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#tv shows ruining my life – @greenberetgirl on Tumblr
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chapter three

@greenberetgirl / greenberetgirl.tumblr.com

Silvia, 31, an Italian abroad. ENFP. This blog is like that section in bookshops that encompasses both fantasy and sci fi. There's really no rhyme or reason to it.
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camhowes

a rant.

So much of TV is way too concerned with being Clever™ right now. There’s this pervasive myth that audiences won’t enjoy a narrative climax unless it’s a total surprise. “Predictable” is always used as a pejorative term when it comes to storytelling, but I think that’s absolute crap, because here’s the thing: 

Unpredictability is not, inherently, a virtue. Unpredictability can mean: a) you don’t have a clear grasp on who your characters are or what direction they’re growing. b) you don’t have a clear vision for the story you’re trying to tell. c) you don’t know how to tell the story (for example, you have a Point A and a Point B but the middle is a bunch of disjointed time-wasting filler. 

“But,” the showrunners cry, “you never saw that twist coming! We kept you on your toes!” That does not make it good. Cleverness is often just smoke and mirrors designed to distract the audience from a lack of substance; it doesn’t guarantee a worthwhile story. I don’t want to be shocked for the sake of surprise - I want to feel like the experience was worth my time.

I want to be introduced to a character, and then I want to be taken on a journey with that character. I want every step of that journey to teach me who they are; what they believe, what they want, what they hate, what they fear, and what they love, so that when they are faced with a conflict or a critical moment of decision, I understand exactly why they do what they do. I’m hoping their choices in that moment will reveal something truthful and powerful and worth knowing about another person’s experience. 

That’s what I want in a story. I genuinely don’t care whether it’s clever or predictable or whatever; I just want a worthwhile journey in which every moment of every episode means something - to the character(s), and to me. That’s what makes serial television satisfying. It has nothing to do with shock or intellect or reinventing the wheel, it’s just about telling the damn story in a way that makes you feel it.

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reblogged

What I loved most and what I found particularly powerful was Nick being surrounded by female Grimms, women who are integral to his life and propelled him forward throughout everything. Seeing Nick with his mother, aunt, and Trubel, fighting together was incredibly epic!

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Agreed! One of the things this show has always done incredibly well, IMO, is having a male protagonist surrounded by women without making those women seem like accessories.

Each woman on this show is powerful, and each one has her own story. And the fact is that Nick would not be who he is–would not have won this final fight at all–if it weren’t for these amazing women who’ve shaped him throughout his life. Particularly Kelly Sr. and Marie.

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lamphous

concept: a tv show with absolutely no romance. no romance at all. no contrived love triangles or forbidden love or unsolicited advances. the villian kidnaps a best friend because they’re the most important person to the hero. there’s no kissing in the rain and no dying confessions of endless burning love. instead there’s friendship and hugging and platonic i love you’s and no one ever thinks there need be “more.”

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Comedy Feeds 2014

Josh: Sitcom based on the stand up of Josh Widdicombe.
Fried: A new manager tries to motivate the staff of a fried chicken shop.
Parents Evening: Multi-character comedy set over the course of a school parents’ evening.
Flat TV: Two guys share a flat where real life gets confused with a fantasy TV world.
Vodka Diaries: Four girls share a flat and get up to no good.
In Deep: Two police officers plunge out of their depth when an undercover operation goes wrong.
Rude Boys: The antics of a group of friends in East London.
Other World: Surreal sketch show set in an alternative universe populated by puppets.
Access All Areas: YouTube star Jenny Bede plays a range of characters in a razor-sharp parody of music TV.
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