T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
550.1 | | LAGUNA::BROWN_RO | eve of destruction? | Mon Jan 14 1991 14:52 | 14 |
| I have one, have cable, but have short attention span... I mostly
watch news or documentaries or music shows. Most dramas/ comedies
are highly predictable, and as soon as they go to commercial, I
pick up something to read and forget about the show.
I've thought about dumping it, but I kinda like the pretty colors
it makes.....
T.V. is best for breaking news, like the current Iraqi situation,
when war might be any minute. CNN and C-Span, MacNeil-Lehrer.
It is going to be a dramatic week, noters.
-roger
|
550.2 | TV is the Great Satan | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 192# now, 175# by May | Mon Jan 14 1991 15:06 | 13 |
| I would love to get rid of the TV. During college and graduate school I
was among the <1% (of U.S. households) without a set. Nowadays I might
as well not own one, so far as my own watching is concerned: it is
monopolized by my three teenage step-daughters. None is a reader. None
is an athlete. We only permit watching on weekends, and on weekends
they (nearly) only interrupt their television to go to the movies.
A year or so ago, I saw in the Wall Street Journal some figures from
Nielsen the TV pollster: the average U.S. household has the television
on 54 hours per week. I can't imagine that the television is actually
WATCHED that much. It seems like a tremendous waste to me.
- Hoyt
|
550.4 | | SWAM3::ANDRIES_LA | and so it goes ... | Mon Jan 14 1991 15:59 | 15 |
| Aversion to Sports: Yes. Aversion to TV: No way!
I watch between 14 to 16 hours of Tv a week. Now before you telephobes
go throwing stones, I say there is a huge difference between watching
Tv selectively and simply sitting in front of the box, glassy-eyed and
slack-jawed. I use the Tv Guide the same way I use the card catalogue
at the library. I choose what I'm going to view several days in
advance, turn on the set (or VCR) when the program starts and turn it
off when its over. The argument that "Tv is nothing but junk" is a
lazy and narrow-minded asumption. 90% of most things (movies, albums,
politicians, yes even books) are junk. The best of television is equal
the best of any other mass communication/information medium. What
constitutes that 10% is totally up to the viewer.
LArry
|
550.5 | | USWRSL::SHORTT_LA | Total Eclipse of the Heart | Mon Jan 14 1991 16:00 | 8 |
| I just got one for X-mas. I mostly watch rented movies with it.
I'm going to be getting cable so I can have the Disney Channel and
the new forthcoming Sci-Fi channel. I also like to have VH1 on the
tube as a radio and background noise (as if my son isn't enough!).
L.J.
|
550.6 | too little good, too much bad | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Mon Jan 14 1991 16:30 | 1 |
| I don't own one either, haven't for about six years. Wil
|
550.7 | the advantages of t.v. | LAGUNA::BROWN_RO | eve of destruction? | Mon Jan 14 1991 16:37 | 28 |
| Usually, the best news coverage is found in a good newspaper, but
television has some other benefits in our global age. Sometimes a
picture is truly worth a thousand words, and more. Right now we
can see our troops in Saudi Arabia, and the terrain they are in,
and can see the manauvers in prerparation for the terrifying war.
We also see the streets of Bagdad, and here all the principal
players speak. We can see our senators and congressmen debating
the war on the floor of Congress.
Anyone with a satellite dish can pick up CNN, and does. Tariq Aziz
the Iraqi foreign minister, said that he watches it to hear Bush's
and Bakers statements. It turns it into instant diplomacy. Supposedly
Hussein watches it, too.
With the proliferation of home video cameras, everyone is a newsman;
a video clip last night showed Soviet troops beating demonstraters in
Vilnius, Lithuania, with their rifle butts. Pretty shocking stuff,
but it gave the true atmosphere without interpetation of the writer.
Even MacNeil_Lehrer can get exciting, when the major politicians and/or
diplomats face off and argue with one another. It gievs one a very
direct feeling of what these people are like.
