the page count does not indicate quality.
Yup, but it's only two episodes in and it has a lot of discussion already. Surely I want to be part of it.
the page count does not indicate quality.
Not very accurate, IMO...Saw this on twitter. I still think that S&M Gay Fantasia is a better hate watch than Misogyny + piano accompaniment, but each to her or his own.
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Yup, but it's only two episodes in and it has a lot of discussion already. Surely I want to be part of it.![]()
I have no problem with Olivia Munn, and think she's been fine in her scenes so far.
I don't want to incite another discussion/debate about her, but you'd think by they way some people talk about her that she had personally ran over everyone's dog/cat/lover, reanimated them, and then proceeded to commit vehicular manslaughter on said loved one again.
Anyway, the episode was alright, not quite as good as the first. The Don character is insufferable, I think he's there just to roll his eyes and belittle his girlfriend.
I don't like her at all, and I was resistant to her presence in this show, but in honesty, her scenes in the episode were fine. I was surprised that she apparently can in fact act a little bit, which is a skill she has never demonstrated before.
She didn't win me over as a capable actress though I suppose she didn't fall flat on her face, either. I don't have any problems with her beyond the fact that 1) she is definitively not funny and 2) I have no evidence that she has dramatic talent either. But I am indeed giving her a chance.I don't like her at all, and I was resistant to her presence in this show, but in honesty, her scenes in the episode were fine. I was surprised that she apparently can in fact act a little bit, which is a skill she has never demonstrated before.
Should I watch this for only Allison Pill?
Just like I did with Chloe Moretz and 30 Rock?
Should I watch this for only Allison Pill?
Just like I did with Chloe Moretz and 30 Rock?
Posts like these are why RealPic avatars are the worst idea ever.
Just got renewed.
Considering there isnt jack shit on TV worth watching till breaking Bad comes back...this show will do.
Alright, time to stand alone:
I liked this episode so much more than the pilot.
The pilot felt like so much soapboxing and revisionist nostalgia. There was a good show somewhere under there, and I had hope it could transform into that show over the season. Something that smartly handled past events, didn't indulge Sorkin's sensibilities too much, had good character work.
The second episode didn't do that, but somehow I enjoyed it more for it. It fully dove into fast-talking batshit crazy events and I was entertained every second. It continued to be very odd and awkward and obvious about recent past events, but that didn't matter because of how much I loved the stuff unrelated to Sorkin stating what he thinks about immigration and shit. I guiltily loved the characters. Maggie and Jim trading banter at impossible speeds, Neal looking on, Don randomly dropping, Charlie being a fucking wizard, Mac and Will trading banter even FASTER than Maggie and Jim.
So in the pilot Sorkin was sort of short-sighted and contradictory and unintentionally ironic and ridiculous about his opinions and the way the show was written, where Sorkin was turned up to say 8. And instead of maybe toning that back, going down to a 6 and checking himself, being more rational and less stickily nostalgic and arrogant, thereby turning the show into something that could be taken seriously and be thought about and possibly evolve into a truly fantastic showhe turned himself up to 12/10. Every part of the show is now so unreal. It's a freaking sci-fi fantasy already, two episodes in. It's melodramatic, breakneck paced, has such unfeasibly fast dialogue that I have whiplash, and is so damn sure that it's right about everything. It's so disconnected from reality that...I don't even know. As much as I've overused the word trying to describe the show, it's the only one that 100% accurately applies: THE SHOW IS RIDICULOUS.
It's a TV auteur at an insane level of indulgence. I'm going to enjoy this show the same way most people enjoyed American Horror Story. Just so completely inflated and high-strung that I'm enraptured the entire time.
Is it just me, or does this show feel like it's 2 hours long? At one point I checked to see how many minutes were left, as it felt like the episode was winding down, and I was surprised to see that there was still 30 minutes left.
