taking it since two month and I'm already at 130% of the daily maximum dosis, but so far it works as good on me as globules :D But good to see that it helps some people to relief their symptoms :)
I don't actually care much about any of the pieces of media you discussed (anymore, as a former Doctor Who enjoyer), but goddamn did you put together a cohesive, coherent, and entertaining little dissertation on a problem that I feel like everyone sees but very few people know how to put into words.
So uh fun fact Kyle Disney didn't reboot doctor who and Disney doesn't have any power in the series what so ever there just a distributor every decision that was made was made by Russel T Davis the only thing we know Disney added was a scene in the church on Ruby road that being the snowman head scene
Yeah a lot of people see Disney and assume they bought doctor who like they do with everything else but in actuality they consider it a low budget investment and only paid for 2 seasons.
Yeah. Disney is just functioning as the distributor, and that’s great because it has been difficult to watch Doctor Who outside of England for like a decade now.
The fact that Disney was to distribute DOES mean the creator's decisions may have been influenced. We know Disney had at least one direct meddle, which means they also had uncountably many indirect meddles
@@lazydroidproductions1087If Disney were purely distributing it they would have just licensed the existing series. They might not own the underlying IP but they've still paid for their own series to be made under that IP, and they'll get at least some influence over it as a result (if nothing else they would have specified which parts they wanted remade in what timeframe, which indirectly dictates a lot of the pacing decisions).
Oh, and you're actually alright at this. Keep doing it a little, it's not a bad video. I think this would be a good way to keep variety on the channel and, at least, I hope most of us would enjoy both and it wouldn't create separate audiences.
yeeeaaahhh i suggest you keep watching fallout cause they do go back to the vault for a plotline and that brother character is the main character in that plotline.
@Wesley-1776 widely considered great and completely revived the Fallout game series, which lost fans after Fallout 76. But I'm sure your opinion is correct and everyone else is wrong.
@@AleksandrStrizhevskiy yes. Also the good games were fine. We want Bethesda to hurt or even close down so someone else gets the IP. Plenty of people agree with me. Tourist
@@AleksandrStrizhevskiyif in 2 hours (ya know, the length of a whole movie) you haven't sold me, I'm nit going to spent 3x more hoping it gets more.interesting. majority rule is never a valid argument by itself anyway
@@malachilining2730 Sure, thats is a valid point. But the criticism he gave of the show were things that were answered later. If he said "the show failed to hook me, thats an opinion that makes sense". But he criticized the story of the vault for things that were actually addressed in the show.
The fallout part... come on you can't assume things! That's literally the mistake most writers make when doing a sequel/reboot of a loved franchise. In Obi wan's words: You have becomed the very thing you swore to destroy.
Prediction what happens in a show without watching it is something only a fool would do. Reminds me of Critical Drinker predicting what happens in Prey based off of the trailer and getting everything completely wrong. Don't be like him. He's a moron.
@@Taladar2003There’s far too many shows that start out that way for that to be true, cmon man. Was ATLA, or hell Morel Orel shit just because of their first few episodes were "meh"?
Another problem is that a lot of things are designed for the audience to react and not the characters. Zooming in on some random item that means pretty much nothing to the characters but is a reference for the crowd to freak out and throw their popcorn on the floor over is one of the worst tropes in movies right now
It's not difficult to understand the state of modern Hollywood, and how it got this way. Steve Jobs made an astute observation about institutional rot in the technology industry, and it applies *perfectly* to the current condition of massive studios like Disney: ua-cam.com/video/NlBjNmXvqIM/v-deo.html Now in the case of Xerox, he blames the rot on "sales and marketing people" getting into leadership and driving creative people who actually make good products. In the case of Hollywood, however, at some point in the early 2000s, a bunch of media consolidation took place, and the people who wound up with the big chairs in Hollywood were the merger and acquisition finance types. Think about Disney buying out Marvel and Lucasfilm, for example. A creative leader who wanted to make great movies wouldn't pay billions of dollars to buy someone else's IP. They'd try and make their *OWN*. And people used to do that. When Star Wars was a huge hit in '77, we got a flurry of other science fiction projects: Alien, The Last Starfighter, The Black Hole, Battlestar Galactica, and the Star Trek movies Now you just get reboots and remakes, greenlit by the suits who spent billions buying the rights to produce reboots and remakes.
Didn't realize I was here so soon, I'm 10 minutes in and this released almost right before I started watching. Been a Door Monster fan for years and I'm enjoying the rant about writing so far.
MLP FiM S4 E6 has a moment that made me realize something similar: at the end of the episode, after everyone escapes the enchanted comic book, Twilight asks "Where exactly did you get that comic book?" There's a joke about how the name of the store "House of Enchanted Comics" is literal, but that reaction of "that's way too dangerous for something so mundane, I need to learn more so I can be prepared" stuck with me. It's a very episodic show so I don't expect this to be setting up anything for the future, but the fact it's not for the plot makes it easier to see as a character moment.
@@Kalightortaio I'd recently finished a D&D comic that used screencaps from the show, and decided to try watching it. Honestly, some of the stuff they get up to makes it feel exactly like a D&D setting.
@@valdonchev7296they actually made roleplay books based off of the series! i looked into it since i enjoy FiM and was wondering about systems/settings to run for possible future children.
@@valdonchev7296Friendship is Dragons? (Which, I just learned, only ended THIS YEAR. Which is wild. I became a fan like 10 years ago, then gave up a couple dozen pages in.)
The bad side of the coin is the 'edge' side, so when you clap your hand to catch it on the fall of the coin you jam it into your soft and sensitive flesh. :
Or it's the good side because you gain the ability to read people's thoughts, feel like you're on top of the world, realize there are unexpected complications from being fundamentally set apart from others, and find yourself grateful to return to your natural state, having grown as a person. THAT'S RIGHT, TOP-TIER WRITING IN 30 MINUTES FROM THE TWILIGHT ZONE
I feel like you need to finish Fallout - Lucy's desires and intentions are really contextualized within the broader narrative of the rest of the season. Returning the original vault periodically is also really important to the story.
I agree wholeheartedly. I love characters that are characters. I want personality. I want people to root for even if they aren't the best people. Because its *interesting*. Because when characters are felly fleshed out it makes any kind of media so much more fun to watch since there's an actual character to be invested in. All of this is of course to say: GIVE ME MORE DUMPSTER FIRE CHARACTERS HOLLYWOOD. I WANT TO WATCH NONREALITY TRASH PEOPLE TRYING THEIR BEST. IT GIVES ME LIFE. Thank you for reading.
Seriously. If i had a choice between this and nearly any Marvel movie i'm choosing this. It's an incredible deconstruction, and he crammed like 5 of them in one video.
Really well-illustrated point regarding Doctor (and glad it wasn't just veiled bigotry). I personally very much agree with your TLOU points, both regarding Tess and regarding the uwufication of Joel of all people.. I've never seen anyone else put it the way you did and - although you didn't go quite as far - i always wished the journey would've been Ellie and Tess That being said, your Fallout point might just come down to your own narrative expectations not being met or a perception that perseveering kindness is a flaw/weakness. What you said about Lucy - especially when putting into the whole "reaction/writing" thesis of the video - is actually bonkers 😭
Just take the sponsorship, only a minute of our time (which people uniterested in the sponsorship can skip through) but a lot of help for you. Also, loving the long form video content!
@@DeathnoteBB That's just how advertising works in our climate. If I got such an offer I would also be questioning it morally but nowadays most consumers are used to ignoring such advertisments anyway. If he's struggling and there's a lot to gain I say go for it.
@@igorkonys1006 The issue is many do know by now to just skip, but many still have faith in what someone they trust endorses. Sometimes it’s whatever, like Raycon sucks but it’s just earbuds (though they are expensive earbuds, despite their ad script’s claims). But some things are Betterhelp, which preys on vulnerable people who are desperate and seeking help. Not everyone is savvy enough to know a UA-cam sponsor is almost always a bad product or service, so people take their favorite UA-camr’s word for it (which unbeknownst to them is just the ad-read script) and then get ripped off.
20:00 - This is actually a complaint I have about a bunch of media criticism I've heard recently. People seem to have developed a complete aversion to scenes that do not advance the plot directly, even if they do develop characters or set the tone. Like, a 30s shot of a character just looking at something might do nothing for the plot, but their expressions and reactions can tell you a lot about who that character is, *which is often later relevant for the plot to make sense!*
Well well well, it’s been a while. Edit: Tails, in my opinion Tails is the bad side of the coin because we all collectively choose Heads for some reason. Not to mention I live in Canada and the Canadian one dollar coin has a Canadian goose on the tails side. Edit2: It apparently isn’t a goose, it’s a different bird, that bird is named a loon according to @Gemma-Majoran (thank you for reminding me). It’s still a bird though which can still be considered evil. Therefore it’s still the bad side of the coin in my opinion.
@@Gemma-Majoran Wait really, I’ve been lied to, Or I forgot. One of those two. It’s still a bird though and it reminds me of those damn menaces, so my opinion on the bad side of the coin remains unchanged.
What you said about having fun making a movie really strikes a chord with me. The best Marvel movies are movies where I felt like everybody was having a really good time making it, like the Deadpool movies and Thor Ragnarok. They seemed like the people making the movie were really into making the movie
Ok. I'm going to argue that the little robot spider who presses the button that incinerates everything in the room is a little contrived, as is the Doctor's random time slow power and pretty much all of the plot now that I think about it, but Rose's story in it was great, and it's still better than like all but 5 of the episodes since The Doctor Falls.