-roger
|
550.8 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Mon Jan 14 1991 17:23 | 4 |
| PBS has a lot of good stuff. Wagner's Ring, Mozart's opera, Civil War
documentary to name a few.
Eugene
|
550.9 | Dan Rather's looking Green! | REGENT::WOODWARD | I've got friends in low places | Mon Jan 14 1991 20:22 | 9 |
| I think the same way as 0. I don't seem to have time for TV. If
I'm home, I do listen to it at times or use it for background noise.
The picture has been turning greener and greener for months now, but
I don't care cuz I hardly ever look at it. My favorite time to use
the TV is between 6-8 when The Nashville Network has "Video PM."
Country tunes are wonderful to work by! So, I miss the news, I don't
care...all this talk about war war war...it's too depressing.
;) kath
|
550.10 | The good and the bad ... | MORO::BEELER_JE | this time...a mountain to climb | Mon Jan 14 1991 22:27 | 8 |
| Television is in all probability the most influential media since the
invention of the printing press ... no denying it ...
For the most part ... trash ... but ... there's NOVA, The Civil War
Series, CNN, and, in my area a channel which carries only the old
movies (pre 1960) ... and ... yes ... the NFL games ...
Jerry
|
550.11 | It's PC in here to knock the telli...interesting. | DEC25::BERRY | Buy a SONY | Tue Jan 15 1991 02:39 | 8 |
| I use my TV quite a bit. I have quite a collection of movies, sports,
and music on tape. I also make my own films. It's a great piece of
entertainment.
And I must have it to observe the normal, American family... The
Simpsons!
-db
|
550.12 | | BSS::S_MURTAGH | | Tue Jan 15 1991 14:41 | 12 |
| When I first got married (in 1979) we didn't own a TV, and there were
so many other things we needed (like food) that we didn't get one right
away. Well, right away stretched on and on and it was six years before
we finally did get the 19" Sony we have had since. That six years was
plenty of time to get out of the habit, and I rarely watch it today. I
will occasionally watch sports or a special, but I find myself unable
to bear what passes for network programming any more. The News is worse
than the series.
My wife watches it a few hours a week, and we rent a movie once in a
while. But, honestly, what's the point?
|
550.13 | | WORDY::GFISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Tue Jan 15 1991 15:47 | 17 |
|
> With the proliferation of home video cameras, everyone is a newsman;
> a video clip last night showed Soviet troops beating demonstraters in
> Vilnius, Lithuania, with their rifle butts. Pretty shocking stuff,
> but it gave the true atmosphere without interpetation of the writer.
Be careful, here. You may not be getting an interpretation through a
writer, but you are certainly getting an interpretation through both
the cameraperson, the reporter who put the piece together, and the
editor.
If you've ever been part of an event that was covered by TV, check out
how what you see on TV has a very different feel from what you
experience when you are there, even when you pretty much agree with
its conlusions.
--Gerry
|
550.14 | | TORREY::BROWN_RO | times of tragedy | Tue Jan 15 1991 17:50 | 7 |
| I agree, Gerry; there is interpetation through the choice of shots
etc. I've actually worked as a T.V. cameraman briefly, and I know
much about the fine film art known as 'cheating a shot'; it is more
direct in it's uncut form, however.
-roger
|
550.15 | There are some good points to TV .... | MORO::BEELER_JE | this time...a mountain to climb | Wed Jan 16 1991 00:53 | 35 |
| I certainly don't want to precipitate a tangent but .... today the
stereotypical sales-three-hour-six-margarita lunch with my secretary
lead to a discussion of the possible "hostilities" in the Gulf.
There is no question but that at this time in history we are the most
informed nation on the face of this earth. We have *live* broadcast
direct from the front ... we have seen the T72s and the M1A1 Abrams,
the B52s, the soldiers faces, and heard their emotions ... we have
seen, time after time, how the strategic strike will unfold and heard
the military experts describe what the confrontation will probably be
like.
