But it doesn't. It's only because in this case the issue being brought up is likely one you don't feel resonates or conforms to one you have a firm grounding in.Andrew Siribohdi said:That's unique perspective. But, sometimes I feel that bringing baggage into the review sometimes sidelines the review of the actual merits of the film and gets caught up in political agendas that may or may not be in the film.
Actually, I think the critical distinction is that you agree with one.Makabriel said:A review with a biasMega_Manic said:What's the difference?Makabriel said:@Andrew: Agreed. There is a difference between a critique with a bias and a critique aimed at pushing the reviewer's own bias upon the audience.
http://www.escapistmagazine.com/videos/view/jimquisition/7196-Boob-Wars-and-Dragon-Crowns
A reviewer pushing their bias
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tropes_vs._Women_in_Video_Games
One uses thoughtful insight on the matter, the other twists and bends what they are reviewing to try to make the audience believe that what they are saying is the truth.
MovieBob said:Baggage
This week MovieBob critiques modern criticism, starting with Ender's Game.
Watch Video
Well as an example. Bob could have simply reviewed Ender's Game through his own mental filters, and told us what he thought of the movie. That is "Critique With a Bias". It is a natural thing. Bob is offering HIS opinion on the matter at hand based through the lens of his worldviews. Everyone does that, and most of us as people are bright enough to apply our own such filters to both the property under discussion and the reviewer.Mega_Manic said:What's the difference?Makabriel said:@Andrew: Agreed. There is a difference between a critique with a bias and a critique aimed at pushing the reviewer's own bias upon the audience.
The fact that two people can observe and analyze the same set of circumstances and agree on their premises, but still maintain differing opinions on them, is the foundation of subjecivity. The fact that two people could disagree about a plot being coherent (informed, maybe, by a better understanding of structure), character's decisions ACTUALLY being poor, the characters being boring (who are you to say that? Maybe they're just completely beyond you?), inconsistencies in their behavior, or poorly implemented romances, but played the same game, means that all of those fields are completely subjective. The adjectives you assign to characters, plot, romances (boring, inconsistent, incoherent, or poor) are completely informed by preference and perception. An objective analysis wouldn't be an analysis at all. It would be a summation, a retelling. Everything you mentioned isn't even superficially objective.uanime5 said:SNIPPITY
This reads quite fluidly as "I don't agree with Bob, and can't be bothered to offer a reason why, but I sure as hell enjoy projecting! [Close with passive-aggressive pledge to abstinence you make after watching every episode, every week]"th3dark3rsh33p said:Bob comments on how he grew up from knowing all the answers he thought he had after graduating collage, to acting as if he still has all the answers now. Just a different set of dogmatic answers that pleases a different audience to make themselves feel better about being them.
Well, I came back to watch one episode seeing how little of the tone has changed, I'll go back to my not watching big picture/movie bob for the time being.
Overwhelmingly. Not always, but overwhelmingly. And frankly, in my opinion she is right.uanime5 said:Both are examples of a reviewer manipulating the facts to fit their ideology.
Anita starts from the position that women are always depicted in a sexist manner, cherry picks her data to support this, and uses strawmen to silence anyone who criticises her.
I'd stopped watching his videos 2 or 3 months ago. I came back once more to see if he'd changed a prevailing trend I felt was bringing his content down. I was also interested to see if he would show some level of introspection on his own sincerely held beliefs on a topic that I knew he'd be very opinionated on. There is a tone of self satisfaction in his own beliefs, that I got tired of listening to in his content. I don't enjoy it. There are things about Bob I do enjoy, and want to watch his videos for. Those aren't the politics or social issues I feel Bob brings little original thought too, and merely parrots other thinkers, while chastising other people for parroting other thinkers. His extensive knowledge on a lot of nerd related subjects are what I find interesting about the man and what I wish he'd keep to. I think he's good at it, and I want to support him when he does it. I don't want to support him when he's being extraordinarily smug about his own political beliefs.Iszfury said:The fact that two people can observe and analyze the same set of circumstances and agree on their premises, but still maintain differing opinions on them, is the foundation of subjecivity. The fact that two people could disagree about a plot being coherent (informed, maybe, by a better understanding of structure), character's decisions ACTUALLY being poor, the characters being boring (who are you to say that? Maybe they're just completely beyond you?), inconsistencies in their behavior, or poorly implemented romances, but played the same game, means that all of those fields are completely subjective. The adjectives you assign to characters, plot, romances (boring, inconsistent, incoherent, or poor) are completely informed by preference and perception. An objective analysis wouldn't be an analysis at all. It would be a summation, a retelling. Everything you mentioned isn't even superficially objective.uanime5 said:SNIPPITY
This reads quite fluidly as "I don't agree with Bob, and can't be bothered to offer a reason why, but I sure as hell enjoy projecting! [Close with passive-aggressive pledge to abstinence you make after watching every episode, every week]"th3dark3rsh33p said:Bob comments on how he grew up from knowing all the answers he thought he had after graduating collage, to acting as if he still has all the answers now. Just a different set of dogmatic answers that pleases a different audience to make themselves feel better about being them.
Well, I came back to watch one episode seeing how little of the tone has changed, I'll go back to my not watching big picture/movie bob for the time being.
EDIT: Typos
And, expounding on those definitions as virtually every philosopher has, subjective is of the self, of perception, and objective is INDEPENDENT of the self, and perception. If you "base your review on feelings or opinions", that review would certainly be subjective. Objectivity constitutes, as I said, things independent of human experiences or perceptions - only facts about reality, qualitative observations without external assessment, observations. I will say this again - "boring" is not an objective statement - it is direct, subjective commentary on an objective observation. There is no grey area at all here. Clarified?uanime5 said:SNIP
So you feel that a lot of his political views go unjustified, and undercritiqued. I'm cool with that. And he can be smug sometimes.th3dark3rsh33p said:SNIP
Edited the hell out of this, but it was really typo-ridden.Iszfury said:EDIT: SNIP Even my accidental double-edit posts take up space.
Thank you! I can understand if a particular website is known for politics or particular social views, but generally speaking I don't want to hear what the critics personal opinion is on issue like politics or social issue. I just want to know if the movie or game is entertaining or not.Saippua said:Do I really need to hear some feminist race theory analysis of a movie to figure out if id enjoy that movie? I/m trying to get consumer advice not political agenda
hahashadowmagus said:You're Bob, and that was quite possibly the most pretentious video you have done to date, and that is saying something.