Why ??!!...The whinging,moaning,complaining,ranting,letting off steam thread !!

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  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    edited October 2022 Posts: 7,526
    Great posts with great information all. I have read that elsewhere as well that you can usually reach out to the author of whichever scientific article and usually they're quite happy to pass it along for free.

    I always thought it was a fun coincidence that people get paid in "exposure", which is exactly what it's called if you die homeless on the sidewalk.

    Happy Halloween!
  • ImpertinentGoonImpertinentGoon Everybody needs a hobby.
    Posts: 1,351
    This is not exactly a rant, but I am getting more and more confused by the gap that is opening up between what is popular and what is considered good. This may have always been the case and it is certainly just me stringing anecdotes together and not some rigorous media study. I feel like when I look at what people I trust to be good critics - whether they work for newspapers and magazines, or have their own websites or podcasts or just are prolific on social media - they are talking about and living in a completely different world than the one I see, when I look at box office numbers and ratings.
    Two anecdotes to illustrate what I mean:
    I just listened to a podcast that branded Black Adam as the worst movie of the year. And I absolutely follow their arguments - without having seen the film. And yet, it is the #1 film at the box office right now (at least in the US) and already at #13 for the whole year. You can go through the box office topping films of the weekend and there are loads of films that have been absolutely panned by critics or just largely ignored. Don't Worry Darling. Bullet Train. Jurassic World Dominion. Fantastic Beasts. Morbius. Uncharted.
    The second part is in TV. Again, at least in the bubble I am in, I've been hearing all about how great of a show Andor is. Breathes new life into Star Wars. Actually better than both House of the Dragon and Rings of Power and so on and so forth. And then I read a piece about how great this show is and how important for the Star Wars franchise and it just casually mentions at the end that not only is it much less watched than the other two big genre shows of the fall, it's the least watched of the life-action Star Wars shows (Mandalorian, Book of Boba Fett and Obi-Wan Kenobi). And that is just it's own little microcosm of genre streaming shows. The real most watched scripted programmes? That's stuff like Yellowstone or the various NCIS shows, which absolutely noone I know is talking about at all.

    So yeah. There's no capper to this rambling collection of thoughts, I'm just kind of mystified by the whole thing.
  • NickTwentyTwoNickTwentyTwo Vancouver, BC, Canada
    edited November 2022 Posts: 7,526
    It's all marketing. Mandalorian, BOBF, Kenobi all play on nostalgia; I was having a discussion with a friend earlier today about how all these shows are just named after a character from other Star Wars media (except Mandalorian, which was Boba Fett basically before we had BOBF). Andor is the least watched because no one cares about Andor as a character, but the show (reverse?) trojan horsed a show about the birth of the Rebellion, which apparently is very good, in a name that no one cares about.

    Movie box office is all marketing. Of course word of mouth is an important part of the marketing of a film, and that does depend on quality more or less, everyone wants to go see whatever latest movie Dwayne is in. All of those films you mention had enormous marketing campaigns.

    It's somewhat similar to books, where when a book comes out they sell it at 30%, 40%, 50% off right away so that it gets on bestseller lists. It's all marketing, and no indication of quality whatsoever.
  • CommanderRossCommanderRoss The bottom of a pitch lake in Eastern Trinidad, place called La Brea
    Posts: 7,969
    j_w_pepper wrote: »
    j_w_pepper wrote: »
    Small children don't sleep by the clock. The only problem is that the world outside (for the parents, I guess) resets, and those parents have to be at their workplace an hour earlier/an hour later than before, whichever applies. Likewise, my opinion on this is that yes, I could stay outside for as long as it is comfortable in spring/summer/early autumn either way, but if the rest of the world works on standard time, it means that I'd have to get up an hour earlier to be on time at my office, and that definitely spoils much of the fun.

    For me, this is a problem of the past (having retired), but that's what has mainly shaped my opinion on this. I never experienced summer/daylight savings time until my exchange year in the US (48 years ago), and never missed having it, but ever since it was introduced in the EU about 1980, I have enjoyed it. And today, I'm disappointed that after a wonderful, much-too-warm autumn day the sun was essentially gone at 3 p.m., and it was dark around five.

    I'm thoroughly looking forward to the last weekend of March 2023.

