Brandon Monk
3 min readJan 20, 2018

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TV caters to the lowest common denominator and strips away your ability to be unique.

TV is designed to appeal as many people as it possibly can so that advertisements are worth more and the revenue stream will steadily increase. The dollar rules and the collective dollars of the collective assembly is the target. I don’t think it is a new idea, but it is one worth recognizing in the context that everyone one should realize that you aren’t going to set yourself apart from the masses by consuming TV.

TV does not encourage the treatment of a particular subject with breadth or depth.

The aim of TV is to fit entertainment bang between commercials. The creators of TV programs have limitations imposed by the format. Attention spans being what they are, it is impossible to cover any subject with the same breadth or depth that a book can. Complicated ideas are typically discarded in favor of a hook that will drag you through the next commercial break.

TV destroys focus and mutates attention span to fit its format.

Watching TV transforms your patience and your brain to a focus on the program, but the experience is completely passive. It asks nothing of you, and as a result there is no need to give full attention to the material. When you need not give full attention, you don’t practice that. Lack of practice leads to lack of skill in this department.

TV has a clear focus, consumption as opposed to creation.

In conjunction with the passive nature of the experience there is typically no call to action with TV. Rarely is the suggestion that you leave with inspiration to go into the world and create or give something back. Instead the call is to tune back in for more consumption or, through advertisement, to express your consumptive self on a given product. Missing is the call to contribute.

These realities are not necessarily an argument to avoid TV completely. TV is not going anywhere. In order to create something that is going to be appreciated by the masses these days you have to be familiar enough with the effects of TV to be able to communicate given the reality of its huge impact.

A good read contrary is Everything Bad Is Good for You: How Today’s Popular Culture Is Actually Making Us Smarter by Steven Johnson.

Johnson asserts the basic hypothesis that IQ has risen as a whole over the past 20 or so years, and that one possible explanation is the increasing popularity and complexity of social media, including television. By way of summary, Johnson sets out by stating that twenty-five years of increasingly complex television has honed our analytical skills. He then moves on to argue that increasing IQ across society, known as the Flynn effect, provide some empiric evidence that his theory is correct.

Johnson paid particular attention to reality TV in setting forth the argument that these shows shift our brain toward focusing on the emotional lives of the people around us. The part of the brain that tracks subtle shifts in intonation, gesture, and facial expression, Johnson thought, were sent into overdrive while we watched these shows so that we could make judgments about whose side we wanted to be on.

After reading Johnson’s book I would echo his sentiment that there is need for more study to determine whether a true connection exists between the increasing popularity and complexity of television and some skill that translates to other areas of life. The reason I put the question that way is because if we just get better at watching TV by watching TV and the skill increase does not translate to other areas, there is limited value.

Emotional intelligence probably can be practiced by watching humans interact with humans in a real way. In that way, TV may increase our ability to read social cues. This ability readily translates into success in the “real world.”

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Brandon Monk
Brandon Monk

Written by Brandon Monk

[Reader/Lawyer] interested in [law/writing/art].

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