Trek is so sincere that irony is virtually nonexistent, much less "camp."
Maybe "camp" nowadays means intentional and self-conscious parody. Back when the term entered the vernacular in the mid-1960s, it meant something closer to Susan Sontag's definition: popular culture that's unintentionally "so bad it's good." Indeed, the words camp and kitsch had essentially the same meaning.In my Media Criticism and Theory class I took junior year I learned that camp was a self-conscious delivery of art or media--it's inherently post-modern. Things like parody and punk rock (especially sub-genres with prefixes like Post and Neo) can sometimes fall into that category. It's usually ironic and meta.
Gee, who'd a thunk it? Sincerity . . . what a concept!I'm kind of sick of the cynicism that comes with postmodern irony. I like to think that the idea of New Sincerity might catch on.
I watched syndicated Star Trek on a primitive cable TV system that carried some pretty fringe stations (channel 42 in Birmingham, for instance--over 100 miles away and which didn't come in clearly unless it was raining).
I think I'll stick with postmodern ironic detachment.![]()
They were and they weren't. It depended on the channel you were watching and whether it was a VHF or UHF channel. Most VHF channels looked good on our TV, but the UHF channels were another story. Often you'd have to buy a loop antenna to see anything. And even with the VHS channels every channel was often at a different level of clarity.
I think I'll stick with postmodern ironic detachment.![]()
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I dunno. I always thought "The Cage" was a thinly-veiled swipe at getting addicted to television, using a TV show to warn viewers about the inherent disaster of getting too caught up . . . in a TV show.Trek is so sincere that irony is virtually nonexistent, much less "camp."
I dunno. I always thought "The Cage" was a thinly-veiled swipe at getting addicted to television, using a TV show to warn viewers about the inherent disaster of getting too caught up . . . in a TV show.
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