I noticed headlines on my browser earlier. "Soaps in ratings war" "Grim storylines in Christmas soap battles". Apparently there are to be suicides and suchlike.
Now, I have no interest in soaps at all, but I was curious as to this. I've gathered over the years that the vatrious soaps have contrived ever more gruesome / appalling / violent / weird storylines in order to keep their watchers (I think the word should be "victims" myself) hooked on their diet of dysfunction, tragedy and "drama".
Occasionally I hear a fragment of the Archers on R4. I can't say whether on this programme as well there has to be some great drama every week or episode, but whether there is or not, I've always been interested in why people listen / watch these things.
I realise that for the lonely and the housebound, they may offer a window into another side of life, and a vicarious interest in the doings of others. In that way, I suppose they are beneficial. But to an outsider like me, the headlines that I see each week about the latest crime / scandal / big drama in one soap or another make me wonder what sort of a world is being portrayed. Certainly not one that I see regularly as I go about my life in the UK, though clearly when abroad one often sees another side of things.
Dysfunction happens, even in the peaceful shires. But it sure isn't the norm: the norm is for people to get on with their lives honestly, help one another and live peaceably with their families and neighbours.
It wouldn't make for ratings, of course - but I can't help wondering (not very seriously as it won't happen) whether if the soaps portrayed the decent things in society rather than the dysfunctions, evils and dramas, life might become more pleasant and peoples' expectations/examples of better behaviour might increase.
Now, I have no interest in soaps at all, but I was curious as to this. I've gathered over the years that the vatrious soaps have contrived ever more gruesome / appalling / violent / weird storylines in order to keep their watchers (I think the word should be "victims" myself) hooked on their diet of dysfunction, tragedy and "drama".
Occasionally I hear a fragment of the Archers on R4. I can't say whether on this programme as well there has to be some great drama every week or episode, but whether there is or not, I've always been interested in why people listen / watch these things.
I realise that for the lonely and the housebound, they may offer a window into another side of life, and a vicarious interest in the doings of others. In that way, I suppose they are beneficial. But to an outsider like me, the headlines that I see each week about the latest crime / scandal / big drama in one soap or another make me wonder what sort of a world is being portrayed. Certainly not one that I see regularly as I go about my life in the UK, though clearly when abroad one often sees another side of things.
Dysfunction happens, even in the peaceful shires. But it sure isn't the norm: the norm is for people to get on with their lives honestly, help one another and live peaceably with their families and neighbours.
It wouldn't make for ratings, of course - but I can't help wondering (not very seriously as it won't happen) whether if the soaps portrayed the decent things in society rather than the dysfunctions, evils and dramas, life might become more pleasant and peoples' expectations/examples of better behaviour might increase.
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