Pikazard1 posted...
I know & understand we have access to many YouTube channels and a variety of streaming services, but itd be nice if Saturday morning cartoons made a come back
Ironically, there are YouTube channels where you can essentially make your own Saturday morning.
Just get up at 7am on a Saturday, then throw a channel like this on:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bl8G96YER84
Then don't skip anything, don't fast-forward past ads, don't pause. If you have to go to the bathroom or answer the phone, leave it running and just miss stuff.
For bonus points, go and buy some Cap'N Crunch or Fruity Pebbles or whatever other sugary kids' cereal you used to eat and eat a bowl of it while watching.
Then, for
real
authenticity, stop the video somewhere around noon, and switch to a channel that has college sports on it, to simulate the crushing depression most kids felt when Saturday morning ended.
(
And try not to think about the fact that most of the kids in the various toy commercials are probably somewhere around 60 years old now.
)
myghostisdead posted...
I hardly ever watch TV. It is crazy. When I was a kid I would have thought that having access to this many channels and genres would be amazing. Nope, it is all boring to me.
It's a function of being "spoiled for choice", combined with a bit of "choice paralysis", and the absence of FOMO.
In other words, the fact that you
know
you have a functionally infinite selection of media available, which you can watch at any time you want, means you never feel the pressure to watch anything
right now
. Which means that you're discouraged from watching
anything
because your brain is afraid of making the wrong choice, so it doesn't want to choose anything. Nothing feels special or important, so you mostly feel apathy rather than excitement.
It's part of why the aforementioned "Saturday Morning Cartoons" phenomenon died in the first place - Saturday mornings were special when you needed to get up early on Saturday to watch 6+ hours of cartoons, and you needed to pick and choose which ones you liked because you couldn't watch them all It felt more precious because most kids' programming was basically exiled to the weekend. But once channels like Nick and Disney began showing stuff for kids 24/7, and most things repeated fairly regularly, it became much easier to watch stuff, and thus, much less special. Streaming was just the next step in that chain.