Once I got past the “I am better than you are” aspect of your post, I found these points worthy of response.
It is measured by a television show which can tell its story or make its point without either resorting to or relying on crudity for the sake of crudity or sexual pandering simply because sex sells or glorifying the most horrific nature of man as something to be idolized. If “Deadwood” was about all the things you say it was about, it could have been about those issues without saturating the dialect with crudity simply for the sake of being crude. That is not intelligent writing, as an eighth grader could accomplish that.
We “have” to? No, we don’t. Would filling my response here with profanity laced invective convey my point any more effectively? A curse is at times effective, as in Kirk’s application in the episode “City on the Edge of Forever”. But profanity for profanity’s sake is not only annoying but insulting, and if writers have to rely on that device to be effective then they are not very intelligent writers.
Intelligence is both, as propaganda can be intelligently crafted but still be sophistry. The counter to propaganda is the truth, and the truth by definition is ethical.
If the statue of David had been crafted sporting an erection, would the intelligence it conveys be interpreted differently?
Star Trek, including “Enterprise”, always attempted to tell it stories without resorting to moral relativism or the glorification of the anti-hero or overt sexual innuendo or the overt depiction of sexual conduct or the inclusion of crudity in language simply for the sake of crudity in language or any supposed shock value. It made limited but effective use of those devices, and that is one reason I admired the show. “House” is another television show currently being aired which falls into this category. There is language and sexual content to be found in “House“, to be sure, but it does not define the series. Nor did it define “Enterprise” or any of the other Trek incarnations.
As for poetry I was always partial to Shakespeare’s use of metaphor found in his prose, as in Lear’s speech on adultery and the “sulphurous pit; burning, scalding, stench, consumption!”
Sure it can, if it serves important artistic and intelligent ends. But when Tony Soprano’s boys gang-rape a former associate simply because they find out he is gay, or the boys from “Oz” wall up another inmate behind a Coke machine and leave him to die all while having a good laugh about it, I don’t see that as “artistic and intelligent” entertainment television. That is dystopian, a glorification of the worst man can be. Trek, including “Enterprise”, did not fall into that trap.
If you really want to know where I am coming from where Trek is concerned, follow the link below and read post number 82. I wrote it as part of my TOS “Best and Worst Of” thread as posted on other websites. Or, follow the second link to a thread here concerning the TNG episode “The Royale” and my response to Sho, post number 54.
Link 1:
http://www.armchairgeneral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=97865&highlight=star+trek+worst&page=6
Link 2: http://www.trekbbs.com/showthread.php?t=161416&page=4
I can see that your view of intelligence is that it is measurable by producing a correct or healthy world-view?
It is measured by a television show which can tell its story or make its point without either resorting to or relying on crudity for the sake of crudity or sexual pandering simply because sex sells or glorifying the most horrific nature of man as something to be idolized. If “Deadwood” was about all the things you say it was about, it could have been about those issues without saturating the dialect with crudity simply for the sake of being crude. That is not intelligent writing, as an eighth grader could accomplish that.
But to be able to understand its grand narrative, its critique of traditional historiography of the 'wild west' and its depiction of the west through more historically correct figures than prior westerns, you have to hear that cursed language...
We “have” to? No, we don’t. Would filling my response here with profanity laced invective convey my point any more effectively? A curse is at times effective, as in Kirk’s application in the episode “City on the Edge of Forever”. But profanity for profanity’s sake is not only annoying but insulting, and if writers have to rely on that device to be effective then they are not very intelligent writers.
Intelligence is sophistic, not ethical.
Intelligence is both, as propaganda can be intelligently crafted but still be sophistry. The counter to propaganda is the truth, and the truth by definition is ethical.
Intelligence is displayed in the making of a given object...
If the statue of David had been crafted sporting an erection, would the intelligence it conveys be interpreted differently?
Star Trek, including “Enterprise”, always attempted to tell it stories without resorting to moral relativism or the glorification of the anti-hero or overt sexual innuendo or the overt depiction of sexual conduct or the inclusion of crudity in language simply for the sake of crudity in language or any supposed shock value. It made limited but effective use of those devices, and that is one reason I admired the show. “House” is another television show currently being aired which falls into this category. There is language and sexual content to be found in “House“, to be sure, but it does not define the series. Nor did it define “Enterprise” or any of the other Trek incarnations.
As for poetry I was always partial to Shakespeare’s use of metaphor found in his prose, as in Lear’s speech on adultery and the “sulphurous pit; burning, scalding, stench, consumption!”
You see, ugliness in drama, in poetry, in art, can serve important artistic and intelligent ends.
Sure it can, if it serves important artistic and intelligent ends. But when Tony Soprano’s boys gang-rape a former associate simply because they find out he is gay, or the boys from “Oz” wall up another inmate behind a Coke machine and leave him to die all while having a good laugh about it, I don’t see that as “artistic and intelligent” entertainment television. That is dystopian, a glorification of the worst man can be. Trek, including “Enterprise”, did not fall into that trap.
If you really want to know where I am coming from where Trek is concerned, follow the link below and read post number 82. I wrote it as part of my TOS “Best and Worst Of” thread as posted on other websites. Or, follow the second link to a thread here concerning the TNG episode “The Royale” and my response to Sho, post number 54.
Link 1:
http://www.armchairgeneral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=97865&highlight=star+trek+worst&page=6
Link 2: http://www.trekbbs.com/showthread.php?t=161416&page=4