MikeKardec
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,157
- Location
- Los Angeles
Yeah, despite my guilty concenrs about what it is doing to - in the words of a higher-up in Waterstones - "real bookshops" - I do use amazon a lot.
I try to see everything just because I'm in the business of staying on top of what's out there in entertainment. Every so often I subscribe to a new service and cancel the last, binge watching what I missed by not being subscribed to them all. I agree, the quickest way to go broke (besides drinking, gambling, burning your money ... oh yeah, having to go in the hospital), is to have a bunch of semi useless TV subscriptions!
Amazon is a very mixed blessing. As a guy in the book biz I have very little respect for how many bookstores were run and how inefficient the book business used to be (this goes back way before Amazon but includes the forces that created Amazon) but I love book stores. I grew up playing hide and seek with my sister in the greatest bookstores in the country. It is worth noting that having large numbers of bookstores was almost a passing phase (though a glorious one). Before WWII there were only 500 true bookstores in the whole country and most of them were centralized in a dozen cities in the NE. 50% of all the books produced by American publishers sold less than 2,500 copies. By the end of the 1960s many hundreds of millions of copies were being sold and bookstores were everywhere. Now Amazon's Kindle direct business (people electronically "self publishing" their own work ... though that is misleading because a lot of it is extremely professional) is possibly larger than all the ebooks they sell for the traditional publishers. The lesson the book biz never learns is that price is king ... lower the cost and people will read a shocking amount of stuff!
Did anyone see what they did in New York to advertise this show? Lots of blowback on it and Amazon has taken it down. So I don't know if they either thought 1) it's really bad to put these Nazi-American flag on a NYC subway train but it will be GREAT publicity! or 2) It's just advertising and no one will get offended. I'm thinking it's the first one.
I'd go for #1 though Amazon tends to be pretty tone deaf. There is nothing in existence today that can't be deemed insulting to someone.
Ok - I finished wtching the entire season. Initial impression: incredible. I want to take a few days to really think about it and maybe I'll write up a review.
PLEASE DO! With your interests and expertise I'd love to read it!
(if anything, the generations here who have grown up with the Hollywood fetishisation of WW2 seem to be more sensitive about the whole thing that the generation who actually faced the Nazi threat; certainly they appear much more responsive to a media campaign telling them to be offended). I'd have thought the Japanese stuff would have been more of an issue than the others in the USA, but perhaps not.
Hollywood, a very Jewish culture ... and the cultural aspects include many like myself who are either partly Jewish or have simply absorbed it from the community, has never shied away from Nazis (that's rather obvious) or even complex and human portrayals of them. That's the lesson, I guess, it could be in us all, so watch out! Thank you, Hannah Arendt.
I was nicely surprised that the series did not shy away from the Japanese. Too many times Western writers get glossed with racism when writing about Japan. Nazis are okay because they are Caucasian. I was very impressed at how wonderfully portrayed even the most "evil" Japanese (Inspector Kido) were. Joel de la Fuente is an amazing actor but no actor can do their job without writing and Kido was beautifully done. Of course this has been one of TV's greatest contributions to drama in the last 20 years, fully realized BAD bad guys who are also worthy of our admiration and pathos. They can be very frightening without being loathsome.