There are few things
that can make you lose yourself more effectively than television. So, when I turn on the TV expecting to enter
a lesser state of consciousness, I am enraged to have lost myself and found a
desperate housewife. We are living in an
age where entertainment has become less of an art and more of an accident. The mainstream media is flooded with corrupt
content while quality substance disappears from our screens. America needs to face a simple fact. Some TV is good, other TV is bad.
This may appear to be a
matter of opinion, but it is not. Some
shows are simply better than others.
Writing, acting, directing, and producing come together to make
television worth watching. However,
let’s take a step back. Why is
television important? It’s just mindless
entertainment, right? Wrong. People dedicate huge portions of their lives
to television. Even if you only watch
your favorite show once a week, that time adds up. TV appeals to all ages, all ethnicities, all
classes. It’s something to look
forward. It’s something to discuss with
your friends. It’s something to gather
the family together. How can the
all-encompassing phenomenon of television be passed off as trivial? And how can the scum of reality TV, the
garbage of poorly-written sitcoms, or the filth of Jerry Springer-esque talk shows be allowed to contaminate something so holy? These shows run for years, spewing brain-dead
nonsense into society. Brilliant shows
however, collapse under corporate management.
Joss Whedon’s Firefly
is exhibit A. Written superbly, acted
beautifully, and directed expertly, the gloriously original sci-fi western was
cancelled before the first season was through.
How could society damn such a wonderful show? How could Firefly—in its first year of
life—be pushed into the purgatory of cult fame?
Cult shows have it
rough. Community—the prime-time,
Emmy-nominated sitcom—has been threatened with cancellation multiple
times. Dangling from its fan following,
high ratings, and comedic genius, Community is in a precarious situation
that some far worse shows have never seen.
![]() |
| Tom Hanks and Peter Scolari |
Take, for example, BosomBuddies. With a premise so
ridiculous that not even the adorable Tom Hanks could save it, the show still
managed to pull through a solid two years on air. I’ve had enough of melodramatic teen shows
like Saved by the Bell that somehow cling to existence for four
years. I’ve had enough of vampire love
triangles like The Vampire Diaries that will not die no matter how many
times you stake them. I’ve had
enough.
It is time for America
to wise up and develop some taste. Support
the shows that deserve your support. For
these television series, it is a matter of life and death. As for me, I am just hoping that Here
Comes Honey Boo-Boo will not run as long as House.


You were really concise and it was actually really effective. Your claims were solid and straight to the point. I liked the last couple sentences of the second paragraph. That paragraph had a lot of good appeals and vivid word choice. I read a lot of things you said and thought, "Hmm...she's right." Good job on voice and the vocabulary used! It was a very solid piece!
ReplyDeleteThere was a lot that I really liked about your blog! You always phrase your work in such an interesting and intriguing way. Everything is written beautifully! I love when you answered your own rhetorical question, “It’s just mindless entertainment, right? Wrong.” It made me laugh. I personally can’t stand when people watch horrible shows; especially when I’m in the room trying to watch a good show. My brother had developed a taste for Dance Moms, and that show will be the end of me. It’s so terrible! Good job on the whole blog!
ReplyDelete