prog: ("The Sixth Finger" guy)
prog ([personal profile] prog) wrote2006-09-21 04:46 pm
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No... I... didn't see anything. Nope! Nothing there. What's for dinner?

Random hypothesis:

In general, and over the whole history of the medium, characters in television shows lie far more often than real-life people would in similar situations. This is because lying is an inexpensive way for writers to introduce plot twists and intercharacter stresses.

This from a conversation with [livejournal.com profile] dougo about "Lost", which I've been watching on DVD. Midway through the second season I'm getting pretty tired of how the all the characters turn to lying so easily, even to characters that I'm fairly sure are supposed to be people they trust. It's moved past caution into what I'd call childishness. These are supposed to be complex adults, not little kids who think that the best way to handle an encounter with something weird is to never tell anyone ever (or until you blurt it out when sufficiently harassed or otherwise upset).

I think this is related to why characters in modern-setting fiction never call the cops. But at least Lost doesn't have that problem...



Also the actor(s, probably) playing Claire's baby are several months too old, at least in some shots. Even I can tell the difference.

[identity profile] kahuna-burger.livejournal.com 2006-09-22 01:00 pm (UTC)(link)
the lying thing is especially prevelant on sitcoms. A friend once described the standard sitcom plot as "Something happens which could be resolved with a small amount of embarrassent, but instead the character lies about it. Things spiral out of control. Next week they do it again BECAUSE THEY NEVER LEARN!"

The earliest siting of this as a repeated plot where characters never learn is the book of Genesis. No joke.