The Mandalorian is safe, comfort food.But that doesn't explain why STD is getting 10 times the hate of the Mandalorian.
The Mandalorian is safe, comfort food.But that doesn't explain why STD is getting 10 times the hate of the Mandalorian.
Now even I'm curious as to where you are getting these statistics from, cause it sure does seem like you're just pulling them outta your arse.But that doesn't explain why STD is getting 10 times the hate of the Mandalorian.
I got 99 problems, but DISCO ain't one.Burnham is human one episode, more Vulcan the next. She bounces all over the map but that's how she's written. She's a human raised from roughly the age of 10 by the Vulcan Ambassador to the Federation and with a half-Vulcan adoptive brother. She struggles with doing too much and then not doing enough.
I have many issues with DSC but Burnham being a narcissistic and problem character isn't one of them.
Frustration is kicking in.Are you okay? Your posts seem to be becoming less coherent. Maybe take a break from this thread?
As soon as baby yoda wasn't part of the picture it was bound to have an uphill battle.Well, now The Book of Boba Fett is being called a failure by a lot of people on social media because of some Space Vespa bikes and Boba isn't the ruthless badass they wanted him to be. So yes, Star Wars series are getting their share of hate, too.
Talks too much? Yeah, that can be kind of a problem when there's work to be done.because she's conversative
But that doesn't explain why STD is getting 10 times the hate of the Mandalorian.
Yep! As popular as ST IV was - with fans, critics and the general public - the club I ran (over 1000 members at that time) had numerous diehard TOS fans walk away from the club in anger in 1986, calling ST IV "the dumbing down of the franchise for the masses".
What demographic are you talking about?Frustration is kicking in.
It's the nature of the topic.
When your demographic is being pushed from a fandom, it kind of breeds resentment.
And it's one thing if it's just being pushed away to chase after a younger demographic, it's strange, it's different, it's not my pace.
I could agree this might be the case with lower decks(I don't watch it).
It's that the production companies being supported are known for their choppy style over substance productions. Let's pretend I'm willing to meet you half way, and watch a show like the 100. The problem is corporate decision making has already decided they have zero interest in substance. And while there's always been corporations etc, it hasn't been the case that the bulk of everything is owned by the richest corporations on earth who are also heavily involved in analytics etc, sifting through everyones data etc, and determining who and how they want to alienate people.(people like myself are hard to market to because our lives are relatively fixed)
It's also the nature of subscription services. My demographic tends to pirate or spend most of their money on video games etc.
And it's the structure of how it is going down. It's the blatant actions that are gonna alienate my peer group even more.
Streaming services don't work directly on add revenue. They work by getting a person to sign up for a service. In our case we have amazon because it's how we buy everything. What I watch is irrelevant as long as they feel their is enough content that I won't cancel.
There's good reason to think once they've monopolized the market that shows like the expanse won't come about again.
Male Mid 30s, without children, willing to spend large sums of money media etc. With that money ending up in the hands of game developers(who are increasingly turning us into addicts). (Since I got married 3 years ago, I've spend about 2 grand on my ps4, and another 1.5 grand on hockey subscriptions and merch) When my dad was in his thirties they needed to create shows in order to sell pickup trucks. With subscription services the whole equation has changed.What demographic are you talking about?
Male Mid 30s, without children, willing to spend large sums of money media etc. With that money ending up in the hands of game developers(who are increasingly turning us into addicts). (Since I got married 3 years ago, I've spend about 2 grand on my ps4, and another 1.5 grand on hockey subscriptions and merch) When my dad was in his thirties they needed to create shows in order to sell pickup trucks. With subscription services the whole equation has changed.
When I look at my friends it's clear their money is gonna dive straight back into video games.
By greater extension I guess you could say the Joe Rogan demographic. Open to psychedelic experiences/liberal ideas, but also open to guns/law and order etc, not necessarily liberal/conservative, but big on the idea of independence, especially from certain kinds of politics. We're too rebellious to buy into brands, which means it's harder to sell us Avenger's branded underwear.
It isn't that content for my demographic doesn't exist, it's that it's receding into a silo, at odds with the greater population.
And again the people at CBS/Netflix/Disney/Amazon know this. If I'm single I'll pirate, if I'm married you need to please my wife too.
You get a few bread crumbs here and there, Dune being an example(which underperforms), but it's been a spiraling trend since streaming became big.
Because if there's anything that displays one's integrity as a psychologist, it's making a conclusive mental health diagnosis about a non-existent person based on 3-5 non-interactive observations of significantly less than 42 minutes each.So you don't think she displays narcissistic traits specifically within the first 3-5 episodes? Are you gonna make that claim with integrity?
You edit TV shows frame-by-frame to point out and eliminate certain personality traits that bother you, huh? I think I've identified some of those extreme personality traits you were looking for.All she displays when you're getting to know her are those extreme personality traits. And again I've spent my time on those episodes trying to edit it out, so I at one point could point out the exact frames where this occurred.
Cool story, dudebro.Male Mid 30s, without children, willing to spend large sums of money media etc. With that money ending up in the hands of game developers(who are increasingly turning us into addicts). (Since I got married 3 years ago, I've spend about 2 grand on my ps4, and another 1.5 grand on hockey subscriptions and merch) When my dad was in his thirties they needed to create shows in order to sell pickup trucks. With subscription services the whole equation has changed.
When I look at my friends it's clear their money is gonna dive straight back into video games.
By greater extension I guess you could say the Joe Rogan demographic. Open to psychedelic experiences/liberal ideas, but also open to guns/law and order etc, not necessarily liberal/conservative, but big on the idea of independence, especially from certain kinds of politics. We're too rebellious to buy into brands, which means it's harder to sell us Avenger's branded underwear.
It isn't that content for my demographic doesn't exist, it's that it's receding into a silo, at odds with the greater population.
And again the people at CBS/Netflix/Disney/Amazon know this. If I'm single I'll pirate, if I'm married you need to please my wife too.
You get a few bread crumbs here and there, Dune being an example(which underperforms), but it's been a spiraling trend since streaming became big.
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