    So, what you're basically saying is that you don't want to change your rithm of the day compared to the working day, so that young children have to adjust their rithm twice a year. Indeed, they don't follow the clock, they follow their rithm, so when the world around them changes the clock, suddenly they neet to change their rithm and for some (and their parents) that is quite difficult. Even though our 4y/o is used to travelling, changing his rithm is always quite difficult. He can stay up late/wake up early for one day, but will return to his normal rithm the next day. So, the coming few days, maybe even weeks, he's going to get up at 5, not 6 am, and will need to go to bed at 6 pm instead of 7. Keeping him awake until 7 will just exhaust him and make it far more difficult to get him to go to bed, as he'll start jumping around when he's too tired to sleep...

    I'm not trying to blame here, just stating the situation. For (most) grown-ups it's not too difficult to change, for kids it's a completely different story.

    Wrong...in the sense that I am changing the rhythm of my day, but in a pleasant way (until it goes back at the end of October). But we've had this change for 40-plus years, although not during the first 35-or-so years of my life. I never knew what I missed until then, but once it came up, I enjoyed it.

    And I must admit that while there have always been reports of farmers having trouble with their cows because they had always been milked at 6 a.m. standard time (why don't the dairies adjust their pick-up times by an hour if that's a problem?), the complaint of people having trouble with their babies is new to me. Probably more relevant, but not present for the last forty years of the discussion. Sorry.

    So how is the rithm of your day more pleasant in this half-year compared to the other half-year? Nature doesn't rebalance the times of sunset or sunrise. Hence your argument that it is more 'enjoyable' makes little sense. Anything that follows nature's rithm, from little kids to cows (has nothing to do with any pick-up times of factories, but with full udders) doesn't change, hence their surroundings (parents, farmers) have to adjust to an unnecessary adjustment. Our son still awakes now every morning at 5 instead of six. He goes to bed at the (new) seven, but is hence far more exhausted, yet still wakes up at 5.
    I can't help it if you haven't heard the argument before as it is as old as the discussion itself, which rages every year since the introduction of 'daylight saving time'. You could also suggest that those who want to have a bit more light at the end of their shifts just go to work earlier. That wasn't possible 40 years ago but by now thaat isn't much of a problem.

    It's just bad, deadly, and unneccessary
    https://www.popsci.com/daylight-saving-time-effects-accidents-health/
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    edited November 2022 Posts: 23,536
    Besides the good points raised by @NickTwentyTwo, I think the gap @ImpertinentGoon is talking about has a lot to do with the fact that "everyone" is a critic now, including those who put themselves above any filmmaker and will burn almost everything to the ground, as well as those who worship at the altar of any professional and kiss all the boots they can. Fair comments are hard to find sometimes. My favourite film podcast, Now Playing podcast, is one the best in my opinion, and at least these reviewers occasionally admit that when they go in arms crossed, they will focus on the bad parts, and when they like a director or film series, they can more easily overlook the faults. Even some of the most famous reviewers have walked into this trap, like Pauline Kael and Roger Ebert. Reviewing a film is so incredibly subjective a thing to do, that between "what she says" and "what he says" about a film, my own opinion can be thoroughly different, as if we've all seen a completely different movie. In the end, we are still our own best critics. I am not too bothered by other people's reviews anymore, because a hundred people having seen the same movie will end up having a hundred different opinions, none more legit than the others.

    The Internet, meanwhile, keeps telling me that APOCALYPSE NOW is one of the best movies ever. It probably is, and I respect the film, but I've seen it several times now and I rate it "average" at best, thinking it a bit tedious, uninteresting and overlong. Then again, I wasn't in that war, nor a part of the anti-war movement of the day, nor even born at the time of its release, so my opinion comes from a different place than that of many orher people. On the other hand, the Internet keeps telling me that Michael Mann's BLACKHAT isn't worth my time, yet that's a film I really enjoy. What is considered "good" and what I myself consider "good" are two completely different things, at least half the time. Sometimes I get what reviewers are saying, and sometimes I don't.

    With that in mind, what is considered "good" or "popular", and by whom? We know for example that BO results are poor barometers of a film's quality (e.g. BLADE RUNNER). Some films make money hand over fist, but are practically forgotten two years later. We also know that hypes can cloud judgements. Some Academy folks have apparently admitted that ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN probably deserved the best picture Oscar better than ROCKY, despite the latter's commercial success. If given the chance to revote, the outcome would probably be different today. And what about "the" websites, like imdb and RT? Again, we sometimes seem to agree and sometimes anything but. Am I gravely mistaken if I like a film with a 13 % score on RT? Of course not. And I shouldn't even care.