I found Jeff Bridge's character to be much improved this week. He wasn't such a huge asshole to everyone, and he even made an effort to learn people's names and such. I think part of the improvement had to do with the writing, but I think Jeff Bridges made a distinct effort to make Will more likable, and I think he did a good job. (despite that story being a little zany)
Nope, not alone. I actually enjoyed episode 2 more than episode 1 as well. I think you hit the nail on the head. The batshit crazy fast dialog, the hysterical women, the tepid karaoke; everything really is dialed up to 12 and it's like watching a very fast talking train wreck of Sorkinisms.
You said Jeff Bridges. lulz
And unfortunately i watch stuff cause it is quality, not because it has creative ways of shitting up the place, which episode 2 had in spades over the pilot.
Isn't that his name? Jeff somethingorother.
Daniels
I'm starting to think that Sorkin's writing only really shines when the setting has more gravitas.
I see. How confusing.
Before edit was hilarious.
I still don't understand why this is a complaint. Why does dialogue have to be realistic? Nobody complained that the Gilmore Girls had unrealistic dialogue.2. The dialogue is just ridiculously unrealistic. I know that is supposedly expect from Sorkin's works but fuck me, it's damn near Dawson's Creek level.
I still don't understand why this is a complaint. Why does dialogue have to be realistic? Nobody complained that the Gilmore Girls had unrealistic dialogue.
I really don't like that a writer can't write something poorly and have it be left at that. Why do we have to write articles about how he has a "woman problem" or is a misogynist? Really? That seems like overkill to me. "Misogyny" is a word that is being seriously overused these days, especially on GAF. Does anyone actually believe Aaron Sorkin hates women? Isn't it more likely that, like the majority of male writers, he just isn't very good at writing women?
Given his pervasive pattern of writing awful female characters and the whole "Hey Internet Girl" thing I believe that Aaron Sorkin has major issues with women. Calling the portrayal of women on The Newsroom misogynistic seems perfectly appropriate to me. It's not overkill at all.
Shouldn't people sound like people?
Dialogue just has to prevent the suspension of disbelief being broken while watching the show.No. Even "realistic" dialogue sounds much more clever than people usually are. I'm not saying Sorkin's dialogue is good in this show, but there are lots of examples of brilliant, unrealistic dialogue.
Male writers who can't write female characters well are at least a bit sexist. If you can't write for a kind of human being just because they aren't you, that's a problem. In the broad strokes, you write women the same way you write men: like humans. Instead, Sorkin's female characters in this show have already contradicted their established characters in order to push the plot forward.I don't know what the Internet Girl thing is but I'll go look. But still, the history of poorly-written female characters does not equate to being a misogynist, which was my entire point in the last post. Many, many male writers cannot write female characters well. It doesn't make them sexist.
And I don't think you can cite The Newsroom as any proof of any kind of pervasive anything. There have been two episodes. The first was fine and the second involved female characters acting ridiculously. I know critics have seen more but we can't analyze what we haven't seen.
Anyway, maybe Sorkin is a misogynist. Personally I kind of doubt it, but we'll never know for sure really. It's still a bigger problem in my opinion as people really jump at the opportunity to accuse people of prejudice at every turn.
Newsroom is definitely Sorkin's most Wacky Women show. The last episode wasn't just bordering on, but was pure misogyny.
Was discussing with my mother how women in shows inevitably have "hysterical" moments and we both agreed we liked the Wire so much because most of the prominent women were professionals who got shit done and didn't turn into raving hysterics. It's part of why I'm disliking the relationship angle. I thought Mackenzie was going to be a no nonsense let's get shit done character and she's becoming more whiny as the show progresses. It's disappointing.
I really don't like that a writer can't write something poorly and have it be left at that. Why do we have to write articles about how he has a "woman problem" or is a misogynist? Really? That seems like overkill to me. "Misogyny" is a word that is being seriously overused these days, especially on GAF. Does anyone actually believe Aaron Sorkin hates women? Isn't it more likely that, like the majority of male writers, he just isn't very good at writing women?