Hey Kyle, I don't know how much effort this video took to make, but holy cow you are so good at the whole video essay format. Would so fucking love to see more of this
It sounds like the Fallout show perfectly adapts the writing of Bethesda NPCs where you try to think they're people but they are so stubbornly dead inside it's like they're spiting your immersion. Snarky comments and jokes aside, this was a very interesting watch and very likely part of why I have been watching almost no movies. We have so many grand and epic plots in media where nobody ever takes a second to act like anything remotely relatable that it all just breezes past us without any impact and it definitely happens a lot in games as well.
18:55 “Why undo all that? She’s leaving; they aren’t even preserving these characters or location for later, they’re out of the story. Why not give us all that extra motivation?” Because writers can no longer think about scenarios beyond they personal experiences. When someone writes a character, that character is them or the writer’s idealized version of themselves and because the writer is more than likely nepo-baby, they have failed to learn what emotions they’re are beyond their shallow existence. Writing a character who has lost everything they have ever known as a result of a morally screwed up experience is not capable in the writer’s imagination
It sounds like this is one part, 'Kyle makes really valid points about the modern landscape of television and cinema,' and one part, 'Kyle only had the time and energy to watch the first two episodes of television shows which ironically have pretty good third episodes'.
Yeah. It was frustrating, since those were good points he was making but it takes away some credibility when he's using shows as examples that he gave up on after 2 episodes. The middle stretch of that season of Who had some truly excellent episodes that absolutely knew what they were doing artistically. (Note, when I say he loses credibility I don't mean he's being dishonest or he wouldn't have admitted to only watching that far, just that the opinions carry less weight as a result.)
@@darlhiatt8136I mean in his defense, the *point* of the first episodes is to hook you and showcase what the rest of a series will be. The fact that he gave up after two episodes shows they failed to hook him
@@darlhiatt8136Exactly, personally if you cant finish a show you or at the very least one season of it, you aren't really qualified at all to critique it from a reviewing pov. Especially under the guise of an informative video.
I didn't know I need Kyle in my life to do deep dives of media to make me feel complete. This is scratching. Such an itch right now. I didn't realize I had.
It's these small little moments characters experience that make a story. Not the overarching events that occur that just progress the plot along. Becuase, at the end of the day, the purpose of a story is to examine what certain individuals will do when faced with these situations.
imagine if the other vault dwellers were scared of Lucy bc of her weird natural talents and disregard to violence bc something about her is just -wrong. Like if a real fallout game player started playing her
i found it so odd that they k*lled off the old lady in the 60s music themed episode. i was expecting there to be a comedic bit where the doctor breaks in through the pianist's kitchen window, stops the maestro, and then makes some lie up about being a repair person before asking the old lady whether she knows what's been happening with the whole no music thing lately - that's what i'm used to the doctor doing, after all, no matter what they look like. but no - i was shocked by the fact that, wholesome disney, of all things, sort of just made a bunch of random side characters perish violently - and then added no catharsis to this scenario, followed by a _musical number for no reason??_ i don't get it - whatever happened to the "900 years of time and space, and i've never met someone who wasn't important?"
like, maybe i'm biased and just don't like seeing seniors perish on television in general, but cmon. the doctor loves old ladies. but he runs away from danger instead? he doesn't go looking for musicians in town? his sonic doesn't work, but not in the usual "oh woops wood door" way? russell t davies wrote some of my favourite doctor who episodes w/ 9 and 10... how on earth did he manage to get this season wrong this year?
Kyle, first things first, I am glad you are sleeping -At least, I think you are? I got kinda confused-, and secondly, I am thoroughly enjoying this more relaxed, long form video format, and how it feels somehow like a chill conversation more than anything else, which I don't understand how that is the case, but meh, it works. Not that I haven't already been thoroughly enjoying you guys' sketches, because I have, but this is really great too. Anyway, basically, I hope you and the rest of monster door are doing well, and this was an incredibly enjoyable episode of "The Opinions of K-Corp".
Broadchurch complaint, every episode followed the same format where they get over the suspect from the previous week, investigate the suspect that was hinted at in the previous week, then hint at a new suspect for the following week. It also ended with a 'twist' that did not line up with the perpetrator's previous on screen behaviours and actions as no one was informed while it was filming who the perpetrator was - not even the perpetrator's actor. It seems like they spun a wheel each week to see who would be the suspect and ended with the perpetrator being whoever was the suspect when they reached the ordered episode number.
00:40 alright so, pateron isn't working well enough. It seems we may need to apply advanced hobo technology to exploit lightspeed's relation to time travel to create gold that will decay into tachyons and decay by traveling back in time: thus multiply in an infinite recursive loop. Or, and here me out, we go graverobbing for fillings.
This is why I like "slice of life"-episodes. Once in a while it is nice to take a break from the action and just... breathe. Take a moment. Process. Watching the characters come to terms with the situation. Walking Dead s1, the crew arrives at the CDC and is told there is some hot water. The disbelief of taking a shower is honestly my most memorable part of that show. That, a slow horseride and chatting while washing clothes. Simple moments in a chaotic world that shows the characters' reactions. Not Dumbledore dying, but the grief afterwards as the other characters come to terms with the new reality.
Hey Kyle, maybe watch the rest of the Fallout show or read a plot synopsis, a lot of stuff you say in this video is incorrect like how Norm and the other vault dwellers remain characters throughout the show and actually have a big role in the overall story
Yeah, and the raider boss Moldaver choosing not to follow through on the trolley problem is character development for her, not a failure of the script.
Gonna be honest, after watching 2 episodes I stopped as well because, while the "next time on Fallout" promos showed Norm becoming more interesting, I'm not watching 6 hours of TV just to see how that 1 part turns out. The show doesn't really feel like it knows what it wants to be and already made a lot of dumb decisions. For me specifically, the mutant bear thing alone had about 5 brain dead moments that really turned me off.
The bad side of the coin is the thin edge side cuz if it lands on that you have to do 'both' or 'neither' which will require you to flip another coin but this time 'both or 'neither' doesn't work so you have to go make a coin that's like 2-dimensional so it doesn't have an edge and it's a whole thing
I think 12th doctor does the whole new person very well as the companion and the doctor have to deal with young Matt smith turning into old Peter Capaldi
I feel like an idiot for only just realising this, but a big reason The Doctor has companions is to experience the sense of wonder through them, even if The Doctor themself has seen it all.
Hey, it's okay. Getting help and meds later is normal, and then you look back and are like "wow, all these things I thought were my personality were really just symptoms and rationalizations?" It changed everything for me. You'll do well, you still have all the superpowers you just have to relearn how to access them, safely.
The bad side of the coin, if you must know, Kyle, is the side the foil has come off and landed in the dirt. You CAN eat the other side still, but it's really tricky.
@@the_nerd5976 they have more of a budget without a straight-man, look at the acolyte, 180 million dollars for what exactly, they ticked all the boxes to get as much financing as possible...THEN the ceo can get another yacht
Honestly I think it’s more they merged the funny man and straight man and now it’s just “snarky man rolls eyes at everything yet also takes things super seriously”
While I have no problem with non white and lgbt characters in doctor who (I'm gender fluid and bi, it would be weird if I was and the idea that the doctor can't change race and sex is just stupid) but I can't stand how it is done in the recent series, where they write them as horrible gay stereotypes rather than actual characters who are gay and it's just bad writing, they don't feel like actual people but cartoonish exaggerated gay characters. As an lgbt person it just makes me want to turn of the show because it's awful representation. I do find it weird how the gay showrunner can't seem to write gay characters well. But it does full somewhat into the wider issues brought up in this video, where they don't feel like characters because they don't react and act like living breathing people and ot negatively affacts how you connect and enjoy the story.
I feel like that has always been an issue for doctor who though. Whenever a lgbt character showed up, their queerness or stereotype was just the joke, rarely as anything other.
@@Taladar2003 I have just looked up that scene and do agree. I was referring to doctor who though. While I did really like Jack in it, it did sometimes feel as though the writers were treating him as both joke and punchline.
There have definitely been hits and misses on that front. Rose Noble (Donna's kid) was probably one of the better handled ones for gender identity, and Yasmin Khan was mostly well handled for sexual identity.
13:05 There's no way Disney or Amazon is going to portray a woman as "Soft and Naive" even if that's what any normal person would be regardless of gender. The Disney Dr Who girl doesn't flinch because the man next to her didn't and that might make the woman look weaker or not as smart, even though anyone would be confused and overwhelmed. They're so obsessed with making "strong females" the characters end up coming across as unrelatable or even disconnected. I never felt that way with Ellie in fallout but the little girl in Last of Us came across as a psycho.