    The problem is that every attempt at constructing an objective quality assessment is inherently flawed. Which criteria does one use? Will the system grade on a curve? The most honest method is probably the "majority vote", and even that is a famous logical fallacy. The fact that most people consider a film good, doesn't make it so, nor does it imply that I should consider the film good.

    So both the "popular" and the "good" markers are untrustworthy and unpredictable. The gap between them is more a logical probability than a strange dichotomy. Also, popularity is dictated by more than quality. THE ROOM is a very popular film, not because it's good but precisely because it isn't. Almost everything Marvel releases under Disney is usually very popular, not necessarily because it's good but because the entire Avengers project is extremely popular as a whole. Several films that are now thought of as "great", weren't so well received at the time of their release, by critics, audiences, or both--and sometimes for strange reasons. Just think about THE THING, a film that is now heralded as one of the best sci-fi flicks ever, but was largely ignored in 1982 because people wanted more cuddly E.T. in their sci-fi diet, while critics felt that Carpenter was a "pornographer of violence". Whatever the reasons, popularity can change overtime.

    Lastly, generalizations rarely hold up. "They don't make good films anymore." Sure they do. They also make bad films today, like they did half a century ago. But bad and impopular films don't bleed over into the latest DVD/Blu-ray releases quite as easily as the "big" titles, and so we lose track of them. It makes us think of the past as a treasure vault of nothing but high-quality films, despite the enormous number of bad productions that have always plagued the market. There's also the fact that "I don't like modern popular films", except that we all do, or at least some of those popular films. And that's true for most people, no matter how old or interested in film. But we tend to focus more on what we disagree with. Another generalization that doesn't hold up is that "These days, films are only made for money." Films have always been made for money; money has always been the driving force behind the "art" of cinema. Apart from a few arthouse productions and propaganda films, movies that don't do too well cause budgets to dry up for future projects. Darwinian survival theory at work. And so on.

    The gap between what is considered "good" and what is considered "popular" is not always there, but sometimes it is; not just now, but always; sometimes in conflict with our own opinions , and sometimes not.
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    As for DST, why not a compromise? Next year, adjust the time by half an hour, and then leave it that way permanently.
  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    Posts: 17,797
    As for DST, why not a compromise? Next year, adjust the time by half an hour, and then leave it that way permanently.

    I've heard that some parts of Norway are dark for most of the year. Not sure if that's true or not.
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    Dragonpol wrote: »
    As for DST, why not a compromise? Next year, adjust the time by half an hour, and then leave it that way permanently.

    I've heard that some parts of Norway are dark for most of the year. Not sure if that's true or not.

    North of the Arctic circle, it is half the year. And bright the rest of it. They still adjust the clocks like the rest. Meaningless.
  • VenutiusVenutius Yorkshire
    Posts: 2,925
    Man, I'd love to spend half the year in darkness - I'd hate it being light for the other half, though. No, I'm not a goth. I said I'm not a...oh...
  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    Posts: 17,797
    Dragonpol wrote: »
    As for DST, why not a compromise? Next year, adjust the time by half an hour, and then leave it that way permanently.

    I've heard that some parts of Norway are dark for most of the year. Not sure if that's true or not.

    North of the Arctic circle, it is half the year. And bright the rest of it. They still adjust the clocks like the rest. Meaningless.

    Yes, I think a Norwegian member on another Bond forum posted about that once. It must be harder to sleep at night when it's still bright outside but I suppose you can block it out sufficiently.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 8,491
    My gripe is my IG got hacked so if anyone receives a DM from me on the 'gram, no I didn't get wealthy in ten minutes in trading Bitcoin! And yes, that definitely is NOT me reaching out!
  • DwayneDwayne New York City
    Posts: 2,622
    Hopefully this will cheer all of us up (a rough week ahead).
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 23,536
    Venutius wrote: »
    Man, I'd love to spend half the year in darkness - I'd hate it being light for the other half, though. No, I'm not a goth. I said I'm not a...oh...

    I'd love that too, @Venutius!
  • VenutiusVenutius Yorkshire
    Posts: 2,925
    I've been thinking about it on and off all afternoon! :D
  • Posts: 12,264
    Absolutely dreading Election Day next Tuesday.
  • Posts: 17,279
    A wile ago I ordered a nice looking lounge table, made out of walnut veneer, applied to a plywood base. I had been looking for a table with the right size and look for months, before I found this one. It was a quite expensive designer table (expensive for my wallet at least), but I thought I would treat myself for once. Then I had to wait another three weeks before getting it delivered today.

