For those occasions, the show 1turned to video games.
This is possibly one; if it's directly copying Jon Stewart, the line is, "Meet me at Camera 3."But it went beyond just the frequent "meet me at Camera 2" with the audience
I don't believe you should have a semicolon breaking a sentence, then a colon in the second half of the sentence. I might be wrong about the grammar, but it definitely looks awkward to me.Heck, in an era where romantic attachment, or the lack thereof, was the entirety of a female character's existence (teenaged girls were either vestigial limbs of their boyfriends or wholly asexual); men in her life were regarded (in a G-rated sense) about the same as her other hobbies: At one point she and her male best-friend decided to give dating a try, realized it wasn't going to work and went right back to friend-status with no ill-effects.
To be fair, that makes a lot more sense than if the show had 2turned. And 3turned? That would just be silly.Thunderous Cacophony said:And this week's round-up of editorial errors:
For those occasions, the show 1turned to video games.
More importantly, professional bloggers probably shouldn't link to or embed such things in their columns because the videos almost invariably disappear within a year, leaving you with a broken link. If not because the videos themselves get removed for copyright claims, then because the person who posted them will get banned for something else they posted, taking all of their videos with them.Alterego-X said:Hey, how comes that Bob can link to obviously unofficial youtube first episodes of copyrighted TV shows? Does that not count as piracy?
We all have :;(sageoftruth said:That's what Clarissa looked like back then? I've gotten old.
I feel the semicolon is unnecessary in that situation: the clause that precedes it is not independent of the clause that follows it; the second clause answers the implied setup of the first clause (i.e., "At a time when X was the norm, Clarissa was Y.") and thus the first clause is dependent on it. A comma makes more sense. (I'd add a "the" after the comma, but I'm not sure it's strictly necessary--it just flows better to me.)Thunderous Cacophony said:I don't believe you should have a semicolon breaking a sentence, then a colon in the second half of the sentence. I might be wrong about the grammar, but it definitely looks awkward to me.
***Heck, in an era where romantic attachment, or the lack thereof, was the entirety of a female character's existence (teenaged girls were either vestigial limbs of their boyfriends or wholly asexual), the men in her life were regarded (in a G-rated sense) about the same as her other hobbies. At one point she and her male best-friend decided to give dating a try, realized it wasn't going to work and went right back to friend-status with no ill-effects. Another episode turned a one-off joke (she stood up to her younger brother's bully, who subsequently developed a crush on her) into a running B-story: They actually dated, with the relationship becoming for a time just another part of her background life.
Man, what a great show. I remember when it started thinking it was the lame off-brand competitor to the Ferris Bueller TV series (itself co-starring a young Jennifer Aniston). Then the Bueller series got only 13 episodes while Parker Lewis distinguished itself from it on every level. At a time when every other bit of teen fiction was fixated on Breakfast Club-style cliques, Parker Lewis centred around the friendship between a preppy, a "bad boy", and a nerd. And even the simplistic bully, the bratty younger sister, the tyrannical principal, and the crypto-fascist sycophant had rare touching moments of empathy. I rewatched a bit of the first season recently, and was pleasantly surprised how well it held up.Sofox said:Except of course the surreal teen comedy Parker Lewis Can't Loose, one of my favourites. That show was steeped in the 90s, in so many ways. The show wasn't about video games, but they popped up in multiple episodes, with real game and company names referenced (such as Altered Beast, and of course Sega and Nintendo). One episode even dealt with game addiction, but was pretty measured and sympathetic and ended on a pretty interesting note.
I think that is the idea though. I should just be a cosmetic thing and this was the show that actually did it. Instead of making it a defining trait.Johnny Novgorod said:I loved Clarissa but I think this article's trying too hard to develop a gaming theme from a show that treated it as a purely cosmetic thing.
That's actually sort of the point: the gaming theme in the show was definitely an important trait of the character, but it was also just a background detail, where usually if that aspect existed in a character it was the core of and only interesting thing about said character.Johnny Novgorod said:I loved Clarissa but I think this article's trying too hard to develop a gaming theme from a show that treated it as a purely cosmetic thing.