I imagine that’s an easier task when you’re all in college and have nothing but free time between classes. Now everyone’s an adult with schedules and rent. I dont know if that’s at all relevant to TGT exactly but it felt like a “Mid-college project with my friends” deal in the best way
I highly reccommend you watch some of the other new dr who episodes. Its was definitely frontloaded with badness which is unfortunate because it only has 9 episodes for some reason (it really needed more episodes). I actually was fine with space babies and church on ruby road but i like camp. Boom, 73 yards, Dot and Bubble, and Rogue are all really good episodes imo. They kinda funmbled the finale but its not awful. You should at least out of these watch 73 yards and dot and bubble, they are genuinely fantastic imo and you get to spend time with character who react to the situations they are in, the main complaint of this video
I love this video. The commentary, the editing, everything in this video was fantastic. Even while I really like some of the shows referenced your points are very accurate and prove your point in an extremely persuasive way
Alright, I hear you, I'll finish Fallout.
Kyle I just watched ghost dog way of the samurai and it was epic!
Good to know the comments beat me to it
Good to know I'm watching this section now going please for the love of God finish it 😅
Yeah, was going to say, I ended up not liking it either, but... you need the whole picture to dislike it for the right reasons.
I think your points are all valid. For me it still works since I love Fallout and Lucy for me is the player character which always had a lot of problems once you tried to make it make sense. Maximus still rubs me the wrong way - never before have I seen a retar**d psychopath.
Doctor Who though, oooh boy. I‘ve long let go of my seething hatred for what they started doing with the female „Doctor“ and as far as I can tell the current incarnation is even more braindead. They successfully disneyfied DW: Diversity & Inclusion is the only thing that matters. Coherent story, character development, interesting ideas or talent are not being taken into consideration making the show. Ah, well, still got 10 new Who seasons worth of great stuff ❤
"Filmmakers like being filmmakers more than they like filmmaking"
OH MY GOD SOMEONE FINALLY PUT IT INTO WORDS
"Everybody wants to be an filmmaker, but don't nobody want to make no good ass film." -Ronnie Kyleman
For real. I have always wondered why modern entertainment felt so off, like “over-produced” is what usually comes to mind but that isn’t really it. It’s that before, entertainment was entertaining and had substance. Now it’s a bunch of filmmakers going “Look ma, I made a show!” and forgetting to actually make a show
In the words of the great Rich Evans:
"It is not fun to make movies."
And the opposite is what defines some of the greatest Filmmakers; In my opinion Stanley Kubrick was the greatest of all time, he cared far more about his projects than any accolades that he might get. Peter Jackson is similar, you can really see his joy and passion for his projects.
@@DeathnoteBB The starwars film producers and directors nowadays don't even like starwars. How insane is that. People should at least enjoy media that they are creating for.
All goes back to Jurassic Park. The most important shot of the movie is not the dinosaurs, it's not being chased by a T-Rex, it's not "dino DNA", it's not Nedry stealing embryos... it's the goddamn low-angle hero shot of Grant, Ellie, and Malcolm stopping their jeep and staring out into the distance absolutely awestruck for practically half a minute before we even see what they're looking at. Because THAT'S when everyone in the audience collectively straps on their Disbelief Suspenders and they don't even consciously realize it.
I like jurassic park
My favorite part about Jurassic Park is the part where first they tell us "hey, the dinos are safe because they can't breed." Smuggling in the info about frog DNA, just as a hint for later and so that the kids who paid attention in biology class can go "hang on, wasn't there a funny fact about frogs-" Then they keep hammering the "nature finds a way" button, until finally - dino eggs! Impossible! How?!
- The important part here is not that they explain it, it's that they _understand why it's necessary_ to explain it. A simpler movie would think that the *eggs themselves* were the scary part. Nono, what makes this a great, thrilling moment is that - having _set up_ the pieces of the breeding restrictions and the frog dna, they can now _pay it off_ with the sequential hermaphrodism, which is a _believable_ thing to miss. The fact that we _understand the mistake that has been committed_ *deepens* the horror, because we relate to the people in the movie, we see their misstep and in it we recognize our own foibles. It increases our immersion because it feels like we could have made _the same mistake,_ and the writing chops that got into creating that moment are key to making that movie one of the all-time greats.
In Jurassic Park 2, conversely, I was cheering for the dinosaurs from the first minute. Nobody was making believable errors ever. It felt like fanfic from some kid who really liked the dinosaurs in that movie and understood nothing else about it.
@@FeepingCreature It's baffling that Jurassic Park II had the same writer and the same director as the first movie.
@@Veylon What? How?!
@@Veylon There was more than one writer... the actual Author of the book co wrote the first film, but not the second.
The bad side of the coin is the side where some of the foil has come off and the chocolate ends up touching the dirt when I drop it
the good ending
And the fact it's now dirty totally 'foils your plans.'
The characters on modern shows ARE reacting, they just aren't reacting the way normal human beings would react. They are reacting the way the writers think they should act---in a cool way, an ideal way, or a quirky way. But the audience needs at least one person to react as a normal person would.
The example of this that comes to mind is Bill Paxton's character in ALIENS. He's all gung-ho at the start of the mission, but when the aliens are mutilating people he just flips out. "That's it! We're dead! Game over, man!" (As much as I'd like to be brave, if faced with the ALIENS, I'd s*** myself)
Yeah, I honestly don't understand why it's so hard to write characters who act like humans. It was bad enough when that seemed like mainly an anime issue, because then I could at least tell myself that it might be a culture barrier thing, but now it's everywhere, and it ruins my suspension of disbelief every damn time.
Let's use Lama with Hats as an example. Carl would be a flop without the straight man. The straight man sells the media.
@@gdragonlord749 Topical analogy! 😄
I agree but this makes his Lucy point moot, she's not a "normal" person - he has a preconceived notion of how a character would have their life "defined"
Could you imagine going into Target and just seeing Kyle at a checkout stand?
I would have sworn it was a copy.
Person: Man, I love your stuff!
Kyle: Oh nice!... It's going to be $14.45
That would require going to Texas and even Door Monster isn't worth that trip.
@@bdletoast09Kyle lives up in New York now
@@spritemon98 You say that like it makes it any better
Disney doesn't actually produce Doctor Who by the way. The BBC still produces it, but outside of the UK and Ireland broadcast rights have been sold to Disney.
The show runners said Disney had high levels of involvement in the production and development
@rustledjimmz8967 Disney also invested in the show itself, so they had a say. Plus I would be surprised if they didn't have a say when they're the one broadcasting it outside of the UK, they'd want to make sure that it fits their needs and brand.
@@testtest648 Source?
@@blinky101Everywhere.
It's Disney +. Of course they hace involvement un production.
@@charlestownsend9280 Except they have no idea what Doctor Who is. It's weird that massive companies want a part in the success of something, but they also want to remove what makes it successful. They care so much about money that they make stupid decisions that make them lose money...
I noticed this trend with writing advice in general, where people are always talking about cutting everything to be as efficient as possible. You need to let people breathe and take things in though. On screen reactions are especially important because there is almost never any internal thoughts for the characters given, so you literally have nothing to go off if they don't react.
Yeah a lot of writing advice these days has become “Efficiency is required and if your writing is inefficient it’s bad.” It’s really confusing to me as a writer. I write things in just because it’s immersive. Yeah if we just went “They did this. Then they did that. The enemies did this so they countered and won.” it would be efficient but that’s… not a story. It’s a checklist of story beats.
Hey I got to the part of the video this is relevant to 25:43
@@DeathnoteBB Efficiency applied to writing sounds so weird... Granted, you don't put out of place stuff in a story, but it's not out of place if it actually serves a purpose.
@@wandy8842 Exactly. The thing is people at some point forgot “Just being there to make the world seem lived in” is a purpose. Now everyone insists “But it doesn’t serve the plot so it’s bad”. Like part of why writing is so hard for me nowadays is because a lot of writing advice recently is just “If it’s not relevant to the story, cut it.” which as I said earlier just leaves a bare bones explanation of the beats in the story. Which you know, isn’t a story, it’s an outline.
It's especially weird because there isn't really a standardized method of making a story, honestly. I've always see people shouting about efficient writing, being to the point, but what for? A story is not a textbook, so why the obsession with efficency of feedin information to the consumer? Long-winded descriptions have their place, as does flowery language, yet some see them as the ultimate sin of writing. Things should have a reason to be in a story, of course. However, who said that the reason shouldn't be immersion? Most things aren't stageplays - we don't need the actors to trip over Chekov's guns all the time. The best stories have times of low tension, where we see characters in their private spaces, or just watch them do anything else other than progress the story, and these are some of the most important parts of the story. If you make a graph of the tension, and its a straight line going up the entire time, then that's just bad pacing.
I never realized how ironic that in the very first reboot episode the Eccleston Doctor says "all that counts is here and now" as the guy/gal that can and will go any time any place... and yet it makes perfect sense for the Doctor in general and this one in particular.
It makes perfect sense for a character who is trying to forget the horrible things they had to do in their past.
"Don't add anything that doesn't serve the larger narrative. Anyway, I'm gonna take a drink from this giant water bottle"
Sam CriticalRole?
@@DeathnoteBB I think he was literally just making a meta joke. He's talking about the rule about not adding anything that doesn't serve the larger narrative while he literally does and says something that's completely unrelated to the rest of the entire video.
If he was really just thirsty, he could have just taken a drink, thrown away that take and refilmed another one. The fact that it's the only shot where he has the water bottle in camera and takes a drink right when he's talking about the rule of not having anything unrelated to the larger narrative just reinforces the point, while simultaneously humanizes him for the fact that he's a person who needs to drink. He's breaking the normal illusion of videos for hiding imperfections because they usually detract from the quality of the video.
