Ah! This was helpful for me also - I re-watched (and filled in the gaps) of Tales From the Crypt over the last few weeks (had to stop at the horrible Season 7).So, I started looking for TV series that I had started but never finished.
Ah! This was helpful for me also - I re-watched (and filled in the gaps) of Tales From the Crypt over the last few weeks (had to stop at the horrible Season 7).So, I started looking for TV series that I had started but never finished.
I've watched so many of Law & Order and House in the last few months that I'll find myself laying in bed like Brian Wilson until I unconsciously realize that I've watched the same episodes about 3 times. If the pandemic goes on any longer it just might break me and I'll order Time-Lifes "Sweet Sounds of the 70's" CD set at 5:30 in the morning.I have been fighting the exact same problem for months now. I have had only some success getting over it so far.
One things that I found helps is familiarly. For example, I can't convince my brain to start any new TV series. So, I started looking for TV series that I had started but never finished. Re-watching the parts I knew tricked my brain into thinking it was something old and comforting, and then I eventually got to new stuff. On the plus side, this has lead me to finally finishing CSI. On the downside, you do sometimes realize exactly why you stopped watching shows before. I'm now stuck on season 14 of ER, with minimal motivation to move ahead.
Ditto with video games. I had played through Borderlands, but not the sequels. I couldn't get into any new video games until I played a bit of Borderlands 1, then jumped into Borderlands II and did a full playthrough. Mario 35 would have been my recommendation to you on this front, but sadly it's gone now. Maybe a new Mario that you missed the first time around?
Hope this helps.
Who doesn't love Chevy Van?I've watched so many of Law & Order and House in the last few months that I'll find myself laying in bed like Brian Wilson until I unconsciously realize that I've watched the same episodes about 3 times. If the pandemic goes on any longer it just might break me and I'll order Time-Lifes "Sweet Sounds of the 70's" CD set at 5:30 in the morning.
Probably everyone born after 1990. Its on the tip of my tongue but I cant remember who sang that song.Who doesn't love Chevy Van?
We're Blues fans in my area. We've lost to the Wild a few times this season. :/Nothing wrong with watching hockey, especially if its the Wild!
While actually producing said content, while working around the various and changing restrictions, makes it even more difficult. I was supposed to be doing on-set photography for an indie film being produced out of Seattle, this time last year, when it was cancelled due to lockdown.The ratio of noise to substance has increased these past years. And it's only getting greater as the massive and ongoing call for content in all mediums increases.
I feel like during the pandemic I haven't been able to focus on anything long-term. I haven't finished a novel, watched a substantial television series, and haven't even touched my video games (which I used to collect).
Nothing seems good enough. If I'm not caught in the first few minutes, or if it seems too long or too confusing, I don't want to do it. If I watch anything, it's hockey in the background or little YouTube videos. If I play anything, it's a few levels of a classic Mario game. Reading is delegated to social media posts or a few pages of a D&D book.
Wandavision, Bad Batch, Mortal Kombat, Justice League, Wonder Woman 84, etc. - I dropped out of all of them within 30 minutes or less.
Has anyone else had this issue? Any tips in getting your brain back into it?
(Oddly, I can stay engaged only if I'm actively creating something. So if I'm running D&D, painting, writing a book, etc., I'm fine.)
I can definitely take a certain level of commitment to watch what is effectively a 8-10 hour movie and lately I've found myself starting even just a movie, on a streaming service, then dropping it a half hour in. Maybe the level of quality I've come to expect has risen? Maybe I'm just less tolerant of crap that I used to be? Hard to say.While I personally definitely have a measure of this going on from the pandemic (and an aimless depression predating the pandemic), I think I've also just struggled for years with the era of every scripted television series wanting to be a grand serialized narrative. I like it, in theory, but I usually end up never actually watching things, and certainly am way less likely to ever rewatch things than I was back when my favorite shows came in self-contained episodes that welcomed me to watch them in any old order.