For the most part, if you listen carefully, you can find out how many
men we have, and how many men they have, how many tanks we have, how
many they have, how many aircraft - model - bomb load etc .. that we
have and the opposing numbers ... I know more about our tactical and
strategic strength, tactical orders or battle, enemy strength ... etc,
than I EVER knew when I was carrying an M14 (the M16 was a piece of
junk at that time) in Vietnam.
There is but little question in most minds that we can bomb Iraq back
to the stone ages ... Americans will probably die, BUT, we will
prevail !
To what do we owe this unparalleled wealth of knowledge? Predominately
television.
Think for a moment it would be like if the same proportion of Iraq
citizens had access to television in the same (relatively) unrestricted
fashion that we do. I would be willing to bet that this "tension"
would have been over ... long ago.
Irrespective ... TV does have it's "good" points ... no?
Jerry
|
550.16 | the box, hooked to cable or a vax? | DEC25::BERRY | Buy a SONY | Wed Jan 16 1991 02:37 | 9 |
|
Watching TV is no different than reading non-work-related NOTES!
Really. With either, you're staring at a box. And these conferences
are not any different than watching one of the daily SOAPS on TV!
Some folks have a huge addiction to NOTES. Where one noter might call
"Joe" a couch potato, that noter could be called the same!
-db
|
550.17 | Information... information... information... informa | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 192# now, 175# by May | Wed Jan 16 1991 08:30 | 18 |
| -1 db: I agree that Notes can be similarly addictive, but there's a
difference in kind: television tends to disconnect the cerebrum,
where notes ENGAGE the mind. IMO.
The informational benefits of TV are staggering. If anything, in our
society we're suffering from information overload. A few years ago I
perceived a forest-for-trees problem: I was unable to see the big
picture because these thousands of details got in the way. I started to
read weekly news magazines instead of the daily paper... and eventually
got to where the annual "Year in Review" issue was sufficient.
It strikes me as highly plausible, the idea that Hussein could not
exist if Iraqis had as good information as we Westerners do. Of course,
Saddam knows that, too, and it will never happen. I wonder what the
U.S. is broadcasting in Iraq these days. Is it a capital crime to watch
or listen to Radio Free Desert?
- Hoyt
|
550.18 | What SCI-FI channel ?? | OTIGER::R_CURTIS | There is madness to my method.. | Wed Jan 16 1991 08:48 | 2 |
| Someone in .5 mentioned a new forthcoming SCI-FI channel. If anyone
knows something about that, can you post some details ? Sounds great !
|
550.19 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Jan 16 1991 08:49 | 5 |
| Re: .18
Rather, you should send mail to the author, or ask in the TV conference.
Steve
|
550.20 | | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Passion and Direction | Wed Jan 16 1991 10:06 | 8 |
|
I don't have one.
Having just moved, I chose to try living without it, and I may well
never own one again. I'd always wanted to try being without T.V. -
for the past few years I'd hardly watched the one I had anyway.
'gail
|
550.21 | TV SUCKS | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Wed Jan 16 1991 12:47 | 26 |
| As stated earlier, I don't have one. Read on to see why:
At 7:30 this morning I stopped at Sears Auto to get a quick oil
change. While waiting, I watched a TV in their waiting area.
The morning "show" was full of stuff around the impending war
in the Gulf.
And there was Joe Garagiola, interviewing wive's and little
children of men in the Gulf... Here was a little four/five
year old kid crying in his mother's arms with this network
news camera stuck in his face, while he burrowed into his
mother's bosom, trying to hide.
That sucks. There's a leech behind every network news
show looking for exactly that kind of exploitation,
hiding behind their "human interest" label, and their "just
reporting the news" badge. And we're so manipulated by
that bull, that we don't even think badly of a mother who
lets that happen, or a kindergarten on an Army base that
lets the TV crews come in and do that. There isn't enough
tragedy around, we're gonna offer up the feelings of little
kids too.
^%$&^^%*^(&)**_(_(+_)+_)_*(^*^)^$%($_^Q^!+#&_@*^$_@*!
