purplecat: Hand Drawn picture of a Toy Cat (Space Opera)
[personal profile] purplecat
Ooh! Haven't done one of these for a while.

Reading: Companion Piece. One in the line of books that started with Chicks Dig Time Lords. I was somewhat bemused by the popularity of Chicks Dig..., I think in part because it didn't seem to bear any relation to my own experience as a female Who fan but I rated Queers Dig Time Lords very highly. So far I'm feeling a bit `meh' about Companion Piece though I'm only a couple of essays into it - in general (though not exclusively) it's been a bit short on the analysis and a bit long on the summaries, but early days yet....

Listening: I've started listening to the Philosophise This podcast. I'm enjoying the survey of the history of philosophy but I find some of the presentation a little hokey.

Watching: Apart from the Randomiser we're not really watching anything consistently at the moment. Odd episodes of Tintin, and Star Trek (both TOS and Discovery). Comparing and contrasting original Star Trek with Discovery is interesting, for all its cheesiness to modern eyes the original series was trying to be high concept in a way Discovery isn't (or at least from what we've seen so far). Discovery seems to be going much more down the space opera/politics route which feels very familiar, particularly viewing it hot on the heels of The Expanse. I feel there is quite a lot of Discovery-like stuff about at the moment but not much original Star Trek-like stuff (possibly Black Mirror but we bailed halfway through the first episode unconvinced by the set-up and another episode I was shown by a friend left me with too many questions about how the concept was supposed to work to feel satisfied- high concept, particularly when you have to both tell a story and set up a convincing world in the space of 45 minutes is hard).

(no subject)

Date: 2018-02-01 02:41 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] theandrewhickey
If you want high concept, then I can't recommend The Good Place highly enough. It's ostensibly a sitcom (and is pretty funny as these things go), but it's an *extraordinarily* well-plotted piece of SFF, one that burns through ideas in a single twenty-five minute episode which most series would get an entire season or more out of, and which has the best use of cliffhangers I've ever come across.

(no subject)

Date: 2018-02-02 07:15 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] theandrewhickey
A little, mostly in the first few episodes. But while I found the first season of Parks & Recreation unwatchable, for example, because of that, and I can't get even half-way through the first episode of Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, I've had no real problem with it.
One friend who is even more sensitive to these things than I am said she had to keep pausing it at first, but bore with it and after the first three episodes she was fine. I've not known anyone else to have a problem with it (and many of my friends are, like myself, autistic and so super-sensitive to that kind of thing).
(Also, to address the other common problems with TV comedy, the cast is multi-racial, with only one white man in the core cast of six, and I've noticed no LGBT+phobia)

(no subject)

Date: 2018-02-03 03:28 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] theandrewhickey
Very glad it went down well/didn't cause too much cringing. One bit of advice if you're going to continue watching it -- don't read *any* discussions of the series. It does some wonderful things with cliffhangers (the first really good one is in episode three, and it just gets better from there) and it's one of the few series I can think of where spoilers might really affect one's enjoyment.

(no subject)

Date: 2018-01-31 08:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] daniel-saunders.livejournal.com
I confess I haven't seen Discovery, I'm too busy watching Doctor Who for my writing project. I might also have been a bit put off by watching DS9 in 2015-2016 and finding it not as good as I remembered, mostly because the politics wasn't as central as I remembered. It's interesting that the politics approach seems passe when it was once groundbreaking. I guess that's life, although it shows how far behind I am that that hadn't really registered with me (I'm not familiar with The Expanse or Black Mirror).

(no subject)

Date: 2018-01-31 09:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] daniel-saunders.livejournal.com
Thanks for this (I wasn't expecting you to summarise, but thanks anyway!). The Expanse sounds vaguely interesting, but I have a long to-watch list...

I should probably also say that I don't need Jewish characters in everything I watch/read! I do play that up a bit to make a political point, because I get annoyed that 'Jewish' isn't considered a 'real' identity by most identity politics people or, perhaps worse, is just considered a subcategory of Western/white/oppressor, whereas the reality is more complex. It does occasionally bother me that if I want depictions of people like me (Jewish and religious, but engaged with the secular world) in contemporary settings, I'm extremely limited in choice, but I do know that Jews are a tiny minority, religious Jews a minority of a minority and religious Jews in some sense engaged with the wider world a minority of a minority of a minority! So I don't need religious Jews, or aliens who can be analogised as Jews, but it is nice to have them sometimes, if done well!

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