Losing a shared experience

Television programming is a curious thing. There are nights when there’s nothing worth watching and others where all the good stuff’s on at the same time.

We refuse to watch the best of a bad selection. We’d rather just turn the television off.

Of course that’s where video recording works its magic. (That’s right. Video. We haven’t moved into hard drive recording yet.) On the really good nights we can watch one show and record another. That gives us some good programming for the dud nights.

This raises problems of its own. Do you ever watch a programme you videoed some time back and want to talk about it the next day?

If we’ve taped a show and then finally get to see it weeks or even months later it’s hard to remember that not everyone watched it at the same time. We get so used to saying, “Did you see such and such last night?” that you almost forget that you were watching an old programme that everyone else saw three months ago. It’s almost like some kind of weird time travel.

It’s a problem that will only get bigger. More and more people are downloading programming to watch whenever they choose, or watching DVDs. Our viewing habits are changing forever.

Is talking about last night’s viewing over the office water cooler becoming a thing of the past? Are we on the verge of losing a shared experience? Does that mean we’ll have to start talking about things that really matter when we get to work in the morning?

Posted by Rodney Olsen

Technorati Tags:



Do you think some of your friends would enjoy reading Losing a shared experience? Please use the buttons below to share the post. Thanks.

About the author

Rodney Olsen

Rodney is a husband, father, cyclist, blogger and podcaster from Perth Western Australia.

He previously worked in radio for about 25 years but these days he spends his time at Compassion Australia, working towards releasing children from poverty in Jesus' name.

The views he expresses here are his own.

View all posts

4 Comments

  • We switched to Satellite TV last summer, and it has been so much better since. We only watch shows that we really want to watch, I haven’t flipped through channels in 6 months. We also don’t have to watch the commercials anymore.

    But the older I get, the more I think that we would just be better off without it.

  • This isn’t a comment that is anything to do with this post!

    This is a comment to simply say Happy Birthday to churches in Australia on the birthday of the Christian Church at Pentecost.

  • yes i’m about 6 weeks ahead with Lost at the moment because I got tired of waiting everyweek and dowloaded the series from the USA.

    Other shows I don’t mind waiting week by week – but yeah i’m finding it hard not to talk about Lost, but i know i’m so far ahead.

  • We had to choose between a high speed internet connection and cable TV – the internet won – so we don’t run into conflict in programming much. We tape shows because quite a few of the shows we’re interested in come on too late for us. The only show they seem to talk about at work is Idol so I don’t worry about joining the discussion.

Join the conversation