I keep checking into this thread tho I tell myself not to. It's like a train wreck -- I can't not look.
Let me see if I get the recent logic:
axiom:Some or even many people don't notice the changes, thus the changes are "good."
So ... logically speaking here . . . if I take Shakespeare, take out a bunch of the harder words and replace them with easier words so that it's more accessible . . . and if most people don't notice the changes . . . that is "good"?
The new version would be easier to read and be more accessible. But I wouldn't make a blanket pronouncement like "good" or "better." Why do we have to generalize and say the new effects are cleaner, snazzier, whatever, thus . . . "BETTER." Or, conversely, the old effects are truer to the look and production values of the rest of the show, thus the "GOOD" version?
I can see "pros" for each style. I prefer the old, but they are not the "good" way or absolutely "better."
Wow, people. Be well. Thanks for the entertainment, though, seriously. I'm sure I'll check beck on this train wreck again.
Let me see if I get the recent logic:
axiom:Some or even many people don't notice the changes, thus the changes are "good."
So ... logically speaking here . . . if I take Shakespeare, take out a bunch of the harder words and replace them with easier words so that it's more accessible . . . and if most people don't notice the changes . . . that is "good"?

The new version would be easier to read and be more accessible. But I wouldn't make a blanket pronouncement like "good" or "better." Why do we have to generalize and say the new effects are cleaner, snazzier, whatever, thus . . . "BETTER." Or, conversely, the old effects are truer to the look and production values of the rest of the show, thus the "GOOD" version?
I can see "pros" for each style. I prefer the old, but they are not the "good" way or absolutely "better."
Wow, people. Be well. Thanks for the entertainment, though, seriously. I'm sure I'll check beck on this train wreck again.