Wil
|
550.22 | re: Gulf action..... | BUFFER::PCORMIER | Runnin' down a dream | Thu Jan 17 1991 09:12 | 7 |
| I'll give up my TV (especially CNN) when you pry my cold, dead fingers
from the remote control. To each his/her own, but *I* prefer to see
and hear what's going on in the world in a timely fashion, not waiting
to read the sweetened condensed version in tomorrow's newspaper.
Long live CNN....
Paul C.
|
550.23 | call it what you like, it's the same rose | DEC25::BERRY | Buy a SONY | Thu Jan 17 1991 09:41 | 8 |
| re: .17
> -1 db: I agree that Notes can be similarly addictive, but there's a
> difference in kind: television tends to disconnect the cerebrum,
> where notes ENGAGE the mind. IMO.
Engage the mind! hee hee
|
550.24 | peace and quiet | FSTVAX::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Mon Jan 21 1991 16:59 | 8 |
| we have a tv in our log-home in central Vermont.
but, there aren't any stations to watch!
generally i like that. but, this weekend, i missed seeing the news.
however, i sure enjoyed the peace and quiet there!
tony
|
550.25 | sorry | NOVA::FISHER | Well, there's still an Earth to come home to. | Mon Jan 21 1991 18:19 | 4 |
| RE: TV in central VT: That's alright, if you had stations, you'd need
electricity? :-) :-)
ed
|
550.26 | ;-) | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | living in stolen moments | Mon Jan 21 1991 21:31 | 4 |
| fer whaddya want tv in vt anyhow?
oops -- gotta run, Little Richard's on the tube, that show about the
60's
|
550.27 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Tue Jan 22 1991 00:25 | 1 |
| "Give me TV or give me death." -- Patrich Hunry
|
550.28 | not so lofty viewing | COOKIE::CHEN | Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing | Fri Jan 25 1991 12:01 | 15 |
| We threw out our TV when our children (then ages 6 and 8) became so
addicted that school was suffering. We abstained for 4 years, until
it became apparent that the lack of the tube was causing some pain
in actual school assignment completion for my oldest son.
During that 4 years, my children became *avid* readers - and they still
are, even though they watch TV now.
What I find amusing in this note is that so many of you don't like the
trash on TV - that's one of my primary reasons for watching... tune out
the real world, blank my mind. It's like going on a mental vacation.
I am for keeping all the trash on TV - and, of course the propaganda
they call news.
-m
|
550.29 | confession | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Fri Jan 25 1991 15:22 | 16 |
| Well, after all my ranting and raving about
TV uselessness, and how I haven't had one for
six years, I went out and bought one today,
along with a VCR.
Now I can watch tapes of Robert Bly, Joseph
Campbell, some instructional tapes that I
have and can rent some wonderful old movies
(Zorba the Greek, East of Eden, The Horse's
Mouth, etc).
I do not intend to sign up for cable, and
I do not intend to watch the game this weekend. 8-)
Wil
|
550.30 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Jan 25 1991 15:34 | 5 |
| Re: .29
Game? What game?
Steve
|
550.31 | | SWAM3::ANDRIES_LA | and so it goes ... | Fri Jan 25 1991 18:55 | 11 |
| Re: last.
What game? What game! Steve, it's only the SUPER BOWL!! -- the most
important competitive event of the year. In which sport I haven't the
slightest idea ...
LArry
(at least the health clubs & supermarkets will be empty)
|
550.32 | | NITTY::DIERCKS | The gay 90's are back!! | Fri Jan 25 1991 18:58 | 7 |
|
>>Game? What game?
My question exactly!
GJD
|
550.33 | The best ski day of season.... | CSC32::GORTMAKER | Alas, babylon... | Fri Jan 25 1991 21:05 | 4 |
| RE.31
Say's you. I plan to miss it and do something worthwhile SKI.
-j
|
550.34 | | CSCMA::BALDWIN | | Thu Apr 11 1991 15:48 | 40 |
| Wow...
