Savant Crime said:
Signa said:
@Savant Crime Ok, I know I'm being a HUGE dickbag to you, and I'm sorry. You put a lot of effort into your review and you seem like a nice enough person. I just didn't agree with much of what you said in the review, and I didn't like much of how you presented it. Hopefully you can pick apart my rage and find the nuggets of constructive criticism in there to make your videos awesome.
You do have legitimate complains, most of which would be fixed by more time and the longer script, and I do appreciate the comments.
However, you could, perhaps, have phrased your complaints better. Or at least, less belligerently.
Then, you WOULDN'T be "being a HUGE dickbag".
I'll keep your comments in mind when I'm writing my next scripts, thanks for the input!
usually I'm pretty good about not being a dickbag. I kinda flew off the handle because of the whole "some one is wrong on the internet" reactionary/troll thing. I didn't stop to consider that the person who
made the video would be watching and so I was far more impolite than I should have been. Not that I've needed to, but I could see myself pulling the same shit in a Zero Punctuation thread because I know Yahtzee doesn't read the comments on his own videos.
Yeah, while I'm
calmly pointing things out, the "thumbs down" in the video got to me quickly because it felt excessive. Maybe offset them with a thumbs up every now and then if you can point out a positive part of the show you're watching? Like I said before, I liked the show quite a bit. Your review pretty much said there was nothing redeeming about it, and so it almost became personally insulting that you hated something I enjoy (stupid, I know, I know...). I just don't want some one to watch your review and think the show is
that awful without trying it. To each their own, but I'd like to think that the time I was watching an episode from the first season and my brother joined me, then continued to watch the show on his own represents some of the positive things the show offers. I wasn't even telling him to "hey! this show is great, you NEED to watch it." He just liked what he saw and gave it a chance.
And believe me, I have my nitpicks about it too. The show got damn repetitive between season 1 and 2 where it almost seemed like they forgot that Michael was burnt spy and not a private fix-it man for hire. Season 3 managed to redeem that for me by directing the focus on getting Michael reinstated, but constantly getting interrupted by some one pleading for his help. It was still the same sub-plots to the overarching plot, but the tone had changed greatly.
Another show that did this and failed was Monk (Also on the USA network, surprise, surprise). Unlike Burn Notice, they kept hitting the reset button at the end of each episode until you almost forgot that he was searching for his wife's killer. I swear there was about 2-3 seasons where Monk just screwed around with NO character development and no progression to the story. I found other ways to enjoy the show, but the premise wore thin around the end of season 2. It's almost like they told a joke until it wasn't funny, and kept trying to tell it until it was funny again. It kinda worked, but you have to evolve your expectations for the show as it progressed, because the show wasn't doing any evolution of its own.
Damn, I just started typing and rambling, and I ended up writing my own review. LOL. Maybe you can take something from all that because I'm sure as hell not deleting it now.