Monday, June 1, 2009

You and Me and This TV, Part 1

Matt Keating--"You And Me And This TV" (mp3)
Matt Keating--"While We Fiddle" (mp3)


I hardly ever watch TV shows. At least not while the shows are on TV. No, instead, I wait and rent or buy the seasons when they come out as box sets. I'm not sure when this bizarre habit began; I think it may have started as a kind of a defense mechanism against television, which I have seen taking over far too many lives. You see, I could then claim that I never watched television, never served as a slave to it. I don't watch TV; I watch DVDs of TV. Yeesh!

Stupid and expensive as that sounds, there is something to it. It puts you in control. Before the invention of TIVO and its ilk, before Hulu.com and other Internet options for catching up on missed shows, and even now for those who don't have a digital recorder, television dictated when people I know could do things.

I have known grown, sane, intelligent people who confused television with social life. They could not do X on a particular night of the week because L.A. Law was on or The West Wing or 24. The more "critically-acclaimed" the show was, the more justifiable the decision to choose it over human interaction.

Recently, I attended a very fun Seinfeld party, a themed event based, of course, on the hit comedy that ran for 9 or more seasons. I never watched Seinfeld when it was on. I've seen a few episodes in reruns on cable. It's quite a good show and I always enjoy it when it comes on. Although my wife and I had a great time at the party, we were clearly out of our element. We knew absolutely none of the trivia necessary to navigate the party and its activities.

As I think back to the Seinfeld years, I try to reconstruct why I didn't watch it. First was the fact that I didn't have cable. We went without it for years, occasionally jumping back in and then getting disgusted and disconnecting it again. Also, I have this weird quirk that plagues me in most contexts. If something is too popular, too mainstream, I recoil from it. When everyone is watching The Simpsons or South Park, I'm not. Of course, when I plug back into something long after the craze is over, I'll think, Gee, this is pretty good.

But, I'll admit that there was a year or so back in the late 80's, early 90's when getting together with our neighbors and watching Thirtysomething was a very much looked-forward-to social event for a young couple with a baby who didn't get out all that much.

Television can serve us in particular life stages. But I certainly wish my elderly father watched less TV, fewer stock market shows and Fox "News" programs and other segments designed to scare old people, even though I understand that his television keeps him company.

There are many studies about children and television and the potential negative connections between the two. I've kept up with them tangentially. TV might promote violence, TV makes kids hyperactive, TV makes kids into perfect little consumers, TV makes kids docile, TV makes kids want to eat really strange breakfast cereals, TV makes kids believe that Nickelodeon and ABC/Disney comedies are funny.

Finally, the results of my own personal ethnographic study are in and here are my findings: TV makes you boring as shit.

With few exceptions, a night, a season, a year of television gives any of us little more than a few "Hey, did you see..." conversation starters or funny lines or sly insider references that we can drop to knowing comrades who have also wasted their evenings.

So let me throw down the gauntlet: Adults should watch no more than 10 hours of television a week.

There, I said it. That's my rule that I just made up. The time limit is arbitrary, probably generous. If you really think that you have 10 must-see shows every week, you are definitely missing out on doing something better, something more edifying, something more alive. All you need to do is to remind yourself, with each passing year, how much harder it is to push yourself out of a chair or off of a couch that you have been sitting in for several television-filled hours. Ultimately, television will kill us, and, therefore, if we inject ourselves with it, we've got to keep the doses small.

Like most rules I have, I violate that whenever I feel like it.

Next: the greatest television show of all time?

Matt Keating's Killjoy is available at Itunes.

10 comments:

troutking said...

1. I agree, 10 hours a week is enough. Of course, if you're like me and take that extra time and waste it on the Internet, then it's kind of a wash.

2. There is some value to being able to take quotes and situations from Seinfeld or other shows and use them for your purposes---jokes, analogies, etc. It might not be as respected in some circles as familiarity with Bible verses or the Constitution, but it is in mine.

