Apologies and Pet Peeves :)

Okay, it's no secret that I've been completely MIA for the last however long. I'd love to offer a whole bunch of reasons, but let's face it -- the why doesn't matter. Regardless of my family and personal issues, I should have been here more often and for not being so, I do apologize.

I suck and I'll try to do better. At posting, not sucking, although... *ponders* Well. Let me NOT get all TMI with you today. *grins*

Much as I'm sure many of you find my presumably slackadaisical habits annoying, I'm going to take this opportunity to mention a fairly new pet peeve -- or three -- of mine. (Nice segue, right? Right? Yes!)

So, a little backstory, because it wouldn't be one of my posts without it. Heh-heh.

I don't watch much television. I generally don't have that kind of time and the few shows that generally appeal to me tend to wind up canceled within the first season. (That's actually pet peeve number one, and isn't a new thing.) I also think most "reality" TV is crap and am disgusted that they keep churning out new show after new show, most of which last for years. (Number two, there. In more ways than one. *snerk*)

That said, there are a few things that I try to watch regularly. Some of the USA Network shows are fairly entertaining. I love White Collar, for instance, and find Suits to be a good way to spend 42 minutes once a week. That said, I hate the split-seasons USA started using. Hate them with a fiery passion. (Number three.)

Worse, however, is what SciFi (I categorically refuse to use the SyFy spelling ever again. It's stupid.) is doing with the new season of Face/Off. Don't get me wrong, the show is fascinating, but they've pitted new competitors against people who've already been on the show. This strikes me as a bitch move, so that's pet peeve number four. (I'm hoping things will even out as the season goes on but I somehow doubt they will.)

My BIGGEST pet peeve, though, is something I've seen occasionally on shows in the past, but just this week I saw it TWICE, once each on two different shows, one of which was "the Glades" and the other of which was "Perception." Now, these are two of the better-written shows on TV right now, in my opinion, and this really irks me. It's also perhaps a bit silly, but so is TV in general, so...

Please, please, PLEASE, television writers... STOP WRITING DIALOGUE IN WHICH A CHARACTER WHO SHOULD KNOW BETTER (in this case a medical examiner and an FBI agent, respectively) SAY: "Time of death was eleven p.m. at night," or "We need to find out what he was doing at three a.m. in the morning."

In case you missed it, P.M. MEANS AT NIGHT (as far as common usage goes), and A.M. MEANS IN THE MORNING!!! So basically, you've just had your character say "Time of death is eleven at night at night," and "We need to find out where he was at three in the morning in the morning."

Yes, I really am this obsessive, but it's mostly because that sort of thing jars me and shakes me out of the story. Maybe it's just me.

How about it, guys? Do any of these things bother you? If not, then what does? Inquiring minds want to know! *grins*
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Published on August 22, 2013 00:14
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message 1: by Chris, the Dalek King (last edited Aug 22, 2013 05:08AM) (new)

Chris, the Dalek King Not just in tv, but in books as well, I hate when the MC (usually a female) moves into a new town and instantly every male within a ten-mile radius falls instantly into lust with her. Either the men around her are so sex starved they will take anything with a pulse (not, I admit, an impossibility) or somehow moving messes with your body chemistry so much that you start producing "come fuck me" pheromones at an outrageous level.

Also annoyed by the fact that in fiction there only seem to be three types of people in schools: Super Jocks, Bad Boys, and Mega Nerds. I love a good Jock/Geek/Bad Boy pairing as much as the next guy, but there are other people in school (as someone who never fit into any of these categories, it always seemed a tad cliche for it to pop up in every ya/coming of age story I have ever read/watched)

(ever since the name change, I have pronounced SyFy as sif-ee, which makes me thing of some type of venereal disease...not the best branding for a channel)


message 2: by Cardeno (new)

Cardeno C. Carissa wrote: "Not just in tv, but in books as well, I hate when the MC (usually a female) moves into a new town and instantly every male within a ten-mile radius falls instantly into lust with her. Either the m..."

Carissa, TC Blue wrote that post. I'll let her know you left a comment here. - CC


message 3: by T.C. (new)

T.C. Blue I so know what you mean! I always chalk up the sudden universal appeal to out-of-town pheromones. Like... it takes a while for the heroine's body chemistry to equalize in the new place. *snorts* Or not. LOL

I see what you mean about the YA high school stereotypes. I was sort of all over the place in HS, though I was lucky enough to have friends within all the various cliques, so I never quite fit in but I also wasn't a social outcaat. There were more people like me than most folks realize, too. Not everyone has a nice little category they fit inside, right?

Totally giggling at sif-ee right now. I may actually borrow that pronunciation! (It kind of reminds me of when I waited tables at a Mexican restaurant and started referring to the mixed fajitas as "combination fajitas", using a J sound like in jeer and rhyming the word with phlebitis. To be fair, it wasn't a particularly GOOD Mexican restaurant but in retrospect, I'm not sure it was right to make their signature dish sound like an STD. Heh.)

Thanks for the reply, Carissa! Great to hear from you! :)

~TCB

Carissa wrote: "Not just in tv, but in books as well, I hate when the MC (usually a female) moves into a new town and instantly every male within a ten-mile radius falls instantly into lust with her. Either the m..."


message 4: by T.C. (new)

T.C. Blue Cardeno wrote: "Carissa wrote: "Not just in tv, but in books as well, I hate when the MC (usually a female) moves into a new town and instantly every male within a ten-mile radius falls instantly into lust with he..."

Thanks for the heads-up, CC! :)

~Tis


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