Dull Men's Club
An unofficial chapter of the popular Dull Men's Club.
1. Relevant commentary on your own dull life. Posts should be about your own dull, lived experience. This is our most important rule. Direct questions, random thoughts, comment baiting, advice seeking, many uses of "discuss" rarely comply with this rule.
2. Original, Fresh, Meaningful Content.
3. Avoid repetitive topics.
4. This is not a search engine
Use a search engine, a tradesperson, Reddit, friends, a specialist Facebook group, apps, Wikipedia, an AI chat, a reverse image search etc. to answer simple questions or identify objects. Also see rule 1, “comment baiting”.
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5. Keep it dull. If it puts us to sleep, it’s on the right track. Examples of likely not dull: jokes, gross stuff (including toes), politics, religion, royalty, illness or injury, killing things for fun, or promotional content. Feel free to post these elsewhere.
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7. Proofread before posting. Use good grammar and punctuation. Avoid useless phrases. Some examples: - starting a post with "So" - starting a post with pointless phrases, like "I hope this is allowed" or “this is my first post” Only share good quality, cropped images. Do not share screenshots of images; share the original image.
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Western are really underestimated, to say the least. Obviously, there is a lot of crap but also a lot of great (and daring) content.
/me (sadly but) approvingly nodding. Either it is because the audience is not paying attention or because the audience is (quickly) losing its ability to follow a story-line and needs things to be constantly and heavily underlined for them?
Replying to myself, for anyone reading this: don't pass over novels either. Western was a written genre as well as a movie genre.
I mean, Western once was a highly popular literary genre and not just because they were easy reads.
Like with movies there was a lot of crap but there was also some true gems. Works that are still really relevant nowadays... and there is still the occasional new novel that is published that will have you wonder why there isn't more like it.
To name just 1 old-ish (I'm almost the same age as this book so, no, it's not old it's just getting aged enough to deliver all its qualities to the amateur :p) and 2 recent-ish books:
There are so much more, not forgetting short stories too, or essays and memoirs! All those books are waiting in many public libraries barely ever read, always willing to surprise the adventurous reader that will be daring enough to change their habits and pick them instead of what they usually read.
And if you're an audiobook person, Willie Nelson has narrated some Louis L'Amour novels. They're not terribly long and interesting enough.
Wasn't there an article recently where [some streaming company] openly admitted to exactly that?
Fake edit: Pretty much, yeah
Real edit for context:
holy cow(boy)!
And that's why AI will be our next screenwriter. And that's also why most audience will demand even more of it.
Sad times we're living in, that will cost us a lot more than loosing our ability to focus on a effing story with animated picture on the screen. Because it's the exact same people with the attention span of a goldfish, unable to follow already simplified story-lines, that will be persuaded they know perfectly well what they do and need not to inform themselves before they elect this or that candidate. Democracy is officially on its way out.