I know it's been a while since the last response in here, but I
thought I'd share my views now that the Gulf Crisis and the Superbowl
are over and we can get back to the topic at hand:
I find it quite interesting that those of you who seem to dislike
it either don't watch it at all, or merely watch it for selected
informational/news programs. Not for entertainment purposes, which
is the same as listening to AM Radio, in my opinion...booorrrring.
I never seem to have time for the tube anymore, but when I do, I
love to watch all the entertainment programming I can (selective
viewing, of course). I enjoy sci-fi, *good* comedy (which is a matter
of taste, IMHO) or drama (ditto), and I have cable, but I really
never catch any of the sports channels or the news channels (channel
4 Boston news is just fine by me...don;t need much more than that).
I don't really need to be reminded that the world has troubles out
there...I don't need to hear the latest in Iraq, the Pamela Smart
trial...etc. Somehow the word will get around where I work. Tell
me something *entertaining* that was on tv that I may have missed
or taped and have yet to watch, and then my ears will perk up.
I don't "veg" in front of the thing...I go through the guide and
select the type of programming which will entertain me the most.
I also am involved in music and the arts myself, which merely enhances
my interest in *being* entertained while not entertaining others
myself. Hey, the informational value of television is amazing in
a technological sense...but tv is also a "reflection of our lives
and ourselves" to paraphrase Walter Cronkite.
However, just let me say that I commend those who have responed
to this topic who show good *parental* judgement in what or how
they let their kids watch. No, I wouldn't want my kids to watch
half the stuff that's shown on MTV or the like, but if *I* want to
blow a few brain cells on it once in awhile, hey...that's entertainment
(especially if it's Paula Abdul...yum yum...) and that's freedom
of choice.
|
550.35 | That's 49 hours/week | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 192# now, 175# by May | Thu Apr 11 1991 16:21 | 9 |
| I recently saw a chart depiciting the average number of hours that the
TV is on in American households, according to Nielsen. In the sixties it
was 5 hours/day; 6 hours/day in the seventies, and now it's up to 7.
In Brave New World, it was soma. TV is our drug.
Re -1: I like your view that good TV entertainment is a worthwhile
use of time. My problem is discriminating: once encouched, it's
hard to turn the beast off. Your selectivity is admirable.
|
550.36 | Sexual harassment? | MORO::BEELER_JE | The few, the proud, the Marines | Mon Oct 05 1992 12:25 | 6 |
| Speaking of TV ... did anyone see "Herman's Head" last night?
I accidentally stumbled onto it but ... well .. I haven't laughed that
much in a long long time - it was a show about sexual harassment.
Bubba
|
550.37 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Mon Oct 05 1992 12:36 | 5 |
| Damn ... I missed it last night.
Herman's Head is one of the better shows on TV these days.
I bet you can guess which one of the 4 I identify with ... ;')
|
550.38 | just kidding 8^) | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Mon Oct 05 1992 13:26 | 9 |
| >> <<< Note 550.37 by HDLITE::ZARLENGA "Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG" >>>
>> I bet you can guess which one of the 4 I identify with ... ;')
I've never seen it. Is there one who's really obnoxious and
hates women?
|
550.39 | curious | DELNI::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Mon Oct 05 1992 16:03 | 7 |
| re .36, what was so funny about it?
Or is it just the idea of women being sexually harassed, in general,
that you find so amusing? :-)
Lorna
|
550.40 | I even laugh at Marine jokes ! | MORO::BEELER_JE | The few, the proud, the Marines | Mon Oct 05 1992 16:18 | 6 |
| RE: .39
Ever seen "In Living Color"? It was along those lines ... no reverence
(whatsoever) with respect to the politically correct attitudes of today.
Bubba
|
550.41 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Mon Oct 05 1992 20:14 | 5 |
| .38> <<< Note 550.38 by PENUTS::DDESMAISONS >>>
.38>
.38> Is there one who's really obnoxious and hates women?
But I like women. Maybe even more than you do.
|
550.42 | tv for me, its meaning and related | STAR::ABBASI | life without the DECspell ? | Mon Oct 05 1992 21:55 | 8 |
| i like TV, i watch it when i eat my sandwich, and before i sleep.
i used not to watch TV for years, never had one, used to make me
nervous to watch it, but now i got used to it. i dont watch sports
really, but i watch discovery channel and documentary stuff and simposon's
and the 3 stooges and bugs bunny.
