Why is
watching TV still considered a guilty pleasure, like eating junk food, even in this golden age of television? The “Media Diet” movement of the last couple of years takes online news, apps,
and information websites seriously. Industry luminaries report, “Yes, I read The Atlantic online, Longreads, RealClear, and Zite…” and then add sheepishly, “Oh yes,
and I also watch 'True Detective.'” Like, I eat my vegetables, but at the end the day I also eat a box of Oreos.
To “eat well” usually means enjoying a nutritious and varied diet, with a little haute cuisine and comfort food thrown in.
There is a lot of good TV out there and man or woman cannot live on spinach, kale and quinoa alone. But do we “watch well”? More than just indulging guilty pleasures?
I wouldn’t say I watch well. Once I finish binging on one show, I immediately want to know what can I binge on
next. TV is habit-driven. We talk about my shows, getting my fix, what we are addicted to. I have the same short list of programs recorded on my DVR that I had two years ago. I am
not going to exhort you to watch less TV/video in 2015 or not to binge on anything. I am just going to suggest we try to seek more balanced diets: the same principles of the Media Diet applied to a
video-specific diet. We require balance and moderation in our food diets (with an encouragement to try something new every now and again, like Ethiopian cuisine or pigeon). The same holds true for
video, and we need more tools to do that.
How is your VIDEO DIET going?
It used to be important to be well-read. That did not mean just having read all of (binged on) Dickens. It meant
having read broadly: the great books, important new authors, many cultures, periods, and genres. Being well-read broadened the mind, increased civility, meant you were able to hold your own in a salon
or at dinner with diverse groups of people. It unlocked cultural touchstones. It improved your own ability to write and express yourself.
We are not expected to be
"well-watched" when it comes to video, just to have seen the latest [fill in the blank], to avoid “Oh, you don’t watch [fill in the blank]?” No reasons are given to watch
anything except:
1.
[Fill in the blank] is REALLY GOOD.
2.
Because you watched [fill in the blank], you might like [fill in the other blank].
3. Everyone is watching [fill in the blank]. That includes 15 minute of famers, friends, circles, ratings, Rotten Tomatoes, etc.
6. Nostalgia.
That is like saying “Because you eat spinach, you might like kale. Kale is
REALLY GOOD. Everyone is eating kale. Remember the salad we had at that restaurant in Big Sur? That was kale!” There are of course other reasons to eat kale having to do with nutrition, food
groups, complementing the taste of other foods, recipes, etc. But we are obsessed with ephemera, not the eternal. Olives, parmigiano reggiano, red wine, bruschetta, and Tuscan bread are eternals. What
are their equivalents in TV/video? We still tend to look over our shoulders at another table and say, “I’ll have what they are having.”
When cable television was first rolling out, people used to say there were getting
cable in order to get Discovery for the kids. (As if "Shark Week" was "Moby Dick"). That is changing with the unbundling of TV/video. Not just the unbundling of cable packages (see recent HBO, CBS,
and Dish Network announcements) but the unbundling of networks: the all-you-can-eat buffet restaurants of television. We want to watch programs, not networks or “cable.”
If we are
going to cook for ourselves, we need diets and recipes. Dieting is an over $60billion per year business in the U.S. alone. We can do better than that for TV. Somewhere between the playlist, the
syllabus, and the video equivalents of Harold Bloom’s "How to Read and Why," we can put together recipes for killer nights of video viewing that go well beyond what’s on now, that yield
higher life satisfaction quotients.