Given the conclusion of building something new- I actually did. I built an app for posting based on location to boost local communities:
https://radiusreport.news/
>here are really only five possible movie plot lines. Boy meets girl. And then... There are at most five ongoing narratives in U.S. political history. Outsiders take power, to redress grievances. And then … There may not be even five master narratives in world religions. People suffer. But then …
7 plots, there are 7 media stories.
Jaws, overcoming the boogyman/shark.
Cinderella, good personality poor becomes rich and deserves it.
LOTR, you need to bring widget somewhere wierd to save the world.
Hobbit, you adventure to strange lands and come back.
Annie Hall, comedic character has to overcome adversity to get happy ending
Sweeny Todd, flawed main character who fails, then ultimately learns to overcome their flaw and become good and happy.
Groundhog day, time travel forces bad main character to become better.
All these are aligned in the news as discovered by the author. Realistically just following 'hate inc' by matt taibi. Which really the article/author and matt just comes from Hunter Thompson. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gonzo_journalism
You can imagine, over and over in the election system the characters of democracy play out exactly this way. Once you realize this, it forces you to personally answer the obvious question. Are they doing it intentionally or is this all fake like these fictional movies?
> flawed main character who fails, then ultimately learns to overcome their flaw and become good and happy
Ha! I'm not sure that final sentence works for Sweeney Todd. Not a lot of redemption in that story. But the rest of your point is good - although I would think that the "flawed main character" bit covers Groundhog day just fine, and I don't know that Groundhog day deserves its own archetype, as great as it is.
>Ha! I'm not sure that final sentence works for Sweeney Todd
Caught that did you? I love johnny depp. Quite possibly the only known musical I like.
>although I would think that the "flawed main character" bit covers Groundhog day just fine, and I don't know that Groundhog day deserves its own archetype, as great as it is.
Ya its hard to find another example, perhaps the grinch? It's not my personal cup of tea, but women typically like these. Downtown abbey maybe? Bridgerton? I'm not sure.
The story is basically, "Jerk becomes better person through experiencing why they are a jerk."
It would seem I'm back to not being able to post on HN. Dropped quite negative in my posts, not sure why people dislike this post. Haven't posted in an hour, still going too fast.
edit/ wow 3 hours i couldn't post. impressive brigading this time.
I'm also a big fan of the Burton Sweeney Todd adaptation. I've heard more musical-inclined folks complain about various components of the movie but for my money it's a lot of fun and the performances are all solid. Particularly liked Alan Rickman and Tim Spall as the villain duo.
Oh, and Sasha Baron Cohen as Pirelli the barber is pretty great too!
Ye isn't going for revenge. Maybe he is billing it that way, but revenge requires an initial wronging, and he was never wronged by the collective Jewish people. Other people referring to him as "seeking revenge" is validating some of his false grievances.
That era ended a long time ago; nobody on a percentage basis watches legacy media any more, almost everyone clicked off. The microscopic fraction of the population who still watch, actually LIKE the five permitted media stories. So changing what's produced would be very risky; might lose the very last few viewers, might not gain any return viewers.
The author is trying to do "startup strategy" in an industry that's in "shutdown mode", that's a tough one.
I think this is generational. Young people may not subscribe to newspapers, whether electronic or paper, or watch TV news regularly, but they are still quite popular among older people. Ask your parents (and your grandparents if they are still living). They don't get their news off the Internet. And these older generations still have a lot of power. In many countries, such as the US, they are still the majority of politicians, for example.
You know, we just might give it a try - I was amazed at how much my kids enjoy the occasional print magazine, and how little comparable there is in any other medium. I am guessing this will play out with some scale since we're a pretty ordinary family.
We subscribe to three magazines (one monthly and two quarterly) as a family. The kids look forward to their arrival, and we don't have to worry about violence/porn for the little ones.
I believe we're going to see a resurgence in "traditional" print media as the novelty of it is picked up by generations who maybe weren't exposed to it much growing up. Like older millennials(35-40) and lower maybe?
Older millennials were still exposed to a lot of print media growing up! I'm 30 and we always had print newspapers and magazines in my house. We ordered clothes from catalogs throughout my childhood. In high school we all read gossip and fashion magazines religiously - Perez Hilton's blog was still a novelty and most teenage girls were reading print magazines on a regular basis. It's easy to forget just how quickly the internet supplanted print media...it wasn't until around 2010 when smartphones went mainstream that people, even young people, started using the internet as their one and only source of information. We're barely a decade into this new world.
I do hope print media makes a comeback! It's so relaxing to read something that's not interactive and isn't constantly bombarding you with embedded video players and notifications. I have given away my kindle and returned to reading print books because I felt that I didn't absorb or properly remember the books I read on it - it felt like my brain didn't process the information the same way it does when I read a physical book.
Why are there two sides to a fight? If you investigate something from a scientific point of view, you may look at many different variables. You may come up with a pareto distribution based on your observations.
There's nothing particularly natural about having two sides.
I think there are two sides because of the fight itself. There may be many points of view, but people choose the side closest to their point of view.
After the fighting starts, all the nuance about those points of view disappears.
After the fighting starts, it is disloyal to acknowledge any weakness in the arguments or proposals of your own side.
After the fighting starts, the two main camps will subsume any smaller groups.
----
I think it's interesting to think about times when there were more than two sides: China during and shortly after WWII - think about Japan vs China and KMT vs Communists.