In this case, it actually adds to it, demonstrating how to successfully break that rule.
The bad side of the coin is the one with all the scratches on it; forcing me to shoot the guy in front of me.
One quick point on your Fallout critique and its probably born from expectations and only watching 2 episodes but they don't drop the vault from the story after Lucy leaves, Norm remains a secondary POV character back home.
thank you. it always annoys me when people make wild assumptions for the future of a story based on minimal knowledge
Not only is he a pov character but he’s probably the most interesting as he unravels the mystery behind the vault.
Yeah his whole Fallout thing was crazy to see after watching the show and him not watching it - Lucy goes through a lot and characters react to an awful lot of things. Case and point, The Ghoul killing his friend after tricking him into having a happy memory, Lucy is awe struck by the weight of the moment. It could be said that it's undercut by the "ass jerky" choice of wording, but that further cements how fucking twisted and irreverent The Ghoul is while Lucy is still reeling from the unbelievable lack of morals this world has.
I would even add that Norm becomes more of a main character than most of the main characters.
He is just totally wrong about her character too: she is objectively naive, being terrified by everything. She goes on about the golden rule as though that would help and clings (at first) to the inherent goodness of humanity
This is honestly top notch writing advice. People confuse show don’t tell by thinking it only means showing things happening, when you’re right that showing reactions is perhaps more important. Looking forward to more of your long form thoughts on story telling, even if there is a raid shadow legends plug at the end! Just blink twice.
There's a writing craft book called The Emotional Craft of Fiction by Donald Maass that goes into this exact thing. You can't just throw a scene or a character at the audience expect them to magically emotionally connect with your story. You need to build audience emotion through sympathetic reaction within the scene.
In a movie that means you don't just show a character in a traumatic event, you show how it effects and changes them from that point on and how the people around them react to it. In a novel you can't expect to make someone scared just because you said the monster is scary, you need to build the feeling with both environmental detail, action, AND emotional reaction from the characters.
"Show, don't tell." really has got to be one of the most misunderstood and overly used bits of advice out there. Sometimes it's perfectly valid to tell and let the audience fill in the blanks. Sometimes it's more ominous to not be shown something. Sometimes it can be used to great thematic effect that you're only told of a great plot point.
I don't think this is particularly "fantastic", more like people are ALL THE TIME misunderstanding what "show don't tell" means.
And it seems most take it as literally "visual, no text", which they then take into practice as "descriptions, no dialogue".
@@Momo_Minomothis is the key. These high impact moments are the result of careful setup, they are the punchline. Then the money people and the focus groups come in and demand more of those moments that people liked, and less of that boring stuff that came before it.
That was a fuckin rollercoaster cold open
The one person who should've self diagnosed himself,really showed there ;p
The begging was off the scale
@@billnyethescienceguy9918 I don’t want to be rude but “self-diagnosed himself” is so redundant I can’t ignore it
Goblin dance numbers just don't work without David Bowie.
The head side of the coin is the bad side because it has presidents on it, whereas the tails side usually has a cool bird or other symbol.
This is the correct answer. Someone said it.
Nah, þat's too specific. Most countries don't put people's faces on coins, but a symbol þat represents þe nation.
So instead of a heads side, we have an emblem side, which is usually cooler, but it does depend a lot on execution.
@cohobast5263 even worse where I live, we have the face of an unelected person who only has their wealth, power and position due to an accident of birth and for some bizarre reason everyone loves them for being born into it.
@@e1123581321345589144 Unrelated, but if you're doing þe þorn þing, might I embolden you to go full Anglish and boot those outland loanwords altogether?
@@e1123581321345589144
I still love þat letter
I spat out my rice laughing at the second "And he's Jack Black now". I'm sooo ready for the full series on Doctor Who. 😂
I totally agree about Ruby. All of the companions in RTD’s first era were lovable because they felt like genuine human beings with complex emotions and believable reactions. In comparison, Ruby just seems so weirdly unfazed by literally everything.
I never figured out what was off about Ruby until that was said
The problem with modern movies for the mythical "modern audience" is that their mindset is "you cannot identify with anyone who isn't exactly like you."
Wow, we still haven't made Kyle sleep?!?!!!!
Back in February when I tried to switch plans, there was somehow always an error occuring. This wasn't just once, I tried it a week later and it still happened. But today things worked just fine. It might have to do something with yearly vs monthly billing? My personal theory is that the yearly billing thing wasn't available for Klubbhus (I think that was the case, at least), and I had it in Tillgang, and Patreon didn't know what to do in order to switch.
I feel bad but also I'm poor
We called that you had ADHD cause we recognize our own 😅
peer reviewed diagnosis
seems like everyone has ADHD
@@PrintScreen. hiiiii
@captainnossi6547 the secret third thing, my favorite
@@PrintScreen. It's almost like they just wanna sell you pills or something.
"Can you imagine him as a main character?" HE *IS!!* HE IS YOU GOTTA FINISH IT
Writing feels like it's got the same problem machine floors used to and still are having. The old guy who's been working there for his entire life and knows everything about the tools and the secrets of the trade is retiring. The company didn't decide to train a replacement, so an apprenticeship is just shoved in who doesn't really know what they're doing. The old guy had a connection with the machine and was an artisan, but the new kid doesn't know the intricacies of the job yet. The product is in theory okay, but never as good as what people expect.
We do have loads of hobbyists looking over the machine and drawing up new tools from the sidelines. Maybe in a while when that apprentice finally gets kicked out, there'll be more machine shops than we thought in this wonderful extended metaphor.
@@localhearthian2387 I guess in this metaphor the true artisans who are the hobbyists become the people on UA-cam, while the "real" products are made in the Chinese Disney factory.
@@localhearthian2387 we also have more hobbyists than ever looking over the shoulder of the apprentice and constantly telling him they could do better.
I disagree, I think the issue they have is exactly what Kyle said, they want to be filmmakers/series leads without the drive and desire and passion for making film and tv and stories. I look at the old BTS of the lord of the rings trilogy and remember Peter Jackson doing 7 day weeks, 20 hour days for months on end before, during and even after filming. I can’t say for certain modern writers do that or are even allowed to do that anymore because they have to look for the next gig to come along. It’s factory filmmaking at its worst.
I wish it was that.
No, they're deliberately hiring people who are incompetent now because they will do what they're told.
How else do you think two guys who essentially have never had a script accepted in a decade ever got Ring of Power? AKA the most expensive TV show in history.
There are so many series that I have been a fan of which I have dropped because of these basic reasons.
It's particularly big for female characters. They want them to start out perfect and have nothing they can't do, and it seems to stem from fear of the perception of being weak or rather, a fear or any of the audience being able to claim that women are weak. It just ends up making the characters flat and uninteresting.
I don't think it's just one thing, but this is on the top of the list. Another could be power fantasy, like self-insert for the authors.
Another could be very weak "genderbend" shenanigans, where people will write female characters just as male ones and then swap the gender. Many gives this exact advice for writing GOOD female characters, but there are real differences between how men and women act and what is more desirable and reasonable between them. A stoic man might be cool and their coldness excused, while a stoic woman comes out as rude and selfish. Or a man who stammers and cries all the time as weak and pathetic while a woman like that as endearing and cute.
Are these double standards? Kinda yeah. But they reflect reality. If one wants to "subvert" the gender roles, it should also come with some kind of commentary on how people are expected to behave and how that is cringe. But it seems nowadays it's almost solely about "women should never be expected to do anything" and "men should be expected to do this and that and not this and not that".
And then a third one: It's this weird attempt to... Wash of any accountability and responsibility female characters should have, but still get all the power and fame and money and love interests by just being a strong woman with agency because that's enough...? That the world is happening TO them, instead of them making things happen. Yet it's also then spun as them somehow being super important and changing the world by just... existing? And proving that they have a chip on their shoulder. It's super weird and hard to verbalize, but so many stories just revel in this... Participation trophy entitlement.
Nothing better than listening to the kids rant about how things were better when THEY were young.
1:19 this is what Dr Who has become for me because I slowly felt myself becoming less and less entertained or invested in it and thought exactly that, it was ME becoming too short attention-spanned or too snobby and some old grouchy "back in my day" person who hates the newer series because i'm some racist sexist and a terrible human... so I rewatched the older series and I can guarantee it wasn't 100% nostalgia because there were plenty of cringy moments and boring or useless plot lines but it was so FUN. Watching the older series from Eccleston, Tenant and the start of Matt Smith were genuinely entertaining in a way shows don't do for me anymore. I enjoyed them as much if not more now as an adult as I did then, probably because I understood more, related to more as i've experienced more etc and it was good! Same with Sherlock and Merlin, greta BBC shows which seem to be lost to time in their 'faith' knowing there would be another series and more to see of these characters and settings so we can mess around a little bit and have fun.
I haven’t seen any door monster for ages, and what I watch is just Kyle sitting here talking, and I love it.
And tails is the bad side
You're wrong about the coin thing. Fight me irl.
You're not alone in feeling 'weird' about a lot of modern movies and shows. The feeling is dissected excellently in Emperor Lemon's video "The Matrix: De-booted" where he goes over some of the stuff you mentioned and highlights how the original creators of the matrix were pressured into making a soulless, sequel/reboot which they filled with criticisms about modern studio filmmaking.
>Seeing righteous Neil critique.
YEAH
We are an AMY HENNIG HOUSEHOLD.
