Dumbest scene in TV History?

Fuck Dan. He should have been written off the show as soon as his involvement in the school shooting episode came to light.
 
This thread really makes me want to watch the OA now, so I can see what that clip is about (I don't want to be spoiled).

If it was so terrible, why is it getting a Season 2?
 
This thread really makes me want to watch the OA now, so I can see what that clip is about (I don't want to be spoiled).

If it was so terrible, why is it getting a Season 2?

It wasn't terrible as a whole. This reminds me of the Dunkirk trailer thread and people going overboard because of a gif.
 
Is anything, it's worth a watch to see Jason Isaac be a prick for 7 hours. Best actor Hollywood forgot.

Yeah, when I saw his face in A Cure for Life,
I knew he was up to no good and oh god he didn't disappoint lol.


This thread really makes me want to watch the OA now, so I can see what that clip is about (I don't want to be spoiled).

If it was so terrible, why is it getting a Season 2?

The show is OK, even good. Too bad it ended on this scene, it's all people remember now ^^.
 
This thread really makes me want to watch the OA now, so I can see what that clip is about (I don't want to be spoiled).

If it was so terrible, why is it getting a Season 2?

I mean, is there a show mentioned in this thread that didn't get a second season?
 
Ahhh YES the OA is it. I might say it's the stupidest thing I've ever watched. Just totally baffling. It may have been so dumb that I erased it from my mind till someone posted that clip.

So.
Dumb.
 
Yep, I've shown this scene to friends without giving them any context and it always gets huge laughs.

Here is the ridiculous scene for those wondering:
The OA - Episode 8 (Season Finale, so be warned that it contains significant spoilers)
https://youtu.be/C-zxOwo10_U?t=30


I really enjoyed that show until that scene. It makes more sense in context of the full series, but yeah that was awful.
 
I mean, is there a show mentioned in this thread that didn't get a second season?

Oh by terrible, I wasn't talking about the clip. I've heard the show itself sucks and was asking why it got renewed.

But I can't watch the clip because I might want to watch the actual show eventually.
 
How Brit Marling has a writing career is beyond me. This, Sound of My Voice, The East... they're all bad in such bizarre ways. But, she keeps getting to write and star in these things, so good on her, I guess. Actually, it's more like they are competent and sort of interesting and then have such bizarre scenes or ideas that come out of nowhere that taint the entire thing. Too clever by a half, and all.

Damn it. You made me remember that creepy group feeding scene from The East that I had repressed.
 
This thread really makes me want to watch the OA now, so I can see what that clip is about (I don't want to be spoiled).

If it was so terrible, why is it getting a Season 2?

OA is well worth an watch. I really want to the watch the second season and find out what happens. It is an show where you try to guess what is real and what is not. It's subtle compared to most shows.

People dismissing the series and never watching it just because of that scene are missing out.
 
How Brit Marling has a writing career is beyond me. This, Sound of My Voice, The East... they're all bad in such bizarre ways. But, she keeps getting to write and star in these things, so good on her, I guess. Actually, it's more like they are competent and sort of interesting and then have such bizarre scenes or ideas that come out of nowhere that taint the entire thing. Too clever by a half, and all.

I actually like most of the films she and Mike Cahill wrote scripts for. And you forgot about the most interesting one imo - I Origins.
 
OA is well worth an watch. I really want to the watch the second season and find out what happens. It is an show where you try to guess what is real and what is not. It's subtle compared to most shows.

People dismissing the series and never watching it just because of that scene are missing out.

As someone who watched it...no. It's bad. Bad acting, poor pacing, and terrible writing.
 
OA is well worth an watch. I really want to the watch the second season and find out what happens. It is an show where you try to guess what is real and what is not. It's subtle compared to most shows.

People dismissing the series and never watching it just because of that scene are missing out.

Couldn't disagree more. Show had some intrigue the first episode or two then just awful. It was so god damn weird and I don't think they even knew what to do with the show. They didn't really figure out what type of show it wanted to be. Blegh. Topped off with that last scene posted in here and I was out. To think that shooter would stand there and watch them move like that.. As if he would be so flabbergasted he wouldn't know what to do ugh just UGH SO STUPID. I generally consider myself easy to please with entertainment and willing to give everything a chance and this is one show that I consider truly awful.
 
