Keep in mind what bias means. We tend to think of it as something evil (especially during an election season) but all it means is someone has an automatic tendency to lean toward or away from something when it comes to judgment. If I have the choice of watching a sitcom rerun or Agents of SHIELD, my personal bias is to watch Agents of SHIELD. If one salad is made with spinach and one with kale, I’ll probably choose the spinach. It doesn’t mean Agents of SHIELD beats every sitcom or that spinach is always better than kale—it’s just the way I roll.September 30, 2016
Artsy Character Redux
Keep in mind what bias means. We tend to think of it as something evil (especially during an election season) but all it means is someone has an automatic tendency to lean toward or away from something when it comes to judgment. If I have the choice of watching a sitcom rerun or Agents of SHIELD, my personal bias is to watch Agents of SHIELD. If one salad is made with spinach and one with kale, I’ll probably choose the spinach. It doesn’t mean Agents of SHIELD beats every sitcom or that spinach is always better than kale—it’s just the way I roll.September 24, 2016
Re- Formatting
Contrast that with a book, where the author, with full control, can shift to any point of view they want. I can make the reader see, hear, and experience everything through one character’s senses, knowledge, and memories… and then shift to a different character. There’s no real way to do that on film.
Of course, if I’m writing for, say HBO or Netflix, then that doesn’t apply and I have a bit more freedom, structure-wise. These episodes are almost more like mini-movies. Except that now I need to be clear people may be binging these stories, watching them back-to-back-to-back, and take that into account.
September 8, 2016
That One Over… No, THAT One, There
Hey, did you know today is the 50th anniversary of Star Trek? Yep, the original series premiered fifty years ago today (tonight, really). “The Man Trap,” the one with the salt vampire.
Instead, the “hero” came across as kind of sleazy (almost stalkery) and completely useless. I mean, seriously, this guy barely worked as bait for the monsters.
In the bad movie… well, I don’t know what they were thinking. I wasn’t there. It’s possible, as I mentioned above, they went for a goofy hero with better sidekicks and really messed up the balance. Or maybe they just planned on her as a love interest, put in a lot of character traits thinking it’d be cool to have a love interest who wasn’t just window dressing, and couldn’t register the fact that they’d made this supporting character into a far better protagonist than their lead. We’ll never know. All I can say is that it was far from the movie’s only problem, and no one should ever watch it without a serious amount of alcohol on standby.September 6, 2016 / 5 Comments
Amazon Review Policy, Pt II
The dates I’m listing are the dates I wrote and submitted the review. As mentioned in the earlier post, they all had at least twelve hours between them. Most of them went up in minutes. In a few cases cases, there was a delay of anywhere from hours to almost two days before the review actually posted on Amazon. And yet… every one of them did go up.
They’re roughly alphabetical, except in a few places where I had to swap out titles for one reason or another (a few books I’d planned to review for this didn’t actually come out yet…). That’s more a function of the original list I threw together, not anything else. All of them are books I’ve read in the past year, more or less.If there’s some factor you can think of that I missed, please let me know and I’ll see if it’s something I can include the next time around..