I hope the Captain America game she's working on goes well, seeing T'challa's father as the Black Panther (+sick cape) seemingly going to beef over the shield looked promising.
i know i had good reason not to watch the tv show
9:20 dude great summary of the issue I have felt with many new shows. No character respresents the 'normal' perspective with understandable fear and surprise and anger etc. Everybody is already 'in on it'
About fallout Norm does become the character telling the story of the 3 connected vaults and Lucy does expierence a lot of hardship.
Yea, but it really feels like Lucy doesn't change till the end of the season. It's not even a gradual change. It's just an abrupt one.
The story indeed does get a lot better but I do think it was fair criticism that a trolley problem was set up with absolutely no consequence at all.
@@aiedenoldstien9751 I think you are missing some points though. There are a lot of subtle shifts, when she accepts human meat and contaminated water for instance, or realises peace and diplomacy were never an option against ghouls and organ traffickers... She even forgoes her "Vaults will rebuild America" idea in the monster/human hybrid vault. I think it's simply that she was more of a comedic device for the writers than anything, by sending her happy-go-lucky self into a dystopian future
@@turoni314 Because the outcome of the trolley problem wasn't a character moment for any of the vault people. It was character development for Moldaver. But you have to finish the show to realize that.
The problem is that by the end of episode one you are so over the concept of caring for any of those one dimensional caricatures of characters that they could do something amazingly impactful later on and it would not do anything.
It wasn't just any planet they were marveling at.
It was a space planet.
Okay the water jug gag at 25:45 is probably the best-balanced meta-joke I've ever seen, because I feel like exactly 50% of people will get it and the other 50% won't. Gave me a good laugh and appreciation for your skill at this!
What am I missing with the water jug? It sounds vaguely familiar but I'm not sure
@@ethanalienx he was just commenting on unneccassary things occasionally being good to make the scene/world seem more 'real' and less like actors just reciting lines at you. Hence, an unneccasary scene of him drinking water is an example of that type of thing.
(at least thats my understanding🙂)
@@Pasta_Pirate That makes a lot of sense. I thought there was some long-standing jug-of-water bit that I wasn't in on, which would be weird because I feel like I've seen like, *most* Doormonster stuff.
@@Pasta_Pirate I didn't even catch that he was making a point in that bit, I was just watching a guy get a drink because he got thirsty while he was talking and being a tad funny about it. Which I guess actually hits home his point pretty well.
It’s a really weird point because he says unnecessary things should be in stories before immediately explaining how examples of “unnecessary” things are necessary for the plot.
This actually gives me some interesting ideas for a story I'm working on. I'll be vague because it's a UA-cam comment but basically I have three main characters traveling through an unfamiliar environment. One character is someone who's already seen it all but been gone so long he doesn't know what's changed and he needs to relearn it. One character hasn't seen it but has prepared themselves with a bunch of training and research, and one character is going into everything with no experience and preparation but cares about the journey more than the other two. This video helped me realize that I can probably add a lot of depth to my story by emphasizing those differences so thanks this video is good brainstorming.
It seems cool
That sounds like a good story premise.
This is quite a great video highlighting a problem I've noticed in a lot of shows and movies. It always takes you out of a film or show when the characters show little reaction to things that most normal humans would react to, especially grief.
25:50
This idea that all dialogue must serve the main plot being what makes good cinema is dead wrong. Proof of this is Stephen King and his works, which are deeply character driven. He puts so much focus on characters that are sometimes used for less than a narrative scene, that it lets you understand the impact of main characters actions much more deeply. In king's works, nobody is just an npc, they are written as people. That is largely why his works are so compelling
Yeah like, not everything in a story, whether it be a movie, book, game, etc, has to be big and important and plot focused. Sometimes, especially if you want to, in some ways, worldbuild, things such as referencing books, foods, events, etc, can help ,make the world feel more alive
It's as same as wrong as the modern idea of filler episodes being wrong. I just watched the Star Trek Next Generation Episode with Picard on the vacation planet. It didn't serve anything really, it was just a silly Episode centered around Picard who just wanted to relax. Or there this X-Files Episode about a disfigured character and genetic experiments. Or pretty much any sitcom episode. No it does not enhance some grand plot where something threatens mankind, it doesn't serve a purpose of defeating the Borg or a bunch of guys conpsiring with aliens - but it does not have to. When I hear that people are bored of Andor or annoyed at an Episode of Game of Thrones or some other show because it does not advance the plot, i roll my eyes. The plot is important but all this stuff mentioned is fun and watching a movie or a tv series should be fun (or entertaining). Personally as a reader or viewer or player I want to have the possibility to know more about the world and characters.
I would even go as far as to say, that it is more important to have unnecessary stuff, because it shapes world/characters. If a villain does not want to drink alcohol but specifically orders milk it shows us an invidual with principles, with things they like and dislike, maybe even a history attached to it. As chris said, the world feels more alive. Yes some people might find it boring but I say: So what? I liked it more when TV shows had 20+ episodes then 8 episodes, because these characters today feel a lot closer to me simply because I got to know them better and I rather watch a random old episode of Stargate then of a lot of modern series.
@@valeriacaissa4552 Thank you, but yeah, it makes a world feel more alive. Like not everything has to serve the plot. Like, have characters be people, rather than like, super plot heavy NPCs and PCs and whatever. And better yet, it gives viewers, players, readers, etc, time to breathe, absorb info, and just give them a respite
I think you're missing the point. You say King's dialog often doesn't serve the main plot. That's not at all true. The Stand as an example is 98% about the characters. There kind of isn't a plot. It's a situation, an inciting incident. King often has terrible endings for this reason. Characters can kind of only wrap up when they die. Anything else is just not the end for them. This can be fine, but it hinges on the characters being likeable or interesting or different. Imagine a King book about GirlBoss, who is perfect and has no flaws except that she's just so good at everything. Bo-ring. Novice writers should cut the fluff, because if you can't write a woman to begin with, at least don't constantly assault us with your lack of ability. Or your James Gunn dialog. Oh my god did I just say that? What am I even doing right now? This is crazy! (Runs around giving strangers high fives.)
@@valeriacaissa4552TNG doesn't really count because it was trying to fill a network schedule. Every story had to be able to be bottled because it would re-run endlessly on broadcast television out of order. You had to be able to watch any episode without much context. This is a weakness to the show that nobody is really defending. The writers though were smart and worked with it. Like you watch some episode about Picard having a side quest where he learns to play a flute. And it seems like a throwaway episode. But then maybe five episodes later someone is poking around his office and they're like wtf is this flute. You saw that episode, so you have context other viewers don't. It's not perfect.
If you want something a little less episodic try Babylon 5. Literally things in the first episode don't pay off until Season 5.
My two points here:
1) I think we never fully understand what "era" we are in as things are happening. But this detached style of character feels like it somehow makes sense with the rise if doomerist philosophy among many of the target demographics, the don't want to take things seriously and "be a main character" so it makes sense that idea would birth characters that are detached and just "along for the ride" and maybe (for better or worse) that's what defines this era of entertainment
2) I also haven't watched Fallout (just haven't had the chance to do so) but from the way people have described it to me, i was told the MC was designed with a sense of detachment to mimic the video games to create a specific style for the show. I'll eventually get around to watching it and judging it myself
A detached character works for a video game because you, as the player, have the option to make choices for the character so it is good for immersion if your own character does not disagree with you. That, however, does not work for non-interactive media like TV series or movies.
Regarding the second point:
In my opinion, the detachment is the only logical outcome from a serious lack of world-building on the surface. The sets all look really, really good, but the internal logic behind them is never explained, and this inherently causes a sense of detachment. For example, the first town on the surface that the protagonist visits has a ton of people roaming through it, with lots of little storefronts available. But why? Is it actually a large urban center? And if so, what is so special about it that made people live there? Does it have access to clean water or agriculture? If so, we never see or hear any evidence of this. Is it just a large trading center in the middle of a trade route between larger towns? No clue, because they never explain anything about it. We get a name for the town, and a pretty cool looking set, and that's about it. It just exists as a place for a scene to happen in the narrative, and then serves no other purpose. It's not expanded upon in any way, and nothing is ever offered to allow it to make sense in the fictional universe in which it exists. And this happens all the time throughout the series. The Vaults get explained fairly well, but nothing on the surface has any real substance to it, and basically only exist as set-pieces for a scene to occur. So how can characters appear to be logically consistent in a setting wherein there is no logic? The show generally looks good, but it all falls apart as soon as you stop and think, and when you start asking questions.
And you might be right that it's done so in order to mimic a video game - because these are the same criticisms that people complained about in Fallout 3. (Why would people live next to an atomic bomb? Where does Megaton get food? How does Rivet City get enough clean water to supply its population and run a hydroponics lab, in a game wherein the entire plot revolves around a lack of clean water? How does Little Lamplight or the Republic of Dave maintain a sustainable population across multiple generations? All these places look cool and make very memorable locations, but also make no sense in-universe.) But if that's the case, I would have hoped that they would mimic the good parts of a game, and not the uncanny valley aspect of poor writing within a game.
@@vdt952 Its very simple. People that have a creative personality tend to go to university and then work in entertainment. Rarely have they ever seen a farm, or a coal mine, or water plant, or oil rig. Because of that theyre not conscious of how society is sustained. Electricity comes from a socket and food comes from groceries. Thats the depth of appreciation people have for their modern lifestyle.
