![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I don't know why, but today I am in the mood to confess my unpopular tv fan opinions. So here are a few:
1. I never really liked Logan Echolls. I thought he was an interesting character, but not a likable one. The regard of so much of the fandom for "woobie Logan" made me want to tear my hair out and negatively affected my enjoyment of VM more than anything else. (I didn't actually tear my hair out though, because my hair one feature that I actually like. Mostly.)
2. I don't like Rodney McKay. I no longer despise him. My feelings have tempered to dislike and irritation, with occasional glimmers of amusement. But mostly, I could do with a whole lot less of him.
3. Unlike almost everybody I know, I don't think that the last two seasons of Buffy were awful. In fact, there's a lot about them that I like, and, I think that overall, more of the story worked than didn't work.
4. Hmm. I can't remember what number 4 was going to be. I may have to come back and edit if I remember.
What are your fandom confessions?
1. I never really liked Logan Echolls. I thought he was an interesting character, but not a likable one. The regard of so much of the fandom for "woobie Logan" made me want to tear my hair out and negatively affected my enjoyment of VM more than anything else. (I didn't actually tear my hair out though, because my hair one feature that I actually like. Mostly.)
2. I don't like Rodney McKay. I no longer despise him. My feelings have tempered to dislike and irritation, with occasional glimmers of amusement. But mostly, I could do with a whole lot less of him.
3. Unlike almost everybody I know, I don't think that the last two seasons of Buffy were awful. In fact, there's a lot about them that I like, and, I think that overall, more of the story worked than didn't work.
4. Hmm. I can't remember what number 4 was going to be. I may have to come back and edit if I remember.
What are your fandom confessions?
no subject
Date: 2008-04-04 04:32 pm (UTC)(I still have the series finale saved on my hard drive, and haven't watched it, which probably indicates how much I cared. :D )
Skipping #2 because I have no idea.
#3 is still a contentious issue, but in general I've come to think that the deep dislike of BtVS seasons 6-7 was confined to a vocal minority. The Amazon ratings for the S6-7 DVD's look just the same as those for earlier seasons, professional critics continued to like the series, etc. In my personal experience, my friends who weren't "plugged" into the fan community would just respond with blank stares when I mentioned some of the common fan gripes. I even said this at one point on TWoP, and ooh, they weren't happy.
That's another interesting thing... at TWoP, where the "party line" was definitely that the last two seasons sucked rocks, if you look at the more democratic episode ratings, the opinion of most forum members was out of line with that of the mods/recappers. Even supposedly dreadful episodes like LMPTM got solid "B" ratings. And "Chosen", which had the mods beside themselves with rage, had an A- last time I looked.
The reason for this discrepancy might be an interesting topic for an essay which I am way too lazy to write, I'm afraid.
I'll add my own #4: Sometimes the discussions generated by controversial television are more valuable than the actual POV of the stories.
no subject
Date: 2008-04-04 06:36 pm (UTC)I agree with your personal #4. Sometimes there are episodes (or movies) that I really don't like all that much, but I get a lot out of the discussion that springs up around them.
no subject
Date: 2008-04-04 08:33 pm (UTC)To expand a bit on #4, I often encounter the idea that controversial = bad storytelling, and it has never made sense to me. I tend to think of banal, cliched or unrealistic stories as "bad" and these don't usually generate controversy. Precisely because they don't speak to the things that people really care about.