modernwizard: (Default)
[personal profile] modernwizard
...how no one chit-chats on TV shows? I was watching Grimm this morning [back from its winter hiatus and as gloriously stupid as ever!], and yet again I noticed how no one ever stammers, stutters, repeats themselves or says hello or goodbye. [Apparently meaningful stares take the place of these conversational markers.] Everyone says everything just once, in the most condensed, pithy, comprehensible way possible, and the listeners always comprehend perfectly and let their interlocutors go without saying goodbye.

I understand that TV represents a stylized view of human interactions, but we spend so much time saying hello, making small talk, repeating ourselves, going "uhhhhhhh..." and saying goodbye that TV's persistent refusal to even acknowledge the actual form of most modern conversations just kills my suspension of disbelief. Instead of following the story, I'm too busy thinking about a) how actors are apparently paid by the world, so cheap studios limit their lines so they don't have to pay them too much and b) how rude and socially inept all the characters would be if they acted like this in real life. Then I become irritated with the whole enterprise and start wanting to throw things at the screen.

Date: Mar. 13th, 2013 09:31 am (UTC)
seventhbard: photo of a plush unicorn on a dark background (Default)
From: [personal profile] seventhbard
It is rather weird.

The one place I notice the kind of hemming and hawing and verbal flailing that real conversations have (only with not exactly authentic exaggeration and laff trax) is on comedy sitcoms-- I don't really like comedy sitcoms much for the most part though so I can't even say if that's still true as it's been a while since I've seen one.

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