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re: To those that experienced the 80s

Posted on 2/2/16 at 9:05 pm to
Posted by TbirdSpur2010
ALAMO CITY
Member since Dec 2010
134026 posts
Posted on 2/2/16 at 9:05 pm to
quote:

You know the old trope. You have a thousand channels on TV and your whole watching experience is flipping through the channels for two hours. It's either "this sucks", or "this is OK, but out of a thousand channels, there must be something better on", so we become enraptured with the possibilities and end up ruining the experience for ourselves. The same way with songs. Nobody sits down and listens to an album anymore. We change the song after the first rendition of the chorus, because we have almost literally every song ever recorded right at our fingertips, so we can't just waste an hour of our life listening to 13 songs by the same person that we might end up hating? Hell, why even finish the song? There are no shortage of them.


Those are tropes for a reason.

For television? People record the shows they want to watch and/or binge watch Netflix to gain the most out of their viewing experience. Or cut the cord and use slingboxes and the like to narrow down precisely the entertainment they desire as opposed to TV networks "signing off" for the night and being forced to watch a limited number of news sources. You don't have to move to your favorite team's region to watch their games.

With songs, for all the crap people talk about music not being as good as it once was (newsflash...literally every generation says this, and it's never true), we're living in the greatest information-sharing age of all time, and it's reflected in the collaboration of artists and blending of genres. You can have hit songs such as "Lean On" and "Uptown Funk" coexisting as hits despite sounding completely different. The horizons are so broadened it's insane.

People will always find ways/reasons to be unhappy. Always have, always will. Doesn't mean the advances themselves are to blame (hell, the advents of radio and television, respectively, were also thought to be harbingers of the end of human happiness and productivity once upon a time).

Our brains can process so much more than even we know we're capable of. The difficulty (as is often the case in human history), is that those of us accustomed to one way find it increasingly difficult to keep up. Younger people adapt--older folks (and I realize my time is coming to join that group) have to make a conscious effort to do the same.
This post was edited on 2/2/16 at 9:09 pm
Posted by VagueMessage
Fayetteville, AR
Member since Jun 2013
3908 posts
Posted on 2/2/16 at 9:10 pm to
To be clear, I'm not siding with the "then was better" argument. It would take surviving an apocalypse for me to go back to the way things used to be. I'll likely always feel this way. I believe you can overcome becoming set in your ways and not keeping up with the times if you're vigilant about it. I'm just noting that I believe there is a correlation between increasing depression and decreasing attention spans with the rise of instant gratification to all of our hedonistic desires.
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