@@zztopz7090Is this really a creative person thing or are you just talking down the industry of entertainment?You think a retail worker or any common worker knows more about how the world is ran than people like those? Especially when one motivating factor to pursue art in any form is because of first-hand life exprience? Farmers and coal miners can easily be as creative. It's not exclusive to just those creatives, especially when those kinds of people aren't always guaranteed success.
Speaking of the MCU and writing convenience the... I think they're calling it the blip (unsnap)? It's convenient to solve the big plot thing at the end of infinity war with a snap and does track as possible but like did nobody think of the ramifications of bringing everyone back? We see in one of the Spiderman movies a whole ass marching band pops back in the middle of a basketball game.
So like did thousands of people who were on planes rain from the sky? Were the highways painted red? The oceans filled with stranded souls?
Then we have the societal implications. The huge hit to production of food and water that'd follow from losing half of all life must have been devastating and the world likely adapted to only feeding half the population and now there's double the people with half the food. Like there are so many implications that just don't get addressed.
They do touch on the double displacement somewhat in the Falcon and Winter Soldier series. They also directly show the shock of coming back for multiple characters like Yelena and Monica Rambeau... but they could definitely have done more with it.
For sure, I've been thinking this as well. After five years it feels almost more unethical to bring everyone back and let chaos ensue instead of leaving it as is, but none of that is ever addressed and everything almost continues like half the population was never actually gone 😅
"It'd be so cool if her brother was the main character"
........I'm glad you've decided to finish Fallout because, he *is* a main character, increasingly so as the series progresses. Hes my favorite character, too, cause he actually does stuff instead of have stuff happen to him.
All of the characters in this show does stuff proactively its just more noticeable in said character who originally wanted to not do stuff
Doesn't the stuff happening around the other 3 main characters make sense tho? All this stuff is happening because the 3 main characters are willingly trying to go after the artifact that many factions want, sure you could say how some of them actually survive in the wasteland is because of bs dumbluck but luck is a literal stat in the games so I don't really mind it.
He's a side character.
@@Razumen We follow his perspective as to what's happening back at the vault and he singlehandedly figures out what the experiment of their vault is, which ties in other characters' stories. That makes him more than a side character. He's not the lead character, but he's definitely one of the main characters that we see the story through.
@@chaotic-goodartistry3903 No, he's a side character. You can remove him from the show and it wouldn't change the main story.
On the Doctor Comparison, I love how Doc snaps about where he is from, which really sets up the future reveal of exactly what has happened not that long ago from his perspective. It's great characterization. Also sets up the Fury Of The Time Lord running theme as well.
I'd like to say with your discussion about fallout that they do continue the story with the vault, and Norm and I'd say that you should give the show another chance... or don't idk 😅
I don't have a direct problem with the new female, black and LGBT characters in modern media. I have a problem with incompetent writers using race, gender and sexuality as a last minute shield to declare any criticism of their characters to be bigotry and not their inept butchering pre-existing characters.
i mean, to put this in even clearer terms, i personally think it's most heartbreaking when nowadays, every instance of potentially good representation is just brutally butchered by terrible writing. the actors behind the characters in the current season are good actors, particularly the doctor. but whatever on earth disney is doing makes it feel so inauthentic, which is just crushing, because the casting and costuming is genuinely delightful.
i don't think the writers purposefully use their casting as a shield; i think some people are legitimately directing bigotry at actors instead of rightfully slinging their complaints at the writing quality and production choices. actors are people with lines who, yes, can absolutely add or detract from their characters - but what the writers tell them to do definitely has the largest impact on the outcome.
@@nobodyimportant1968
I don't think they are intentionally using their casting as a shield. They think that giving a male character boobs, making a white character black, or making someone LGBT inherently improves a character so they don't need things like nobility, humility or any character trait that could be perceived as good. This is while at the same time giving a female character feminine traits = all women belong as subservient to men, a black character doing something naughty = all black people are criminal scum, a gay man having a masculine trait = denial of their existence and other bull like that. Simply put they don't write a character, they write an identity and due to the fact that they could only see their identity that must be the only thing anyone else can see.
In summary, the writers are racist, sexist, homophobic bigots but think they are champions because that is all they see and they portray those traits as inherently positive to the point of absurdity.
Something I think about alot is the original stargate series and how they tried to handle adding more to a universe that was really only meant as the movie.
Yeah, I am struggling a lot with the whole Chekhov's gun idea, that everything introduced needs to be significant or it shouldn't have been introduced in the first place. Casual mentionings, red herrings, character introductions for characters that end up not really mattering. That's stuff that builds the world creates context and distracts you into getting invested.
I am not saying you should always stick a bunch of unnecessary stuff into every scene or even every movie, in fact that would just be annoying.
Like Han Solo's dice is a great example, did they put them there because they're a significant part of the story in any way? No, they put them there because Han Solo is a person and people like decorating their areas. If you think about it, his line of work makes him basically a space truck-driver, and spend most of his time in the cockpit of his truck. With that being such a big part of his life, of course he decorates it, most truckdrivers do as well if they're allowed to.
Yeah same. I think the issue is people took a solid piece of advice “A gun presented in the first act must be fired in the third” and extrapolated that to *everything a story can include.* Like it’s called Chekov’s *gun* not Chekov’s Everything for a reason
There’s a reason “sometimes the curtains are just blue” is a popular saying these days. Because it is true. Sometimes something is just there. It doesn’t always have to come back around, sometimes it’s set-dressing. Imagine a play with no backgrounds because it’s “not relevant to the plot”?
Yes, the first season of Westworld did this so well.
Vyvanse is the most helpful ADHD medication for me, I'm glad it seems to be helping you.
Taking it since two month and I'm already at 130% of the daily maximum dosis, but so far it works as good on me as globules :D But good to see that it helps some people to relief their symptoms :)
I don't actually care much about any of the pieces of media you discussed (anymore, as a former Doctor Who enjoyer), but goddamn did you put together a cohesive, coherent, and entertaining little dissertation on a problem that I feel like everyone sees but very few people know how to put into words.
The bad side of a coin is the scratched out head where you give in to the urge to attack batman
Or, as I read the title, "I'm scared doctor, who is going to become a musical?" 🤣 Ok, on to the video!
So uh fun fact Kyle Disney didn't reboot doctor who and Disney doesn't have any power in the series what so ever there just a distributor every decision that was made was made by Russel T Davis the only thing we know Disney added was a scene in the church on Ruby road that being the snowman head scene
Yeah a lot of people see Disney and assume they bought doctor who like they do with everything else but in actuality they consider it a low budget investment and only paid for 2 seasons.
Yeah. Disney is just functioning as the distributor, and that’s great because it has been difficult to watch Doctor Who outside of England for like a decade now.
The fact that Disney was to distribute DOES mean the creator's decisions may have been influenced. We know Disney had at least one direct meddle, which means they also had uncountably many indirect meddles
@@lazydroidproductions1087If Disney were purely distributing it they would have just licensed the existing series. They might not own the underlying IP but they've still paid for their own series to be made under that IP, and they'll get at least some influence over it as a result (if nothing else they would have specified which parts they wanted remade in what timeframe, which indirectly dictates a lot of the pacing decisions).
I doubt they won’t edit things, they changed a lot in Bluey (not a lot a lot, but little changes here and there adds up)
Oh, and you're actually alright at this. Keep doing it a little, it's not a bad video. I think this would be a good way to keep variety on the channel and, at least, I hope most of us would enjoy both and it wouldn't create separate audiences.
yeeeaaahhh i suggest you keep watching fallout cause they do go back to the vault for a plotline and that brother character is the main character in that plotline.
I wouldn’t. The show is complete ass.
@Wesley-1776 widely considered great and completely revived the Fallout game series, which lost fans after Fallout 76. But I'm sure your opinion is correct and everyone else is wrong.
@@AleksandrStrizhevskiy yes. Also the good games were fine. We want Bethesda to hurt or even close down so someone else gets the IP. Plenty of people agree with me. Tourist
@@AleksandrStrizhevskiyif in 2 hours (ya know, the length of a whole movie) you haven't sold me, I'm nit going to spent 3x more hoping it gets more.interesting. majority rule is never a valid argument by itself anyway
@@malachilining2730 Sure, thats is a valid point. But the criticism he gave of the show were things that were answered later. If he said "the show failed to hook me, thats an opinion that makes sense". But he criticized the story of the vault for things that were actually addressed in the show.
The fallout part... come on you can't assume things! That's literally the mistake most writers make when doing a sequel/reboot of a loved franchise.
In Obi wan's words: You have becomed the very thing you swore to destroy.
I mean the assumption "The first episodes are shit so the rest is probably shit too" is not that much of a stretch.
@@Taladar2003very few shows get their footing on the first episode, especially if they’re built to have a full season without the need of a pilot.
Prediction what happens in a show without watching it is something only a fool would do.
Reminds me of Critical Drinker predicting what happens in Prey based off of the trailer and getting everything completely wrong. Don't be like him. He's a moron.
@@Taladar2003There’s far too many shows that start out that way for that to be true, cmon man. Was ATLA, or hell Morel Orel shit just because of their first few episodes were "meh"?