There's 8 episodes of very... "reasonable" build up, that explains why they thought
getting up and doing a strange dance in-front of a school shooter
was a reasonable thing to do. Pretty much one of the main focal points of the series. As to whether the dance actually did anything... watch the series. Explains the girl too - there's a shit ton of context for all of it. Out of context that scene is straight wack.

Yeah, out of context that scene would be utterly baffling, but pretty much the entire rest of the season is building up to that moment in some way or another, so without any of that of course it's going to look odd.

Conceptually the 'movements' is a fairly out there plot device, but if you've bought into the story that is being told then that finale is more or less earned by the show.

I appreciated the audacity of The OA's premise, and it had a few interesting ideas and some genuinely affecting moments, so even though it was (very) shaky at times I'm still curious to see where they go with season 2.

Shit, I thought that OA scene was powerful as fuck, though I totally get finding it ridiculous.

It's basically meta-commentary of the shows premise. It either works, or is amazingly ridiculous. Like the main Characters either believe her stories and in her, or they tell her to fuck off. The weird movements are part of that.

Is anything, it's worth a watch to see Jason Isaac be a prick for 7 hours. Best actor Hollywood forgot.

I will agree with all of the above. It's almost an embodiment of the whole idea of the show that watching that scene without understanding what's going on will make you go "WTF." I will admit that even watching it play out as someone who saw the whole series up to that point and was very invested in it, I thought it was a bit cheesy. But damn if it wasn't compelling.

It's supposed to make you uncomfortable. The idea of the show, if you watch it, is to step outside your comfort zone, believe things you wouldn't normally believe, and embrace the weird. It's certainly very, very far from "the worst thing ever put to film." And it totally makes sense within the show's framework of slightly magical realism.
 
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Dont you hate it when you slip on ketchup?
 
So, does someone actually care to elaborate what exactly is so bad about that scene from The Newsroom?

Because I remember the threads here when President Obama announced bin Laden's death and in comparison that scene was almost subtle...
 
Yep, I've shown this scene to friends without giving them any context and it always gets huge laughs.

Here is the ridiculous scene for those wondering:
The OA - Episode 8 (Season Finale, so be warned that it contains significant spoilers)
https://youtu.be/C-zxOwo10_U?t=30

Are they casting a spell? Summoning Gabriel? Tsukuyomi????

I was expecting the shooter to blow them away at any second, might have made a better scene
 
I can't think of any context where this can be justified and not look like a parody or something.

And yet the commenters claim this was a powerful scene that needs to be taken seriously, if you watched the show.

No way.
I seriously doubt that even in context it's a good scene. I could only stomach the first episode because the writing and acting was so God awful. Worse than in any other Netflix original I've seen and that's saying a lot.
 
So, does someone actually care to elaborate what exactly is so bad about that scene from The Newsroom?

Because I remember the threads here when President Obama announced bin Laden's death and in comparison that scene was almost subtle...


i mean, it's an incredibly cringey scene (the only thing missing was the passengers standing up with their right arm on their chest while 'god bless america' plays in the bg with an amercian flag waving in the wind), but hardly the 'dumbest thing on tv'. not defending the show or anything, but man, the hyperbole. i don't get the vitriol either.

what's funny is until this thread, i had no idea what "hate-watching" was, lol.
seriously, there are actually real-life people who do this?? people who spend a decent portion of your own time watching a show you don't actually like? i wish i had that level of spare time, lol.

if i don't like a show, i simply watch something else. but i guess that's just me... is this part of 'hater-culture' or something. i don't get it. i'm really getting old.
 
what's funny is until this thread, i had no idea what "hate-watching" was, lol.
seriously, there are actually real-life people who do this?? people who spend a decent portion of your own time watching a show you don't actually like? i wish i had that level of spare time, lol.

if i don't like a show, i simply watch something else. but i guess that's just me... is this part of 'hater-culture' or something. i don't get it. i'm really getting old.