/nasser
|
550.43 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Oct 06 1992 14:51 | 44 |
| >
> Or is it just the idea of women being sexually harassed, in general,
> that you find so amusing? :-)
Who said it was women being sexually harassed? :-)
Most of the show did NOT deal with sxual harrassment of anybody. Basically,
Herman gets the chance to hire a 'temp' to help reduce the department's
workload. He interviews a number of people, and then selects one woman.
That woman is there approximately 3 days when Herman decides he has to fire
her for not being able to handle the job. He starts to talk to her about it,
she says she knows what he wants to say but she does not think dating him would
be a good idea. Herman then tells her he is not asking her for a date, but
to fire her. She immediately claims harrassment and a hearing is held. At that
time, the people sitting in judgement of Herman (3 of them) are all set to find
Herman guilty of harrassement. Herman gets up and asks the 'victim' a few
questions (like:
1) in the 3 days she was there, how many articles did she process
answer = 0
2) how much <some other job requirement> did she do
answer = 0
3) how many fires did she set
answer = 3 (changed to 2 after Herman said he only knew about 2).
Basically, the person as NOT doing the job and Herman fired her. She had the
impression it was because she refused to go out with Herman (incidentally,
Herman never asked her out). After the questions, she said that yes indeed
she had been mistaken and 'dropped' the charges. Happy ending?
Well, it seems two (male) of the three people sitting in judgement WERE making
comments about the 3rd (female). After the hearing, she told those two that
she was going to get a lawyer and sue them for harrassment [There was actually
no mistaking it on anyone's part this time]. On the way out, one of the males
made a comment about Herman's buns. So, perhaps he was harrassed as well?
Anyway, out of the show time, about 1 minute dealt with the female telling the
two males about the upcoming lawsuit, about 3 minutes dealt with the 'trial',
another 2 minutes where Herman fired the woman. The rest was just a normal
Herman show.
It is intersting to note that one of the interviewees was a beautiful woman
that did not have ANY of the job qualifications; Herman did not choose her
but rather someone with the qualifications.
|
550.44 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Wed Oct 07 1992 14:06 | 9 |
|
>> But I like women. Maybe even more than you do.
Oh yes, I'm sure you do in some ways, Mike. I'm sure
many have succumbed to the Zarlenga charm over the years, too.
8^)
Diane
|
550.45 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Wed Oct 07 1992 22:37 | 5 |
| .44> many have succumbed to the Zarlenga charm over the years, too.
Succumbed? Please, this is a family conference.
Besides, I hardly have enough class to be charming.
|
550.46 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Thu Oct 08 1992 11:16 | 6 |
|
>> Besides, I hardly have enough class to be charming.
Well, self-deprecation can be charming. It's a start.
|
550.47 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Oct 08 1992 12:37 | 1 |
| I'm not clever enough to be self-deprecating enough to be charming.
|
550.48 | 8^) | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Thu Oct 08 1992 18:02 | 8 |
|
>> I'm not clever enough to be self-deprecating enough to be charming.
Oh, this is balderdash. In fact, I have removed the word
"clever" from my vocabulary and replaced it with "zarlengoid".
Di
|
550.49 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Thu Oct 08 1992 18:04 | 5 |
| re .47, .48, really, with those SAT scores I, personally, doubt there's
anything he couldn't do.
Lorna
|
550.50 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | This is just a passing phase | Fri Oct 09 1992 08:45 | 1 |
| Ooh, er... sorry, wrong conference. :-)
|
550.51 | Diane, you're making me blush ... | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Sat Oct 10 1992 15:36 | 3 |
| re:.48
If I didn't know better, I'd think you were flirting with me.
|
550.52 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Mon Oct 12 1992 11:15 | 6 |
|
>> If I didn't know better, I'd think you were flirting with me.
Keep 'em guessin', I always say.
|