How disturbed where you when you saw todays Jimquisition?

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Eternal_Lament

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Sep 23, 2010
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Not very disturbed, but that's because I've seen the clip before. I think I was disturbed when I first saw it, but having already seen it I already knew what was going to happen, so it didn't phase me out. In general though my reaction to violence seems to be off sometimes. If I was unaware that something violent was about to happen and I saw a video showing something as such then I have a somewhat strong reaction, but if I'm aware that I'm about to watch something violent then I actually don't have a very strong reaction to watching it.
 

RedDeadFred

Illusions, Michael!
May 13, 2009
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Dethenger said:
RedDeadFred said:
Reading the thread, I do believe it was this one.

Captcha was "you win," and since you managed to watch a video that I couldn't, in that regard it's true.
Hooray! My prize is being scarred for life...
 

ChocoFace

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Nov 19, 2008
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It was disturbing enough to prove a point. Didn't make me gag or anything and i won't be losing sleep over it.
(That's all because i once decided to visit 4chan's /b/ and found a gore thread. That there was immensely more brutal than anything else i could ever have imagined.)
 

Jayemsal

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Dec 28, 2012
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I've seen the video before, it makes my stomach turn every time.

I did not enjoy the experience, But I appreciate Jim's use of it to make his point, which I wholeheartedly agree with.
 

The_Echo

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Mar 18, 2009
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I've seen it before, and back then it didn't disturb me.

I desensitized myself to violence years ago. I can't remember the last time I said "ew" from a scene of intense gore. In fact, there was a time when I actively searched out graphic scenes or images to test my limit. Turns out, I don't have one.

But I didn't desensitize myself through games, oh no. I don't even play the sort of "violent games" the media points its finger at all the time. They're mostly shooters, which tend to be not my cup of tea for other reasons.
 

Strazdas

Robots will replace your job
May 28, 2011
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IT disturbed me not because i saw the "russian guy plays a russina roulette with an automatic during the weidding"footage way too many times. media desensitized me, lets burn us some newstations.

I desensitized myself to violence years ago. I can't remember the last time I said "ew" from a scene of intense gore. In fact, there was a time when I actively searched out graphic scenes or images to test my limit. Turns out, I don't have one.
been on that road myself. though albeit i found no truly disturbing things. though i admit there still are certain taboos in the film industry that made those that want to, impossible to release things i wanted to see. as for what those things are, public forums arent a place for that.
 

Jamous

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Apr 14, 2009
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I felt that it genuinely shook me, but I didn't feel as bad as I could because there was still that barrier between myself and the actual event. The fact that it was footage and not the actual event -did- diminish the shock; the distance, both in space and time, did numb it a bit for me. However, it still got to me a lot more than anything else I've ever really seen, other than looking at my grandfather's body. A very good demonstration of how real violence and videogame violence are incredibly different.
 

BleedingPride

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Aug 10, 2009
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When the warning came up I thought about whether or not I would be bothered by it, but when the footage actually started I couldn't bring myself to even watch. Even the THOUGHT of that kinda made me sick. Which I guess proves Jim's point about being desensitized to REAL violence, I mean, yeah I play Resident Evil, Silent Hill, Assassin's Creed, Gears of War, and all these other violent games but the real thing is truly different.
 

Jakub324

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Jan 23, 2011
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Dwyer's face keeps coming back to me. Can't get that image out of my head. Feel kinda shaken all around. So that footage was pretty disturbing.
 

Chrinik

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May 8, 2008
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I wasn´t very disturbed. I am desensitized to voilence on a screen because of the fact that it´s everywhere, News, Internet, you name it. People die every second so I don´t tend to spend any more attention to a death if it doesn´t affect me personally.

Now, I have not been in the situation of a man dying infront of my very own eyes, so I can´t make an honest judgment of how I´d react, but I do have the nerve to act rational in dangerous environments, as in, I was the only guy calling an ambulance and giving first aid to someone who´s got an open leg fraction after a motocycle accident. Blood everywhere and the dude was screaming bloody murder, but I remained calm. I´ve also been injured alot and all it does is make me angry because I hate pain. But I won´t flip my shit making the injury worse somehow, no, I´d just go and seek help if I am able too.

Now if someone want´s to tell me that´s a bad quality, then I´d like to see them be treated by someone who completely freaks out and faints when you have a serrious injury in dire need of help.

And it would take a damn good reason for me to kill someone else, along the lines of protecting a bunch of other people or my own life from said person. I wouldn´t kill for fun or kicks or attention, not even myself like so many do, and get rewarded for it by our news media trying desperately to make everyone care.

I was also trained to kill by my government at the tender age of 19, so if I flip out and shoot somebody, point the finger at your local recruitment center. They showed me how to do it.
 

God's Clown

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Aug 8, 2008
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I wasn't disturbed at all. Blood doesn't really affect me, nor does someone killing themselves. Specially if I am not there in person. I would probably be disturbed if I had been there, but it's mostly other people hurting others that disturbs me.

Like, I literally get pissed off just at the mention of someone having raped someone.
 

The White Hunter

Basment Abomination
Oct 19, 2011
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Ehhh... I found it a tiny bit unsettling I guess... Honestly death rarely affects me, chalk it up to childhood traumas.
 

