In my new, post-dog life, I was going to have so much time for things! And all the stuff I was going to do--going out and being active, getting work done, watching cool stuff and writing about it, thereby reviving my dying fannish presence--was going to help buoy me through the post-dog sadness, as well as through the period of living where I don't
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That, of course, is entirely contrary to my usual television-watching preference, so I acknowledge that it's sort of a weird thing. I don't love this show the way I love SG-1 or Leverage or ( ... )
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I the gabolange hit on it with the Wire. It's a brilliant show at times and I didn't always get that until I saw all five seasons. And it was uncomfortable as hell to watch at times. There was one point in season 4 where I didn't know if I'd be able to continue. The paucity of female characters is an issue, but the glimpse of female characters we do get are memorable.
I still remember these character's names almost every one and I did mainline the show. I was actually thinking of rewatching season 1. I might still. It was a good season and gosh, how I adored D'Angelo.
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I did rewatch season 1 and enjoyed that a lot--and I enjoyed the season a lot more the second time. I'd seen it a couple of years ago and liked it, but it didn't grab me enough for me to keep watching. And then when I decided I would give the whole series another go, I figured I'd do best to refresh my memory on season 1. I recommend it!
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But it's one thing to be intellectually invested in that idea and another to be emotionally invested in it. The Wire has me on the first point but not so much on the second. Which, again, is sort of the point. But it's still not my favorite storytelling choice. (All of this means, though, that I really LIKE the show, rather than really LOVE it. Because I still find it awesome and compelling in a lot of ways.)
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*shrug* I guess I just didn't get the point then. Alas.
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I think part of what makes The Wire difficult, especially at first (and I'm finding this to be true at the beginning of each of the subsequent seasons) is that it takes a big risk that you'll stick around and let them play out a long game. It starts slow. There's tons of exposition. It's hard to see what the point is, and all these characters are annoying, and we don't get enough of the ones who aren't, etc. And then even when the payoff comes, it's a different kind of payoff than I, at least, was expecting the first time I watched season 1 ( ... )
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As for The Wire, I've now mapped it all out on the pattern of late 19th- and early 20th-century fiction and have consequently determined why I feel as I do (see comment to gabolange above, if you care!). But yes, a lot of it has to do with that question of what we want in our fiction: do we want gritty realism or escape? Or some combination of both, which tends to be my answer. I am most interested in what makes characters tick, and I'm always drawn to those moments when characters can rise above whatever their current situation is and be a little bit more, even just for a ( ... )
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