I practically never wade into the comments (I skim for Buffistas but mostly ignore the others)
You should read enigmaticagentscully's comments. She's also watching for the first time and her reactions are adorable. She's recently started adding her Dad's amusing comments on the show. To wit: "That's another magic shop owner that's been killed! These places must be available on a short lease—comes fully stocked, just ignore all the chalk outlines on the floor...remind me never to open a magic shop in Sunnydale."
He's definitely not everyone's beautiful cake, but I'm charmed by the pummeled-by-emotionness.
It'd be fun if you came to the event on Wednesday! But it's probably hard to get there. Maybe I could pick you up?
I... don't know. Maybe? With job and kids and spouse it can be tricky. Let me ponder, and discuss with Hec. Between the two of us (both fans of Mark Doing Stuff), I think maybe possibly we can get one Zmayhem rep out there, possibly? No promises.
it feels like he's treating Buffy partially as a forum for psychoanalyzing his high school years.
If you look at Mark Reads Harry Potter, he kind of does the same thing there.
I don't see anything unusual about using stories about characters going to school to psychoanalyze your own experience going to school. I mean...that's what make stories so important and wonderful, that they can reflect your experience in a way that makes you understand them better.
I don't think it's required by any means. I fully enjoyed and appreciated the early years of Buffy despite my high school experience not being hellish at all.
Absolutely. I don't think any TV show has really mirrored my high school experience, not even
Freaks and Geeks.
It's probably why I'm so drawn to high school movies and TV shows; it's what I imagine my experience was
supposed
to be like.
Absolutely. I don't think any TV show has really mirrored my high school experience,
Well, Dazed and Confused nailed my high school years pretty well. (I would be in the car with Anthony Rapp, Adam Goldberg and Marisa Ribisi [aka, Mrs. Beck]).
I don't see anything unusual about using stories about characters going to school to psychoanalyze your own experience going to school.
There's nothing unusual about it. Lots of people blog exactly for this reason. And I get that Mark is your friend so it feels like I am being somehow unkind in not wanting to read him do it. But it's not meant to be a slight.
There's nothing unusual about it.
I do balk at the amount he's able to find (and be surprised to find) every single time. That was one hell of a time you must have had to generate the frenzy,
And I get that Mark is your friend so it feels like I am being somehow unkind in not wanting to read him do it. But it's not meant to be a slight.
Yeah, sorry, obviously I'm a little defensive. No worries.