Another problem is that a lot of things are designed for the audience to react and not the characters. Zooming in on some random item that means pretty much nothing to the characters but is a reference for the crowd to freak out and throw their popcorn on the floor over is one of the worst tropes in movies right now
Goddamn memberberries...
It's not difficult to understand the state of modern Hollywood, and how it got this way. Steve Jobs made an astute observation about institutional rot in the technology industry, and it applies *perfectly* to the current condition of massive studios like Disney:
ua-cam.com/video/NlBjNmXvqIM/v-deo.html
Now in the case of Xerox, he blames the rot on "sales and marketing people" getting into leadership and driving creative people who actually make good products. In the case of Hollywood, however, at some point in the early 2000s, a bunch of media consolidation took place, and the people who wound up with the big chairs in Hollywood were the merger and acquisition finance types.
Think about Disney buying out Marvel and Lucasfilm, for example. A creative leader who wanted to make great movies wouldn't pay billions of dollars to buy someone else's IP. They'd try and make their *OWN*. And people used to do that. When Star Wars was a huge hit in '77, we got a flurry of other science fiction projects:
Alien, The Last Starfighter, The Black Hole, Battlestar Galactica, and the Star Trek movies
Now you just get reboots and remakes, greenlit by the suits who spent billions buying the rights to produce reboots and remakes.
Didn't realize I was here so soon, I'm 10 minutes in and this released almost right before I started watching.
Been a Door Monster fan for years and I'm enjoying the rant about writing so far.
MLP FiM S4 E6 has a moment that made me realize something similar: at the end of the episode, after everyone escapes the enchanted comic book, Twilight asks "Where exactly did you get that comic book?" There's a joke about how the name of the store "House of Enchanted Comics" is literal, but that reaction of "that's way too dangerous for something so mundane, I need to learn more so I can be prepared" stuck with me. It's a very episodic show so I don't expect this to be setting up anything for the future, but the fact it's not for the plot makes it easier to see as a character moment.
Glad to see FiM still discussed.
@@Kalightortaio I'd recently finished a D&D comic that used screencaps from the show, and decided to try watching it. Honestly, some of the stuff they get up to makes it feel exactly like a D&D setting.
@@valdonchev7296they actually made roleplay books based off of the series! i looked into it since i enjoy FiM and was wondering about systems/settings to run for possible future children.
@@valdonchev7296Friendship is Dragons? (Which, I just learned, only ended THIS YEAR. Which is wild. I became a fan like 10 years ago, then gave up a couple dozen pages in.)
@@TheDanishGuyReviews Yup!
The bad side of the coin is the 'edge' side, so when you clap your hand to catch it on the fall of the coin you jam it into your soft and sensitive flesh. :
Or it's the good side because you gain the ability to read people's thoughts, feel like you're on top of the world, realize there are unexpected complications from being fundamentally set apart from others, and find yourself grateful to return to your natural state, having grown as a person. THAT'S RIGHT, TOP-TIER WRITING IN 30 MINUTES FROM THE TWILIGHT ZONE
"Ruby Sunday, a character who they named that," brutal man. lol
I feel like you need to finish Fallout - Lucy's desires and intentions are really contextualized within the broader narrative of the rest of the season. Returning the original vault periodically is also really important to the story.
I agree wholeheartedly. I love characters that are characters. I want personality. I want people to root for even if they aren't the best people. Because its *interesting*. Because when characters are felly fleshed out it makes any kind of media so much more fun to watch since there's an actual character to be invested in. All of this is of course to say:
GIVE ME MORE DUMPSTER FIRE CHARACTERS HOLLYWOOD. I WANT TO WATCH NONREALITY TRASH PEOPLE TRYING THEIR BEST. IT GIVES ME LIFE.
Thank you for reading.
Why is 30 minutes of mostly Kyle just talking into the camera so damned entertaining?
Seriously. If i had a choice between this and nearly any Marvel movie i'm choosing this. It's an incredible deconstruction, and he crammed like 5 of them in one video.
Kyle is simply an entertaining guy.
Charismatic, likable people relating their sincere opinions is entertaining. Turns out it doesn't take much for us monkeys to have fun.
Because ADHD people talking about something we’re passionate about is entertaining
Because, unlike his subject matter, HE can write
Really well-illustrated point regarding Doctor (and glad it wasn't just veiled bigotry). I personally very much agree with your TLOU points, both regarding Tess and regarding the uwufication of Joel of all people.. I've never seen anyone else put it the way you did and - although you didn't go quite as far - i always wished the journey would've been Ellie and Tess
That being said, your Fallout point might just come down to your own narrative expectations not being met or a perception that perseveering kindness is a flaw/weakness. What you said about Lucy - especially when putting into the whole "reaction/writing" thesis of the video - is actually bonkers 😭
Just take the sponsorship, only a minute of our time (which people uniterested in the sponsorship can skip through) but a lot of help for you.
Also, loving the long form video content!
Eh, it feels unethical since it’s basically the content creator endorsing said sponsor, and 99% of them are scams or misleading
@@DeathnoteBB That's just how advertising works in our climate. If I got such an offer I would also be questioning it morally but nowadays most consumers are used to ignoring such advertisments anyway. If he's struggling and there's a lot to gain I say go for it.
@@igorkonys1006 The issue is many do know by now to just skip, but many still have faith in what someone they trust endorses. Sometimes it’s whatever, like Raycon sucks but it’s just earbuds (though they are expensive earbuds, despite their ad script’s claims). But some things are Betterhelp, which preys on vulnerable people who are desperate and seeking help.
Not everyone is savvy enough to know a UA-cam sponsor is almost always a bad product or service, so people take their favorite UA-camr’s word for it (which unbeknownst to them is just the ad-read script) and then get ripped off.
20:00 - This is actually a complaint I have about a bunch of media criticism I've heard recently. People seem to have developed a complete aversion to scenes that do not advance the plot directly, even if they do develop characters or set the tone. Like, a 30s shot of a character just looking at something might do nothing for the plot, but their expressions and reactions can tell you a lot about who that character is, *which is often later relevant for the plot to make sense!*
Well well well, it’s been a while.
Edit: Tails, in my opinion Tails is the bad side of the coin because we all collectively choose Heads for some reason. Not to mention I live in Canada and the Canadian one dollar coin has a Canadian goose on the tails side.
Edit2: It apparently isn’t a goose, it’s a different bird, that bird is named a loon according to @Gemma-Majoran (thank you for reminding me). It’s still a bird though which can still be considered evil. Therefore it’s still the bad side of the coin in my opinion.
Well well well well well well well if it isn’t Stanley pines.
yeah i thought that too as a canadian
turns out the canadian loon
for which the loonie is named
ISNT A CANADIAN GOOSE
@@Gemma-Majoran Wait really, I’ve been lied to, Or I forgot. One of those two. It’s still a bird though and it reminds me of those damn menaces, so my opinion on the bad side of the coin remains unchanged.
Heads is the bad side. It's covered in imperialist colonizers
fun fact: the loon is Minnesota's state bird
What you said about having fun making a movie really strikes a chord with me. The best Marvel movies are movies where I felt like everybody was having a really good time making it, like the Deadpool movies and Thor Ragnarok. They seemed like the people making the movie were really into making the movie
I just gotta say it: End of the world was such a good episode. That's it. That's the whole comment.
Ok. I'm going to argue that the little robot spider who presses the button that incinerates everything in the room is a little contrived, as is the Doctor's random time slow power and pretty much all of the plot now that I think about it, but Rose's story in it was great, and it's still better than like all but 5 of the episodes since The Doctor Falls.
Hey Kyle, I don't know how much effort this video took to make, but holy cow you are so good at the whole video essay format. Would so fucking love to see more of this
It sounds like the Fallout show perfectly adapts the writing of Bethesda NPCs where you try to think they're people but they are so stubbornly dead inside it's like they're spiting your immersion.
Snarky comments and jokes aside, this was a very interesting watch and very likely part of why I have been watching almost no movies. We have so many grand and epic plots in media where nobody ever takes a second to act like anything remotely relatable that it all just breezes past us without any impact and it definitely happens a lot in games as well.
These are a lot of things I feel like I have been feeling about media for a while now too, I'm glad you were able to articulate it so well
18:55 “Why undo all that? She’s leaving; they aren’t even preserving these characters or location for later, they’re out of the story. Why not give us all that extra motivation?” Because writers can no longer think about scenarios beyond they personal experiences. When someone writes a character, that character is them or the writer’s idealized version of themselves and because the writer is more than likely nepo-baby, they have failed to learn what emotions they’re are beyond their shallow existence. Writing a character who has lost everything they have ever known as a result of a morally screwed up experience is not capable in the writer’s imagination
It sounds like this is one part, 'Kyle makes really valid points about the modern landscape of television and cinema,' and one part, 'Kyle only had the time and energy to watch the first two episodes of television shows which ironically have pretty good third episodes'.
Yeah. It was frustrating, since those were good points he was making but it takes away some credibility when he's using shows as examples that he gave up on after 2 episodes. The middle stretch of that season of Who had some truly excellent episodes that absolutely knew what they were doing artistically.
(Note, when I say he loses credibility I don't mean he's being dishonest or he wouldn't have admitted to only watching that far, just that the opinions carry less weight as a result.)