I mean, hate-watching has been a thing since as far back as I can remember. Used to watch terrible movies on VHS in the 90s with my cousins. It's fun to make fun of bad tv/movies with you friends... not sure whats hard to get about it. Everything Is Terrible started in 2000 and is still going strong.
 
I actually love Three's Company, but there's no denying it's a dumb show, and the "Double Trouble" episode is ridiculous even by this show's standards. You see, Mr. Furley (the landlord, for the young or uninitiated) has a niece visiting, and Jack wants to date her, but since Mr. Furley thinks he is gay, he has to invent a twin brother from Texas. So he puts on a cowboy hat and invents "Austin", complete with terrible hick accent. What's that you say, not ridiculous enough? Well then there's the scene where Mr. Furley wants to have a drink with both Austin and Jack and somehow Jack convinces him that both are in the same room by taking his hat on and off. It's masterful in its stupidity.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TIaCEPVHBUM
The scene in question starts at about the 13 minute mark.
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Holy fuck that OA scene ahahahahahahah. Gonna remove the show from my Netflix to watch list and punch my friend who recommend it.
 
The thing is, it's not actually dumb in the context of the show whereas the Newsroom's is.
It really is dumb even in the context of the show. I almost burst out laughing when they did the dance at the end. Not to mention the sheer randomness of the school shooter.

Just close the thread,this clip already won.
 
It really is dumb even in the context of the show. I almost burst out laughing when they did the dance at the end. Not to mention the sheer randomness of the school shooter.

Just close the thread,this clip already won.

I went from thinking the show was interesting, to meh, to hating the show after that last scene. However, the scene kinda sorta makes sense. Major spoilers...

The bulk of the series is Brit Marling telling the story of her abduction to these high school kids, and the dance they learned during that time that had special powers. But it turned out that Brit was full of shit. She made it up. To what extent I'm not certain. Was this her coping mechanism during the time of her abduction? But the point is the dance had no special powers. So the random guy hitting the shooter made sense. There wasn't going to be some miraculous intervention. Unless you count that random guy... but fuck that noise and the entire school shooter premise.
 
I went from thinking the show was interesting, to meh, to hating the show after that last scene. However, the scene kinda sorta makes sense. Major spoilers...

The bulk of the series is Brit Marling telling the story of her abduction to these high school kids, and the dance they learned during that time that had special powers. But it turned out that Brit was full of shit. She made it up. To what extent I'm not certain. Was this her coping mechanism during the time of her abduction? But the point is the dance had no special powers. So the random guy hitting the shooter made sense. There wasn't going to be some miraculous intervention. Unless you count that random guy... but fuck that noise and the entire school shooter premise.

Plus if I remember correctly, that series of movements was an
act of healing. So they were healing the shooter's pain to stop him from shooting.

I loved the OA. Watching that clip out of context is a mistake as it is the build up of the whole series about mysticism. It is the only show I can think of where it really humanizes a bully character and shows such growth in its characters. But I can see it is not for everyone.
 
Obscure, but watching How I Met Your Mother when Robin cheats on Kevin, and is about to tell him when he stops her, saying whatever he has to tell her is better left unsaid, and if it's going to hurt him, why bother saying it in the first place.

Just really pissed me off.
 
Now the OA has literally the dumbest scene in TV history? Because it chose to use interpretive dance?

Opinion threads never fail to get to point of "that thing you enjoyed and found interesting and valuable and maybe resonated with you? It totally sucks. You actually didn't enjoy it. You're wrong."
 
That clip in the OP really is incredible. Like does their entire audience consist of old people that think that's actually logical?
 
I feel like riverdale had a ton of really dumb scenes. I can't think of anything specific but I recall turning to my wife multiple times a show and saying something like "that was stupid as fuck, I want all these characters to die."

Archie's an idiot, and the latter half of the season starts to play into that.
 
I think the OA gets bonus bullshit points because it inadvertently makes light of school shooters with how ineptly they handle their fictitious one. For me, The Newsroom's largest sin is that it feels self congratulatory and assumes the viewer will follow along with its jingoism because they too celebrated the death of Bin Laden.

But the OA is a special kind of stupid, the kind that is so egregious it insults actual social issues.
 
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