    Once unpacked it looked alright, and assembling the base of the table was no trouble. When mounting the base to the tabletop however, everything went wrong. The base was mounted to a square metal plate which was to be placed into a corresponding square spot cut into the board of the table. It was a little bit of an awkward fit, but like when assembling the base, I expected that fastening the screws with the hex key would make the base go into place. I didn't take many turns with the hex key – the table base only halfway fastened at this point – until I hard a minor cracking sort of sound which is easy to mistake for the base setting into place. Having paid for an expensive piece of furniture, I took no chances and unscrewed the base. To my shock and horror the inner board which the veneer is applied to had cracked, making a bulge which now makes it impossible to mount the base! In other words, the table is useless, and didn't even make it through careful assembly…

    I now have to email the webshop I ordered the table from, and see if I can return the damn table and get a refund. If not, I've paid for a pricy piece of furniture (from a well-known designer brand mind) which will only end up being thrown away at the local recycling station.

    Had something similar happen. We even went with solid wood (Sheesham, not mahogany ^^) to have a higher chance of not having problems with the material and when it arrived the tabletop was warped, because the logistics company had stored and transported it on it's side and not flat. After corresponding with the manufacturer, we decided to keep the table and accept a big rebate instead of a replacement, because they would obviously throw the whole table away and we didn't want that. And now we have a slightly sloped dining table on which you have to kind of have to know where to place plates to not have them wobble when cutting something... Only slightly annoying, but still annoying.

    I've had my share of bad experiences with logistics companies too. Luckily not for the more expensive packages though!

    A little follow up: After contacting the webshop I ordered the table from, they've contacted the manufacturer which will deliver a new tabletop free of charge next week. They did not want the damaged tabletop in return, and since it's only the underside which is damaged, I have now found and ordered four table legs with clamps which will be mounted on the sides of the table rather than the underside – making it possible to make a custom lounge table to compliment the (what I hope will be) a damage free lounge table.
  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    Posts: 17,797
    FoxRox wrote: »
    Absolutely dreading Election Day next Tuesday.

    Have you got the mid-term blues?
  • Posts: 12,264
    Dragonpol wrote: »
    FoxRox wrote: »
    Absolutely dreading Election Day next Tuesday.

    Have you got the mid-term blues?

    24/7 political blues, exacerbated by this “holiday.”
  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    Posts: 17,797
    FoxRox wrote: »
    Dragonpol wrote: »
    FoxRox wrote: »
    Absolutely dreading Election Day next Tuesday.

    Have you got the mid-term blues?

    24/7 political blues, exacerbated by this “holiday.”

    Sorry to hear it. Hopefully matters political will go the way you wish.
  • edited November 2022 Posts: 12,264
    Thanks. That serves as a good launch pad though for a little rant. I don’t feel represented by the only two “electable” parties in the States. I think the two-party system stinks and has helped lead to the disturbing extremism we’ve seen continuing to just grow and grow, leaving open minded people who don’t align with every single idea behind. There’s a side I agree with more on, but because of the way they all behave I don’t like labeling myself. And all of it just seems to get worse and worse and worse every year. Plus my votes don’t even count being I’m not in a purple state.
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    It is only meant to give the illusion of choice.
  • ImpertinentGoonImpertinentGoon Everybody needs a hobby.
    Posts: 1,351
    I'm not going to quote your entire post due to it's length, @DarthDimi, but know that I think it is very well put. One can just look at the franchise that brings us all together here to note how financial success and critical assesment don't always go together; how 'popular opinion' changes over time; how one and the same piece of art can be loved and loathed by different people.
    I've only been on this forum and with that in the more engaged Bond fandom for a little over two years and even in that time, there are marked shifts in what is an outside opinion, what is gathering steam and what is widely accepted as in-group gospel.
    This is of course just my own perception, but 2 years ago, everyone was still coming to grips with OHMSS being a consensus top-level film for a lot of people, which is now teetering somwhere between "obvious truth" and "way overstated". Since then the very strong Dalton-renaissance has kicked off, with especially LTK seemingly only rising in the estimation. And finally, albeit not necessarily here, the wider populace seems to have adopted GoldenEye as the "standard classic Bond", the spot formerly inhabited by Goldfinger. That only really happened during the pandemic, when many people where doing rewatches, I feel like.
    And then for any of those points you can always find not a small number of people who are of the diametrically opposite opinion (f.e. I just don't see it with LTK. It's not horrible, but people are way over-praising that film).