@@darlhiatt8136I mean in his defense, the *point* of the first episodes is to hook you and showcase what the rest of a series will be. The fact that he gave up after two episodes shows they failed to hook him
@@DeathnoteBB sure, it's fine to drop a show anytime. But doing so leaves him less qualified to comment on the quality and plot of those shows.
@@darlhiatt8136Exactly, personally if you cant finish a show you or at the very least one season of it, you aren't really qualified at all to critique it from a reviewing pov. Especially under the guise of an informative video.
I didn't know I need Kyle in my life to do deep dives of media to make me feel complete. This is scratching. Such an itch right now. I didn't realize I had.
It's these small little moments characters experience that make a story. Not the overarching events that occur that just progress the plot along. Becuase, at the end of the day, the purpose of a story is to examine what certain individuals will do when faced with these situations.
The teleprompter ended?! Everyone, don't blink! Blink and you're dead.
Suppose that means we can't sleep either.
They totally missed the Normal person vs omnipresent space alien time lord dynamic
imagine if the other vault dwellers were scared of Lucy bc of her weird natural talents and disregard to violence bc something about her is just -wrong. Like if a real fallout game player started playing her
i found it so odd that they k*lled off the old lady in the 60s music themed episode. i was expecting there to be a comedic bit where the doctor breaks in through the pianist's kitchen window, stops the maestro, and then makes some lie up about being a repair person before asking the old lady whether she knows what's been happening with the whole no music thing lately - that's what i'm used to the doctor doing, after all, no matter what they look like. but no - i was shocked by the fact that, wholesome disney, of all things, sort of just made a bunch of random side characters perish violently - and then added no catharsis to this scenario, followed by a _musical number for no reason??_ i don't get it - whatever happened to the "900 years of time and space, and i've never met someone who wasn't important?"
like, maybe i'm biased and just don't like seeing seniors perish on television in general, but cmon. the doctor loves old ladies. but he runs away from danger instead? he doesn't go looking for musicians in town? his sonic doesn't work, but not in the usual "oh woops wood door" way? russell t davies wrote some of my favourite doctor who episodes w/ 9 and 10... how on earth did he manage to get this season wrong this year?
Kyle, first things first, I am glad you are sleeping -At least, I think you are? I got kinda confused-, and secondly, I am thoroughly enjoying this more relaxed, long form video format, and how it feels somehow like a chill conversation more than anything else, which I don't understand how that is the case, but meh, it works. Not that I haven't already been thoroughly enjoying you guys' sketches, because I have, but this is really great too. Anyway, basically, I hope you and the rest of monster door are doing well, and this was an incredibly enjoyable episode of "The Opinions of K-Corp".
Broadchurch complaint, every episode followed the same format where they get over the suspect from the previous week, investigate the suspect that was hinted at in the previous week, then hint at a new suspect for the following week. It also ended with a 'twist' that did not line up with the perpetrator's previous on screen behaviours and actions as no one was informed while it was filming who the perpetrator was - not even the perpetrator's actor. It seems like they spun a wheel each week to see who would be the suspect and ended with the perpetrator being whoever was the suspect when they reached the ordered episode number.
00:40 alright so, pateron isn't working well enough. It seems we may need to apply advanced hobo technology to exploit lightspeed's relation to time travel to create gold that will decay into tachyons and decay by traveling back in time: thus multiply in an infinite recursive loop. Or, and here me out, we go graverobbing for fillings.
This is why I like "slice of life"-episodes. Once in a while it is nice to take a break from the action and just... breathe. Take a moment. Process. Watching the characters come to terms with the situation. Walking Dead s1, the crew arrives at the CDC and is told there is some hot water. The disbelief of taking a shower is honestly my most memorable part of that show. That, a slow horseride and chatting while washing clothes. Simple moments in a chaotic world that shows the characters' reactions.
Not Dumbledore dying, but the grief afterwards as the other characters come to terms with the new reality.
I honestly, like these videos more than your skits. Keep writing these, you’re a man of many talents.
Definitely watch the rest of Doctor Who‘s new season. Several episodes (Boom, Dot & Bubble, and 73 Yards) are among the best of the revival era.
Hey Kyle, maybe watch the rest of the Fallout show or read a plot synopsis, a lot of stuff you say in this video is incorrect like how Norm and the other vault dwellers remain characters throughout the show and actually have a big role in the overall story
Yeah, and the raider boss Moldaver choosing not to follow through on the trolley problem is character development for her, not a failure of the script.
Gonna be honest, after watching 2 episodes I stopped as well because, while the "next time on Fallout" promos showed Norm becoming more interesting, I'm not watching 6 hours of TV just to see how that 1 part turns out. The show doesn't really feel like it knows what it wants to be and already made a lot of dumb decisions. For me specifically, the mutant bear thing alone had about 5 brain dead moments that really turned me off.
The bad side of the coin is the thin edge side cuz if it lands on that you have to do 'both' or 'neither' which will require you to flip another coin but this time 'both or 'neither' doesn't work so you have to go make a coin that's like 2-dimensional so it doesn't have an edge and it's a whole thing
I think 12th doctor does the whole new person very well as the companion and the doctor have to deal with young Matt smith turning into old Peter Capaldi
I feel like an idiot for only just realising this, but a big reason The Doctor has companions is to experience the sense of wonder through them, even if The Doctor themself has seen it all.
Hey, it's okay. Getting help and meds later is normal, and then you look back and are like "wow, all these things I thought were my personality were really just symptoms and rationalizations?" It changed everything for me. You'll do well, you still have all the superpowers you just have to relearn how to access them, safely.
The bad side of the coin, if you must know, Kyle, is the side the foil has come off and landed in the dirt. You CAN eat the other side still, but it's really tricky.
so one of the problems is a lot of modern media is a straight-man, funny-man act but they cut the straight-man for budget reasons?
It’s not for budget reasons my dude
@@Scruffynerfherder10 of course it is, ceo couldn't fit both another yacht and a straight man in to the budget
@@the_nerd5976 they have more of a budget without a straight-man, look at the acolyte, 180 million dollars for what exactly, they ticked all the boxes to get as much financing as possible...THEN the ceo can get another yacht
Honestly I think it’s more they merged the funny man and straight man and now it’s just “snarky man rolls eyes at everything yet also takes things super seriously”
@@DeathnoteBB correction "snarky woman who rolls eyes at everything yet also takes things super seriously”
I like the current hairstyle, I thought you looked rather dapper if I do say so myself. Also enjoying the longform content.
I thought Ethan already taught you the lesson about half-binging a show!
The bad side of the coin is the side you don't want to land face up.
While I have no problem with non white and lgbt characters in doctor who (I'm gender fluid and bi, it would be weird if I was and the idea that the doctor can't change race and sex is just stupid) but I can't stand how it is done in the recent series, where they write them as horrible gay stereotypes rather than actual characters who are gay and it's just bad writing, they don't feel like actual people but cartoonish exaggerated gay characters. As an lgbt person it just makes me want to turn of the show because it's awful representation. I do find it weird how the gay showrunner can't seem to write gay characters well.
But it does full somewhat into the wider issues brought up in this video, where they don't feel like characters because they don't react and act like living breathing people and ot negatively affacts how you connect and enjoy the story.
I feel like that has always been an issue for doctor who though. Whenever a lgbt character showed up, their queerness or stereotype was just the joke, rarely as anything other.
For real. Remember Jack Harkness? Imagine if they wrote him like the modern Doctor. Woof
@@fargrave6019 I would argue that that scene with Jack losing Ianto in Torchwood was one of the most emotional scenes in any gay relationship on TV.
@@Taladar2003 I have just looked up that scene and do agree. I was referring to doctor who though. While I did really like Jack in it, it did sometimes feel as though the writers were treating him as both joke and punchline.
There have definitely been hits and misses on that front. Rose Noble (Donna's kid) was probably one of the better handled ones for gender identity, and Yasmin Khan was mostly well handled for sexual identity.
13:05 There's no way Disney or Amazon is going to portray a woman as "Soft and Naive" even if that's what any normal person would be regardless of gender. The Disney Dr Who girl doesn't flinch because the man next to her didn't and that might make the woman look weaker or not as smart, even though anyone would be confused and overwhelmed. They're so obsessed with making "strong females" the characters end up coming across as unrelatable or even disconnected. I never felt that way with Ellie in fallout but the little girl in Last of Us came across as a psycho.
YAY!!!! HE HAS RETURNED!!! Now get back to my emails because I want your help with stuff....
and... please finish The Guards Themselves 2
I imagine that’s an easier task when you’re all in college and have nothing but free time between classes. Now everyone’s an adult with schedules and rent. I dont know if that’s at all relevant to TGT exactly but it felt like a “Mid-college project with my friends” deal in the best way
I highly reccommend you watch some of the other new dr who episodes. Its was definitely frontloaded with badness which is unfortunate because it only has 9 episodes for some reason (it really needed more episodes). I actually was fine with space babies and church on ruby road but i like camp. Boom, 73 yards, Dot and Bubble, and Rogue are all really good episodes imo. They kinda funmbled the finale but its not awful. You should at least out of these watch 73 yards and dot and bubble, they are genuinely fantastic imo and you get to spend time with character who react to the situations they are in, the main complaint of this video
the left side of a coin is the bad side, No questions!
I love this video. The commentary, the editing, everything in this video was fantastic. Even while I really like some of the shows referenced your points are very accurate and prove your point in an extremely persuasive way