Both are classics and rightly so . . . . and most folks have not read them. They hold a great deal of influence on modern art, because many artists and intellectuals have read them, but the average person? Nope.
Ok. That makes sense.
Both are classics and rightly so . . . . and most folks have not read them. They hold a great deal of influence on modern art, because many artists and intellectuals have read them, but the average person? Nope.
I care so little about who creates the stuff that I enjoy, that I only learned that I did enjoy stuff from some of those people mentioned here when I googled them.Gotta say, it’s a good thing I’ve cultivated an ability to detach creatives’ output from their personal lives. (Ditto others in the public eye.) I was largely unaware of the scandalous & evil acts perpetrated by several people mentioned in here. I generally don’t seek out such info unless and until it is unavoidable news.
The thing is, though, directors/writers/showrunners provide a better predictive index of quality, so I pay attention to behind the scenes names to find out more of what I enjoy.I care so little about who creates the stuff that I enjoy, that I only learned that I did enjoy stuff from some of those people mentioned here when I googled them.
Sure the actors are front and center when I watch a show, but directors, show runners, these I hardly register
I suspect you're correct. Although I don't really follow directors/writers/showrunners, when I think about how bad a particular show is it's usually not the actors I'm finding a great deal of fault with. Gates McFadden did just fine in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Sub Rosa," but there's only so much an actor can do when the plot revolves around Beverly Crusher banging a ghost that not so long ago was banging her grandmother.The thing is, though, directors/writers/showrunners provide a better predictive index of quality, so I pay attention to behind the scenes names to find out more of what I enjoy.
Could be worse.
Imagine if you were a Marion Zimmer Bradley stan ....
And it's harder to accept when this person has a great deal of personal meaning to you. The Mists of Avalon is one of the few interesting modern takes on the Arthurian legends I've ever read (even if it's not my favorite I can recognize that it's good) and is probably the only fantasy book I ever saw my mother read. But while I just acknowledge that MZB was a good author, for a lot of people, MZB meant something much more to them. She encouraged and inspired a lot of women authors to to write fantasy. For those folks, the news about MZB was devastating.I was, unfortunately. It was only last year when someone here mentioned her being awful that I googled and found out that horror story.
She and her husband were head of the Science Fiction Writers Association, that whole organization has stumbled from one disaster to another. Not long ago here I tried to clue people in about the writer of Altered Carbon, which if one reads the books and follows the fandom, knows he is a piece of work. Not that he really hid it in his books, people really didn't like hearing it though.I was, unfortunately. It was only last year when someone here mentioned her being awful that I googled and found out that horror story.