Candidus

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Dec 17, 2009
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I watched it just a few hours ago. I wasn't disturbed- perhaps because I was braced for it, as Jim went to great lengths to make sure his viewers were- but it was unpleasant. And I say that as a man who's comfortable in a fistfight; who worked through the shakes and sickness felt by the infrequent victims of violence years ago, and can hit a man and feel good- almost high in the aftermath. As a man not particularly 'sensitive' to violence, I say: that video was an unpleasant watch.
 

SonOfVoorhees

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Aug 3, 2011
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Didnt disturb me but did sadden me that the guy committed suicide. But i do know if i had been there when he did it, actually saw it in person then it would disturb me. One time i was watching a movie with a guy getting beaten with a baseball and i was enjoying it. My dad said i must have something wrong with me for enjoying that. Thing is, real life violence committed against real people disturbs me.....my dad didnt understand that i know the difference between special effects/acting and actual real people being hurt. Its why when i watch a movie and at the end it states "based on a true story" it shocks me and makes me feel bad for the enjoyment i got from watching it.
 

babinro

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Sep 24, 2010
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I've never seen the footage and I skipped passed that part.

Real-life violence is something I can't handle. Especially if it's associated to broken bones.
I can't watch the MMA's because of the chances of seeing a leg or arm break.
Heck, I can't even bring myself to watch Tosh 2.0 because of the pain and injury idiots expose themselves to.
I grew up loving wrestling but I could never bring myself to watch Psycho Sid's 'famous' broken leg video.

There are exceptions to what real-life violence I can watch though and I really don't understand why.
My best example of this is that famous JFK assassination footage doesn't phase me.

Game/t.v/movie violence doesn't bother me with the only exception being broken bones.
Scenes like the stairs in Unbreakable or long chains of combat in Arkham Asylum/City are hard for me to watch.
More 'cartoony' broken bones like those in Assassin's Creed don't bother me at all.
 

Bertylicious

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Apr 10, 2012
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I actually heard an interview with Quentin Tarantino about Django which, I think, touches on this. He talked about the difference between scenes where slaves were being whipped and brutalised, about how those scenes are difficult to watch, and the cathartic violence of the action sequences.

This, combined with our own experiences of games and Jim's helpful video, might yield the answer that looking at all violence as "violence" is inaccurate and unhelpful, just as looking at "words" as an aggregate is equally meaningless as it overlooks the complexity of the subject.

Visual interpretation, or rather presentation, is a form of language. It conveys nuance and differing emotions.

Lets explore this theme of mine though. Maybe it's bullshit.

What about rape? Rape as catharsis. The mind immediately leaps to Hentai pornography, with it's absurd presentations of bucket loads of bodily fluids and gravity (or eucledian geometric) defying protagonists. The whole genre is aimed at male empowerment fantasies and the concept of female degradation being so openly freudian in its revenge/acceptance of the mother figure theme as to be comical. Indeed, there are whole libaries devoted to this theme. I've checked.

But is it harmful? Is it wrong?

Let us proceed on the assumption that "standard" pornography is fine for the sake of argument. Afterall, it operates to fulfill the same male empowerment need without the same worrying component. Does watching pornography, or anything for that matter, reinfoce themes within the psyche of the viewer? It causes the viewer to think about the subject of sex in much the same manner if I were to mention white elephants you would think about white elephants or at least the linguistic statement. That is just a shape though, an amorphous blob.

If I were to flesh out the theme of the elephant, give the elephant a name for instance and craft a story about him, then it takes on a whole different form. The form of a concept rather than just an image. If the concept I impart is that of a destructive beast that does harm and should incur wrath and death as a consequence then that is what I am imparting; white elephants are a problem.

What if I tell a story where you are a white elephant though? A story where you are a white elephant who goes around raping and killing? What if I call it "Rumbo-fuck 4" and you play it with a controller?

It's fundamentally fluff. The brevity of the experience and the shallowness of the portrayal might excite the tendancy of a hardcore sadist, but would not go far enough. It may form one part of a larger exploration of themes of victimisation, but (I would suggest) not be "wrong" in itself.

Perhaps though it could be paving on the road to damnation though. One cobblestone on the way from fantasy to enaction.

I would go so far as to say that it is obsessive immersion in any one theme, whether it is hateful female victimisation or cleanliness or body image or anything, that is destructive.
 

SadisticFire

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Oct 1, 2012
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I always found my take on death strange when I see others have different opinions. I am never actually disturbed by the death, it's the way leading up to it for me. He willingly shot himself with a pistol, what appeared to be in an almost calm fashion. I've often thought about suicide and death enough to be used to the idea, but never the methods and thought process.
 
Mar 9, 2010
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I was shocked but not disturbed, I didn't recoil in horror or anything. I recoiled in horror at the video of the guy being beaten to death with a hammer, that was vile, though it was when I was much younger, so I get the point he was making and I'm glad he made it that way. It might not have affected me like intended but it sure as shit affected others and drove the point home.
 

sky14kemea

Deus Ex-Mod
Jun 26, 2008
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I wasn't even shocked. I don't wanna sound like a douche (Though I probably will) but it was just a clip of something that happened a while ago.

Do I think I'm desensitized? Yes, but not solely because of violent video games. I watched more horror movies than played violent video games when I was younger.

I'd probably react very different if I was actually there in person, no doubt about that. It just didn't affect me at all to see that footage. :/