How Streaming has Changed My Viewing –
and Reviewing! – Habits
by
Kristin Battestella
In
these instant glory days – or is that days of instant glory? –
it's becoming tougher to be both a viewing consumer and a reviewing
content creator. Is there enough time to both watch all I want and
maintain consist professional output? Below, I've broken down how the
multitude of streaming availability has affected the focus of my
writing, viewing, and reviewing.
At
times, I want to zone out and look
for show to watch casually – movies or series that I don't intend
to review with any critical eye. However, there are a lot of shows I
end up not watching because I am saving them for a review focus. This
dilemma leads me to viewing extremes, as sometimes I watch a lot
purely for my enjoyment, resulting in a drop in my writing output.
Then, I feel guilty if I'm not reviewing everything I watch. I used
to have a policy when purchasing DVDs that all I watched would be
critiqued, so if I comfort binge that's followed by an obsessive
marathon viewing to get my analysis back on track. There should be a
better balance between work and entertainment, but....
I
Can't Keep Up!
Currently,
between diginets, cinema, DVR, DVDs, Netflix discs and Instant Watch,
Hulu, HBO, Amazon Prime, Starz, and Britbox – as well as free
streaming channels such as The Roku Channel, TubiTV, Pub d Hub, and
more – there is
just too much to watch. Rather than reviewing what I want when I
want, I'll rush to watch something before it expires, rotate between
one program on each platform, or seasonally add or drop yet more
services including Shudder, Filmstruck, and Showtime. It isn't a
question of cord cutting, price per month, or yearly subscriptions
anymore but rather wanting to watch something and signing up for
whichever service has it – whether you already have too many things
in the pile, queue, and watchlist or not because...
You
Watch Something because It's There, don't Lie.
On one hand, for those of us who grew
up with a wonky antenna and a dozen fuzzy channels on the dial,
streaming services and all the latest technological devices provide
tremendous freedom of choice. When you have Roku TVs, set top Rokus,
Fire Sticks, Chromecasts, PS4, and even a VCR/DVD combo, there's no
need to tune in “Same Bat Time, same Bat Channel!” However, this
what you want, when you want whatever mood strikes you free reign, is
deceiving, for I watch something because it is available, not
because I was really looking for it. When recently drafting a horror
viewing list of retro films about witches in the bayou, I browsed all
the horror movies on all the streaming platforms for something that
fit the bill. Rather than watching a bunch of horror movies that
interested me and then finding something common between them to make
a recommended list, I saw several similar movies in different places
and made my review around them.
So,
Streaming Begets Laziness, too.
For
ages, I've felt like watching Only
Lovers Left Alive again.
So,
am I supposed to get up and put on the blu-ray because it isn't
streaming anywhere? No, because it isn't streaming anywhere, I just
don't watch Only
Lovers Left Alive again,
no matter how much I'm hankering for it. Personally, I try not to
watch something on a streaming platform if I already own it on video.
What's the point of having a hard copy then, right? Unfortunately,
that again means I either break an outdated rule for a spur of the
moment white noise viewing, or I don't watch anything. After all....
“Read
the TV Guide, you don't need a TV.”
As
Grandpa in The
Lost Boys said,
sometimes I just end up browsing, and browsing, and browsing some
more. It's like when you are in the kitchen and open the refrigerator
three times in a row hoping something different will be there when
you know there won't be. Sometimes I enjoy the scrolling, it's fun to
add items to my already full watchlist. When passing a good show or
memorable movie, it' makes me smile to remember it even if I don't
queue it, much less press play. Occasionally, I'll add something to
the queue just to know it is there – you don't want to lose it and
that click in itself is comfort viewing without actually watching
anything. Occasionally, something expires and it isn't a big deal,
you can let it go because, like a rerun you expect it to reappear on
another streaming channel since so many have a lot of the same thing
padding their catalogs. That said, there is inevitably that time you
go through every single $^(&!&@ streaming option only to
proclaim there is absolutely nothing
to watch! Of course, once you look at the clock and see all the time
that was wasted just looking...by that point, I'm kicking myself for
not watching something I could have been reviewing.
Sometimes
Not Everything is Worth Watching – or Reviewing, Let's be Honest.
Recently,
I'm more likely to review entire television seasons in long form and
do more viewing lists of feature films instead of reviewing a motion
picture in one full length essay. Sometimes, a film that's two hours
or less just isn't worth the two days time to write one article about
it – especially if it is a stinker. Other times, again especially
with horror, I marathon too many films in a row and don't have time
to write a full length piece even if one lost in the viewing shuffle
is deserving of more praise. Shorter televisions shows that only have
a few episodes per season or brief overall runs, however, still
receive a long form eye because there is still much to discuss.
Occasionally, I'll compile viewing lists of shorter shows that I
deliberately chose to watch with a lighter critical focus – a low
episode count or a cancellation notice means I don't have to give it
as much thought, right? Of course, I'm
more likely to give up on a show after only a few episodes if it
doesn't immediately grab my interest. Remember, I just have so much
more to watch.
Does
Streaming Impatience impact My Reviewing Viewpoint?
Thus,
my ever lengthening queue makes me more overly critical than I used
to be, even more negative. I'm not willing to wait for a show to get
good or finish a movie that's dumb. Instead of coming from a
viewpoint of why a program is worthwhile, today I'm more likely to
question what a program must do to keep me watching. There's no real
love lost if something is bad when I've not purchased that individual
movie ticket or blu-ray set, yet even when a movie or series blows my
mind both in entertainment and analysis, there's still a fear of what
you are missing or what else you should be watching and if it was all
worth the time. When you can see something in such so good, so fast
consumption, there's a hesitant search for what to watch next, and
inevitably, I'm going to compare what I watch after as most likely
inferior no matter how different the content. I'm almost to the point
where it is easier to pick something at random – press play, make
some notes, and not worry about if it was worthwhile or stinks. Then,
I can be pleasantly surprised when the whim succeeds, giving birth to
a rare zone out viewing that become a happy review. Who knew?
What
are your thoughts on how streaming has changed your viewing habits?
2 comments:
I'm with you sometimes when I'm just looking I will be like Oooh I need to watch this but keep browsing then I get overwhelmed by the selection between Amazon Netflix Vudu and all those free Roku channels it's too much! SO I end up not watching anything and go to bed! But streaming has its upside I could read a review on a blog and want to watch it streaming makes that much easier!
Hi Bob!
Thanks for stopping by and commenting!
You've given me a nugget for an Upside of Streaming editorial now, too!
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