Aaron
Tuesday 12th February 2008 4:09pm
Royal Berkshire
69,949 posts
Quote: roscoff @ February 12, 2008, 12:37 AM
If people read the stuff on here why is Little Miss Jocelyn still on? Or are we not the voice of the nation? Aaron will be disappointed!
I said they read it. I didn't say they always pay attention! Remember that apart from Mark and myself, the vast majority of posting members are aspiring writers. Not Joe Public who watches a show for enjoyment, but people who criticise criticise criticise and fail to see any worth in programmes. Not really the target audience, so do they really care that much what you think? Probably not.
Take Little Miss Jocelyn. I personally maintain that if she weren't black, she'd be stacking shelves in Tesco rather than being given her own TV show, but someone must like it. Two Pints is another great example. HUGELY successful show, very popular with its target audience, one of the BSG's most visited programmes, and pretty positive DVD sales. But no, practically no one can see any worth in it and just dismisses it as a piece of crap. If you don't like it then that's one thing, but I think it's pretty depressing for the industry that people who consider themselves to be upcoming, talented writers don't even watch, let alone appreciate, a show that's had so much success. No production company is going to take THAT big a risk, let alone the BBC, who receive huge criticism for whatever they do, and have to be careful with the licence fee.
A huge smash-hit show like Two Pints or My Family is roundly denounced by aspiring writers (the minority and not-target-audience), but more cult-y shows which writers praise are far more risky as an investment. The Mighty Boosh wasn't just commissioned on a whim. Noel and Julian have been working the live circuit for years, building up a following with their kind of humour and act, so the show was guaranteed to have an at least reasonable amount of success. Your opinions are far too easily skewed by bitterness and jealousy, and very few of you seem to be able to just WATCH a show without picking it completely apart. That's not what Joe Public does or how he watches, so your opinions have less worth. In short, you're not the target audience that the BBC has to or aims to please.
And that's why they don't always take note of what's said!
Quote: Hardcorr @ February 12, 2008, 3:32 AM
I own a TV license, but I also have a PC, and as far as I'm aware I don't need a license for watching shows on that.
No, but you do need a licence, depending on how you watch those shows exactly:
You need a TV Licence to use any television receiving equipment such as a TV set, set-top boxes, video or DVD recorders, computers or mobile phones to watch or record TV programmes as they are being shown on TV.
http://www.tvlicensing.co.uk/information/