This article I was reading had the following two quotes which
amused me and made me ponder:
“When you don’t watch television for a long time, your way of
thinking becomes different, your idea of what is interesting is not the same as
what television people think should be interesting.” (Tran, 2001:7)
“the common factor to all 20th-century lunatics and serial
killers, from Stalin to Lee Harvey Oswald, was this: they didn’t watch enough
telly” (Scott, 1999:17).
The article isn’t that old, but it would seem to be, given the
rate at which technologies are changing. We don’t set as much store by the
‘television’ anymore I guess, since the arrival of Netflix and smart phones.
Entertainment has moved elsewhere. Technically Netflix could be called
television as you might be watching it on the television screen, but I guess
what these quotes are referring to is something different. A ‘television
culture’ as it were, which is produced by most people watching the same shows
at the same times. It gave everyone’s life a common context so to speak. If you
aren’t watching it, then it’s almost like you do not even live in the same
world, even though you do. Sort of reminds me how in India at one point we had
a lot of television based on the Indian epics: Ramayana, Mahabharata, etc.
Everything revolved around them, people spoke of nothing else!
It’s not the same anymore with Netflix. Each person chooses what
they want to watch for themselves. And many probably just choose to browse
social media or do games on their smart phones. Of course, you could still end
up watching the same popular shows on Netflix or other streaming services as
your friends… but I think it’s still not the same? Unlike earlier when people
who all watched television shared a common context or inhabited a similar world
which was distinct from those who didn’t, now everyone inhabits their own
unique world, a world in which what they consume in terms of media or stories
or knowledge or news or entertainment is all very different from the next
person. It sort of makes me wonder what that means from a social perspective…?
posted by Sylvia D'souza at 2:21 am
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