Sci said:
Yep. And for that matter, Doctor Who has made regular use of popular music since its revival -- -- everything from "Tainted Love" by Soft Cell, to Britney Spears's "Toxic," to "Moonlight Serenade" by Glenn Miller, to "Abide With Me," to "I Can't Decide" by Scissor Sisters, to "Bohemian Rhapsody" by Queen, to "Rolling in the Deep" by Adele, to "Hungry Like the Wolf" by Duran Duran, to "Don't Stop Me Now" by Queen as covered by Foxes.
Or think about how beautifully the heart break of the season six Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode "Tabula Rasa" was captured by their using "Goodbye to You" by Michelle Branch, or the same for the Angel season five episode "Shells," which used "A Place Called Home" by Kim Richey. The use of contemporary music can be deeply, deeply moving and effective.
Or it is used because the stories have less or nothing of actual substance to offer its target audience,
For the examples I cited: pure nonsense.
Music can be great but it's got to enhance the story first, not be it - not be the pretty shiny thing to make up for a lack of a compelling storyline
That's true of
any element, be it the writing, the acting, the direction, the cinematography, the set, the lighting, the art design, the whatever.
Every element needs to be used in a way that is well thought-out and enhances the story.
No one is arguing that there are never situations where music -- or these other elements! -- are used in a thoughtless attempt to draw the audience's attention away from an overall bad production. But I am arguing that popular music, just like orchestral music, and just like other elements,
can be used in a thoughtful, effective way and that space opera shows should not be obliged to only use orchestral per se.
If the music feels more potent on its own, and watching the story with the music turned off during the song scene, that's a giveaway that the story might not be that good.
Maybe -- maybe not. Music can be more than just a pretty ornament -- it can be something that reacts to and comments upon the scene unfolding, and therefore can enhance the level of depth and sophistication involved. As video essayist Patrick H. Willems noted in his most recent video, for instance, Martin Scorsese carefully chose the songs used in
GoodFellas to express the emotional journey the main character goes on. Popular music in a film or TV show can end up being a modern sort of "Greek Chorus."
I'd argue that, with "The End of the World" for starters, it didn't need to go out on a limb to use music to sell the story and characters to begin with
I think "The End of the World" was very effective in its use of "Toxic" and "Tainted Love" -- it established very early on that
Doctor Who would be a show that was playful and wouldn't have a stick up its ass about its own storytelling; it established that underneath the trappings of a sci-fi adventure show, it would be a romance between the Doctor and Rose (which it was for its first two seasons); and it foreshadowed the ways in which that romance was frankly doomed.
There are few times when adding in pop music can actually work, "Knight Rider" did it the best since it's usually over overly long lazy driving scenes to pad out the story with and it's like us in the passenger seat listening to music
That is the absolute worst possible way I could ever imagine adding popular music to a scene -- to have it be nothing but "ear candy" that adds nothing to the story, makes no comment upon the story, can easily be removed without affecting anything.