If shows like L&O-SVU where the victim gets raped and mutilated every episode isn't "too dark" for the average viewer, what is?
I only meant my comments to apply to my own experience. I can't figure out why people do like half the stuff they do.
I watched the SVU pilot. That was enough for me. When L&O-SVU comes up in conversation (in real life), I try to work in Allyson's pet name for it.
But they don't want to explore the inside of dangerous, crazy people.
This is the case with me. If I had the channel that carries
Dexter, I wouldn't watch it, even though I now understand some more about the premise of that show (thanks to Polter-Cow), enough to make its appeal somewhat understandable to me, now.
Dexter
puts the viewer in an even more unsafe place because Dexter is rather likable. But he isn't killing innocent people, so there's that. His narration, however, allows him to connect with the viewer.
Now I've not seen that new serial murderer show, Dexter or whatever it's called, so I can't compare them.
The Inside was sometimes hard to watch, but it wasn't unwatchable to me. Dexter makes me physically uncomfortable. i've tried watching two different eps and it just really squicks me.
Dexter makes me physically uncomfortable.
I did get the shudders at the end of the pilot.
I *love* Dexter, maybe even the character -- which, yes, does worry me. Many of the characters in that are lovable in their own way. Personally, the only thing which really creeps me out about it is the title sequence. Which isn't graphic at all. But it still creeps me the fuck out.
To me, many of the qualities of The Inside -- the fact it was different to what people expect from shows of that nature, the characters are different, more layered and explored, the fact the characters were often front and center of the story instead of being purely exposition chess pieces (CSI! CSI!) most of the time -- those are the things which, in my mind, may have effected ratings. I may be wrong about that. I also think that applies to Firefly.
In a way, my world view is sad. I don't want to think many viewers are thick and fed the same shit on TV everyday, lapping it up -- but in some respects, I do.
I just have a higher tolerance for dark. Things like Saw, for example? Over the bar, for me.
Me too, Zenkitty.
I've been told I'd love Dexter.
I just ran across this Tim quote:
There's something nice about being able to go from a hard drinking space western to a hard drinking whimsical comedy to a hard drinking abyss peering noir.
So drive will be a hard drinking fill-in-the-blank?
I find The Inside darker than Dexter. Dexter's funny. And somehow because of his disorder, he's impossible to laugh
at
properly. Rebecca wasn't remotely funny. I was asked to soberly believe in her and her damage and how it was being exploited the whole time she was onscreen. Dexter does a distracting dance. I felt bad for the character at times, but never uncomfortable.
Hell, if it comes down to wish-fulfilment, somehow Dexter wins as my role model.
Mel Gibson should get a guest spot on Drive.
Hell, if it comes down to wish-fulfilment, somehow Dexter wins as my role model.
Haaaaa.
Dexter is definitely funnier than Rebecca. And I think
The Inside
tried to be much darker and more grim, whereas
Dexter
has a lot more humanity to it to balance things out.