Even before Out of Shadows, I gave up on TV well over a decade ago. My sister and coworkers kept bugging me to get into the show Lost beucase "omg it's like so fascinating, for reals" only for eventually every single one of them to say, "Fuck Lost, that show was garbage. I cannot believe I wasted my time with that dumb show." The same thing with Game of Thrones. So when anyone tells me something like, "Ohmygosh, you have just GOTTA watch "Assisted Living Dracula." It's like the best show ever, and it starts getting really good after the 5th season," I just politely refuse.
Because all Leftists writers do well is making good hooks. Endings take more thinking than they're capable of. The whole "pull it all together in a logical way at the end" is too much for them.
A good intro can be "A girl is running through the forest when suddenly dark figures surround her her, but suddenly light erupts from her and they all die. Then the title screen appears and we flash forward to three years before."
People are intrigued. Who is the girl? Why does she have powers? Who were the figures? We want to know.
But most H-wood shows will be go three seasons in and still never explain what the hell the intro was about. It just gets "forgotten". I hate hooks that lead nowhere. It's like the writers knew their show was boring af so they wrote a mystery that they never planned to solve, but it got you watching.
Even before Out of Shadows, I gave up on TV well over a decade ago. My sister and coworkers kept bugging me to get into the show Lost beucase "omg it's like so fascinating, for reals" only for eventually every single one of them to say, "Fuck Lost, that show was garbage. I cannot believe I wasted my time with that dumb show." The same thing with Game of Thrones. So when anyone tells me something like, "Ohmygosh, you have just GOTTA watch "Assisted Living Dracula." It's like the best show ever, and it starts getting really good after the 5th season," I just politely refuse.
Because all Leftists writers do well is making good hooks. Endings take more thinking than they're capable of. The whole "pull it all together in a logical way at the end" is too much for them.
A good intro can be "A girl is running through the forest when suddenly dark figures surround her her, but suddenly light erupts from her and they all die. Then the title screen appears and we flash forward to three years before."
People are intrigued. Who is the girl? Why does she have powers? Who were the figures? We want to know.
But most H-wood shows will be go three seasons in and still never explain what the hell the intro was about. It just gets "forgotten". I hate hooks that lead nowhere. It's like the writers knew their show was boring af so they wrote a mystery that they never planned to solve, but it got you watching.
Dude I love Lost