During the Japanese invasion and occupation, the Chinese forces mainly cooperated, or at least tried to appear cooperative. Once the pressure of that fight ended, the Chinese groups were free to fight each other
---
Another: US vs Communism until the end of the Cold War and then Red vs Blue.
Back before Margaret Sullivan became public editor at the Washington Post, there was a reporter--name forgotten--who wrote about the media. It was possible now and then to read a Post story about the NY Times's reaction to a story in the Post. That sort of thing made you wonder why you were reading it.
This take is seductive & alluring for the "I have it all figured out" folk. It tells you there is secret power you can have, a secret truth that describes it all, waiting to be unlocked. It purports to help you decode, to see truth.
In fact, you're just dawning the special filters the author has in mind, a super-skeptical narrow-minded distorted view. The story says it will help you understand, but it is a very biased very particular set of frames it wants to limit you to. To sow distrust, to foster incredulity. This is pure meta-disinformation.
24 comments
[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 72.9 ms ] thread7 plots, there are 7 media stories.
Jaws, overcoming the boogyman/shark.
Cinderella, good personality poor becomes rich and deserves it.
LOTR, you need to bring widget somewhere wierd to save the world.
Hobbit, you adventure to strange lands and come back.
Annie Hall, comedic character has to overcome adversity to get happy ending
Sweeny Todd, flawed main character who fails, then ultimately learns to overcome their flaw and become good and happy.
Groundhog day, time travel forces bad main character to become better.
All these are aligned in the news as discovered by the author. Realistically just following 'hate inc' by matt taibi. Which really the article/author and matt just comes from Hunter Thompson. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gonzo_journalism
You can imagine, over and over in the election system the characters of democracy play out exactly this way. Once you realize this, it forces you to personally answer the obvious question. Are they doing it intentionally or is this all fake like these fictional movies?
Ha! I'm not sure that final sentence works for Sweeney Todd. Not a lot of redemption in that story. But the rest of your point is good - although I would think that the "flawed main character" bit covers Groundhog day just fine, and I don't know that Groundhog day deserves its own archetype, as great as it is.
(Not to mention Groundhog Day is 100% flawed character, the "time travel" part is redundant).
Caught that did you? I love johnny depp. Quite possibly the only known musical I like.
>although I would think that the "flawed main character" bit covers Groundhog day just fine, and I don't know that Groundhog day deserves its own archetype, as great as it is.
Ya its hard to find another example, perhaps the grinch? It's not my personal cup of tea, but women typically like these. Downtown abbey maybe? Bridgerton? I'm not sure.
The story is basically, "Jerk becomes better person through experiencing why they are a jerk."
It would seem I'm back to not being able to post on HN. Dropped quite negative in my posts, not sure why people dislike this post. Haven't posted in an hour, still going too fast.
edit/ wow 3 hours i couldn't post. impressive brigading this time.
Oh, and Sasha Baron Cohen as Pirelli the barber is pretty great too!
Could Ye and Elon be Ahab?
This in terms of modern news. "Clinton/Biden are Ahab." They were overcoming the monster which is trump.
In corrolary if looking at the other political spectrum. It's trump overcoming "the swamp"
Both of which are ridiculous but that's the story being spun for either side. When in reality neither is true.
(Shapes: Man in Hole, Boy Gets Girl, Cinderella)
That era ended a long time ago; nobody on a percentage basis watches legacy media any more, almost everyone clicked off. The microscopic fraction of the population who still watch, actually LIKE the five permitted media stories. So changing what's produced would be very risky; might lose the very last few viewers, might not gain any return viewers.
The author is trying to do "startup strategy" in an industry that's in "shutdown mode", that's a tough one.
You know, we just might give it a try - I was amazed at how much my kids enjoy the occasional print magazine, and how little comparable there is in any other medium. I am guessing this will play out with some scale since we're a pretty ordinary family.
I believe we're going to see a resurgence in "traditional" print media as the novelty of it is picked up by generations who maybe weren't exposed to it much growing up. Like older millennials(35-40) and lower maybe?
I do hope print media makes a comeback! It's so relaxing to read something that's not interactive and isn't constantly bombarding you with embedded video players and notifications. I have given away my kindle and returned to reading print books because I felt that I didn't absorb or properly remember the books I read on it - it felt like my brain didn't process the information the same way it does when I read a physical book.
There's nothing particularly natural about having two sides.
I think there are two sides because of the fight itself. There may be many points of view, but people choose the side closest to their point of view.
After the fighting starts, all the nuance about those points of view disappears.
After the fighting starts, it is disloyal to acknowledge any weakness in the arguments or proposals of your own side.
After the fighting starts, the two main camps will subsume any smaller groups.
----
I think it's interesting to think about times when there were more than two sides: China during and shortly after WWII - think about Japan vs China and KMT vs Communists.
During the Japanese invasion and occupation, the Chinese forces mainly cooperated, or at least tried to appear cooperative. Once the pressure of that fight ended, the Chinese groups were free to fight each other
---
Another: US vs Communism until the end of the Cold War and then Red vs Blue.
---
Do you have any examples?
Back before Margaret Sullivan became public editor at the Washington Post, there was a reporter--name forgotten--who wrote about the media. It was possible now and then to read a Post story about the NY Times's reaction to a story in the Post. That sort of thing made you wonder why you were reading it.
In fact, you're just dawning the special filters the author has in mind, a super-skeptical narrow-minded distorted view. The story says it will help you understand, but it is a very biased very particular set of frames it wants to limit you to. To sow distrust, to foster incredulity. This is pure meta-disinformation.