    Secondly, as I mentioned before, I used to be a political scientist, so I always feel like I have to wade into arguments about political structures, but frankly, I don't feel it would help if I did a long post about the strengths and weaknesses of various systems and what factors do and do not lead to extremism. I think just the point that a lot of the things we in academia hold to be to true don't penetrate to the populace is an indictment of both political science and the wider political class in general.
    I have long felt that it is time for some very fundamental societal discussions about what we consider to be politics, what we want our politics to be and what that means for us. The irony is of course that the point in time where we most need to have these conversations is of course also the point in time where we are least able to come together to have them. Half the problems we have today are because we can't talk to each other anymore. So, maybe it's a very "ivory tower" idea to say "well, we just need some good think pieces and an honest conversation and this will all sort itself out".
  • ProfJoeButcherProfJoeButcher Bless your heart
    Posts: 1,690
    FoxRox wrote: »
    Thanks. That serves as a good launch pad though for a little rant. I don’t feel represented by the only two “electable” parties in the States. I think the two-party system stinks and has helped lead to the disturbing extremism we’ve seen continuing to just grow and grow, leaving open minded people who don’t align with every single idea behind. There’s a side I agree with more on, but because of the way they all behave I don’t like labeling myself. And all of it just seems to get worse and worse and worse every year. Plus my votes don’t even count being I’m not in a purple state.

    I'm pretty much in exactly the same place as a Democrat in California. I feel like there's a wing of my party that's slowly going nuts, but the party as a whole is pretty much what I want and there's obviously no voting for the Republicans.

    In a winner-take-all system you're pretty much stuck with two parties though. I actually live in Germany, which of course has a parliamentary system, so the sane and insane alike have a choice between a few options.
  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    Posts: 17,797
    FoxRox wrote: »
    Thanks. That serves as a good launch pad though for a little rant. I don’t feel represented by the only two “electable” parties in the States. I think the two-party system stinks and has helped lead to the disturbing extremism we’ve seen continuing to just grow and grow, leaving open minded people who don’t align with every single idea behind. There’s a side I agree with more on, but because of the way they all behave I don’t like labeling myself. And all of it just seems to get worse and worse and worse every year. Plus my votes don’t even count being I’m not in a purple state.

    It's much the same in the UK where nationally the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour have dominated politics here for the last one hundred years or so. This often happens in democracies, but I suppose the only alternative is the instability of several larger and smaller political parties in a coalition (see Italy etc.) or (even worse) the one-party state of the dictatorship where opposition parties are banned, and their leaders imprisoned or killed.

    Sir Winston Churchill once said that “democracy is the worst form of government – except for all the others that have been tried.” There's definitely something in that. At least in a democracy we have the right to vote for an opposition party and change the guard every five or so years, depending on the relevant election law. I'd say it's very important to exercise your democratic right to vote and cast your vote for the candidate or candidates of your choice. Remember that every vote cast for your candidate is one less vote for the other candidates and parties and that if enough people did the same real change in politics would be assured. It's important not to give up hope and to not become cynical about the efficacy of voting as if you feel it achieves nothing then be assured that people not voting achieves even less. Hope these considerations help as you cast your vote.
  • edited November 2022 Posts: 784
    The film industry seems adamant on making itself irrelevant.
  • peterpeter Toronto
    Posts: 8,491
    @ByRoyalDecree you really have a general dislike towards the film industry.

    But why?

    I ask since this isn't the first shot you've thrown at it, so I'm interested. Is it the global film industry? The US? UK?... What happened that made you quite cynical?
  • Posts: 14,816
    I'm sick on my wife's birthday, so we had to cancel the restaurant reservations. And I spent most of the day sleeping.
  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    Posts: 17,797
    Ludovico wrote: »
    I'm sick on my wife's birthday, so we had to cancel the restaurant reservations. And I spent most of the day sleeping.

    That's awful. Hope you feel better soon, @Ludovico.
  • j_w_pepperj_w_pepper Born on the bayou. I can still hear my old hound dog barkin'.
    Posts: 8,684
    Ludovico wrote: »
    I'm sick on my wife's birthday, so we had to cancel the restaurant reservations. And I spent most of the day sleeping.

    Get well soon, @Ludovico!
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 23,536
    Ludovico wrote: »
    I'm sick on my wife's birthday, so we had to cancel the restaurant reservations. And I spent most of the day sleeping.

    Birthdays can wait. You get better first, @Ludovico!
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