That seems like kind of a broad swath.Phasmal said:Eh, I don't enjoy anything that's particularly mean-spirited.
Mostly because I'm not too big on being down on other people and partly because it always strikes me as kinda... hypocritical?
What I mean is, I know quite a few guys who enjoy racist and sexist jokes, and think those who don't should 'get a sense of humour'- and who also don't like the Big Bang Theory because it's making fun of nerds.
Basically, a lot of people enjoy mean-spiritedness until it's targeted at a group they're a part of.
It's likely going to depend from person to person, but mean-spriritedness isn't about whether you feel attacked for your ideals and opinions, but whether you can sense that certain ugliness permeating throughout a story. This doesn't even have to be anything deliberately controversial, it can something as simple as a scene in Jurassic World where someone dies in a way that makes you feel extremely uncomfortable eventhough there's no blood or gore whatsoever.
You can have a story about horrible people doing horrible things and still make it not mean-spirited, or even make the characters themselves relatable and likeable. The Witcher 3 has a drunken wife beater who you actually grow to symphatize with and even like. The Sopranos is filled with homophobic, racist, male chauvinists... And yet you like them, despite heavily disagreeing with them, because they're well-written and well-balanced characters.
It's not what's being said or who's being targeted, it's how it's being said.