3. I know what you mean about resisting the popular. I do the same...unless I'm in at the beginning (Seinfeld, Barack), then I don't care how popular something gets later on. However, I think Nick Hornby's wise words about Born in the USA standing among Springsteen fans are applicable, paraphrasing: just because something is popular doesn't mean it isn't good. Also, this attitude has had its costs to me---most notably perhaps with Bruce himself. I wasn't musically aware until the mid 80s and at that point Bruce was too big for me to get into without feeling I was jumping on the bandwagon. I missed out on 15 years of Bruce fandom because of this attitude. I am making up for lost time now, however. ;-)

4. Glad you liked the party.

Jason said...

Bob,

My question is: Does watching sports constitute part of that 10 hours of TV per week?

For me, I certainly don't watch 10 TV shows a week, I am lucky to watch 3 really.

I have been known, however, to spend some time watching sports, mainly football, and at certain times of the year that would take me over 10 hours per week.

Billy said...

I second Jason's emotion. Sports is the loophole.

However, even between sports, regular TV, and DVDs (TV or movies), I'm pretty sure I don't exceed 12 hours a week very often.

As for popularity, I'm with you, as my non-Harry Potter-reading ass will suggest, as will my having only seen three episodes of The Office.

Bob said...

Sports is definitely the loophole! A 10-hour football Sunday at Bud's would in no way impact the 10-hour rule. In fact, after a 10-hour football sunday at Buds, I wouldn't feel like doing anything else but watch tv anyway.

Randy said...

The funny thing about Tivo is that by giving more control, it actually makes me feel less in control.

Because of Tivo, I never have to worry about missing my favorite shows to do something else. I don't even know what night most of my shows come on.

And because of Tivo, I almost never channel surf, and thus I avoid the train-wreck shows (Rock of Love, E Hollywood Story, etc) that suck you in like the Death Star's tractor beam. I also never watch commercials. However, because of Tivo, I've also found it easy to watch more TV...except that it's not really easy at all.

In the good old days, I had one show that I followed. Now I can record a dozen good shows a week...and why wouldn't I? That's what the Tivo is for. Problem is, I don't have time to watch those shows, so things start to get backed up, and then I don't know what to do.

This year I tried to watch season two of Damages, because I really liked season one. The second season was everybit as twisty-turny and suspenseful, but I couldn't keep up. I wound up with 7 episode titles staring at me every time I turned the TV on, and it was only with a great sense of guilt, and a tinge of failure, that I erased them all without watching them. Even now, I wonder what I missed, and hope to see them on DVD some day.

Tivo is one of the coolest inventions ever. But I don't know that I like my TV watching to feel like a To-Do list. Then it's another chore, and instead of the Tivo freeing me up to go to Night Fall, I begin to feel obligated to stay home to clean out the In-Box.

Maybe I need to figure out how to transfer my Tivo shows to my Iphone. I think that would solve my problems.

troutking said...

I don't know about that whole sports as a loophole thing. I supposed if it's background to interaction with other people, but if it's just watching sports, what's more mind numbing? At least a good TV show is potentially enlightening in some sort of way, but really what's to be gained from yet another football or baseball game? Especially when you can summarize 3 hours in one recap article or box score the next day.

Tockstar said...

I hope, for the sake of at least one blog follower, that "57 Channels and Nothin' On" gets a mention.

Clarence said...

Bruuuuuce!!!

Jason said...

Troutking,

It could also be said that you can summarize a 30 minute TV episode into a 3 sentence summary of the story. I have to disagree with you on the mind numbing comment about watching sports, but we all have our own tastes.

I think I am low on the end of the TV viewing scale, but I don't have the availability that most have, and I have never really been a huge TV person. However if we transferred this discussion to internet I read some much internet everyday with my emails...that could cause some hand wringing here.

Bob said...

But Jason, some of those Korean tv shows are pretty sexy!