Connecting Readers and Writers discussion

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Sleep With One Eye Open
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Is it just me?
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These are supposedly intelligent people. But none of them ever think to bring a book to read during their breaks.


Is this because the games are visually more appealing, or has so much money been pumped into advertising that people just believe whatever they're told to believe.

Nah, in France, it's cool and trendy, and it means you live in Paris, drink champagne wine in your bathtub, and go to celeb parties. Of course, that's until you 'fess up and say you write SF or fantasy. Then you're the next uncouth idiot who doesn't deserve a second glance because you don't know what True Literature is. *elitist country o' doom*
(Seriously, soon we're going to have some TV-reality show about "20 authors competing to write a book in 10 days". If authors don't become the next best thing after that, I don't know what gives. Of course, writing SFF, I'll still be the uncouth idiot.)

Even when you're not actually writing; psychologically, you're still in the book.


As to television, Dutch television has more variety in the sense that we have great documentaries and films, and rarely will people admit to being a fan of Idols and other 'reality' shows.

You assume we all have souls that will be destroyed by disturbing subject matter. Whatever pretends to be my soul is clad in asbestos armor. What I fear more than the dragon of doom is the beast of boredom and the avatar of apathy.

As to boredom - check out my book titles, then have a good laugh, Martyn."
:) How apt! :)
Now check mine and wonder if I have a soul...

I used to work shifts, so I never could watch anything 'live', so I taped what I wanted to see, which allowed me to fast-forward through commercials.

Well, considering Katla the remorseless freelance assassin sprung from the same mind that created Bram the blind jazz musician, I'm kind of 'on the fence' about the darkness of my soul.
Although some readers think that I must be pretty twisted to think up the scenarios of my books.

I don't know how they are 'supposed' to be. I'm just me, and sometimes I scare myself. When you're writing suspense fiction, scaring yourself is probably a good thing.
:)

Doesn't that depend on what you cry about?

Or, if what you just wrote made you feel a little ill.


Writing for entertainment, self-expression, or sharing ideas is healthy and rewarding.
That said; an excess of anything is seldom good for you.
The negative impact of any activity that prevents one from active participation and interaction in the real world for extremely long periods of time outweighs any benefit.


Sadly, this is true. People have become more obsessed with these reality TV shows than they have real educational things that actually make them think.
For example: Men in Tights versus Scary Movie (or any of the other dull "movie" titles)
The worst thing is, is that these people are actually allowed into public, where they are free to spread their unintelligent-like plague among their peers, who in turn become unintelligent-plague carriers. Usually, these people are drama-filled and can't think for themselves without being shown how to do so, and what the "society" around them expects out of them. If they do not conform, they will be ridiculed and left behind--and these people are afraid of being alone.
As a writer, we do not mind being alone. We have more time to spend on our stories, in our worlds, honing our craft to perfection--which will take time since perfection is nearly impossible.
I have a 55" LED and I never turn it on unless to watch movies, or the occasional episode of Bones. My husband is the person in the house who needs it on all the time, but he watches HGTV, Food Network, Foxnews, or the occasional MMA fight show--never anything else.

LoL. Now I'm interested in finding out what it is.

It is a great movie, well worth watching.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0387808/?...

*nods* I'm actually debating about losing my worries in a good book, or gritting it out by watching a bunch of stupid teenagers get slaughtered in a horror flick.


The Simpsons summed it up best. (Yes, I enjoy watching the Simpsons, it is my guilty pleasure). The Simpsons - Treehouse of Horror III (the annual Halloween episode).
Marge: Well I'm sure glad we didn't turn into mindless zombies.
Bart: Shhhh! TV.


I've spent the last ten months (or so) writing and editing my book, so TV has been a non-entity in my life. Over that time, colleagues and acquaintances keep asking me my opinion on the latest reality TV shows, "What did you think of the dish so-and-so cooked on Master Chef?", or "Do you think X and Y will get together on Big Brother?". I wouldn't watch these shows anyway, but when I remind them I'm writing a book, and politely apologize for not knowing what they're talking about, they look at me like I have three heads.
Am I surrounded by an inordinate number of couch-potatoes, or has society really succumbed to trash-TV?