• NOW LIVE! Into the Woods--new character species, eerie monsters, and haunting villains to populate the woodlands of your D&D games.

Unpopular Geek Media Opinions

Sure. And watching the episodes in relatively rapid succession, as well as dissecting them in detail, probably helps the "What, again?" factor by quite a lot.
While I think Buffy should have ended at season 5, my low opinions of seasons 6 and 7 were no doubt formed in part because I watched it on DVD in quick sessesion rather than on television as it aired. You don't have time to digest the episodes and since a week hasn't passed everything is fresh in your mind so it sometimes seems repetitive. I don't know if I'd be so harsh had I watched those seasons when it originally aired.
 

log in or register to remove this ad

Complete agreement on this. The fact this bombed and seemed to get a lukewarm reaction in general is utterly baffling to me.

It retcons the original movies the ones people actually like.

It wasn't the worst Terminator film but the good stuff is basically T1&2 and the TV show.

I've a soft spot for T3 though.
 

While I think Buffy should have ended at season 5, my low opinions of seasons 6 and 7 were no doubt formed in part because I watched it on DVD in quick sessesion rather than on television as it aired. You don't have time to digest the episodes and since a week hasn't passed everything is fresh in your mind so it sometimes seems repetitive. I don't know if I'd be so harsh had I watched those seasons when it originally aired.

Buffy season 6 is one of the top examples of "not made for binging" that I can think of. And as for context of when it originally aired there are two things to you should consider. The first is technology. This was a show that started with beepers, and season 6 is when they gave the youngest member of the cast a cell phone. The second is that season 6 immediately followed 9/11.
 

Buffy season 6 is one of the top examples of "not made for binging" that I can think of. And as for context of when it originally aired there are two things to you should consider. The first is technology. This was a show that started with beepers, and season 6 is when they gave the youngest member of the cast a cell phone. The second is that season 6 immediately followed 9/11.
I don't remember much of season 6, but I do recall both Buffy and Angel as being prime examples of shows whose writers were downright allergic to the proliferation of mobile phones that was happening in the real world at the time. Even once they could no longer find any excuse not to equip their characters with them, they'd be forever running out of battery or unable to get signal.
 


More a general philosophical statement than a specific opinion, but, without writing a dissertation on the subject...

The main tropes and themes in most anime I'm aware of, the things that most folks seem to like about them, are the main reasons why I can't stand to watch it.
 


I don't remember much of season 6, but I do recall both Buffy and Angel as being prime examples of shows whose writers were downright allergic to the proliferation of mobile phones that was happening in the real world at the time. Even once they could no longer find any excuse not to equip their characters with them, they'd be forever running out of battery or unable to get signal.
Looking back, it's astonishing to me how quickly cellular phones went from being rare sights to ubiquity. The Blair Witch Project came out in 1999, and a few short years later I heard people argue it was completely unrealistic that none of them had cell phones. In 1999? I didn't know anyone in my group of friends, we were in our early to mid 20s, who had a cell phone. Most of the people I knew who had a cell phone were in their 40s.
 

The main tropes and themes in most anime I'm aware of, the things that most folks seem to like about them, are the main reasons why I can't stand to watch it.
I used to think I didn't like most anime because it was poorly translated or dubbed. Nope. Turns out most of it is just garbage. Don't get me wrong, I actually like some anime, like Cowboy BeBop, but I find most of it to be pretty bad. Even with Cyberpunk 2077: Edgerunner I had to look past some of the common conventions I see in anime to enjoy the story.
 

Looking back, it's astonishing to me how quickly cellular phones went from being rare sights to ubiquity. The Blair Witch Project came out in 1999, and a few short years later I heard people argue it was completely unrealistic that none of them had cell phones. In 1999? I didn't know anyone in my group of friends, we were in our early to mid 20s, who had a cell phone. Most of the people I knew who had a cell phone were in their 40s.
It could be hugely regional. There were still large swathes of the US where you wouldn't get a signal.
 

Into the Woods

Remove ads

Top