Explaining Our Terrible Taste-Ep. 86 of Intentionally Blank

Ойын-сауық

Brandon and Dan explain their bad taste, their distinction between liking something and appreciating something while discussing Andor, She Hulk, Avatar, and more.
Check out our previous episode of Intentionally Blank
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Can be listened to almost everywhere podcasts can be found.
Produced by Adam Horne
Sound engineering and editing by Daniel Thompson

Пікірлер: 451

  • @mishisoo
    @mishisoo Жыл бұрын

    “I trust that our listeners have done their due diligence in studiously avoiding all mention or sign of this news story” Dan I’ve been looking forward to this story so much this past week I have in fact subconsciously made myself forget all about it!

  • @Osyrous

    @Osyrous

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh my gosh me too! And theres a picture too!

  • @notchbeard9007

    @notchbeard9007

    Жыл бұрын

    I actually forgot so this was a pleasant surprise.

  • @vincentpelletier57

    @vincentpelletier57

    Жыл бұрын

    What story?

  • @Osyrous

    @Osyrous

    Жыл бұрын

    @@vincentpelletier57 Dan mentioned the meat suitcase story last week and asked us not to look it up.

  • @Bloodn0k

    @Bloodn0k

    Жыл бұрын

    I did my due diligence!!

  • @samm8190
    @samm8190 Жыл бұрын

    I straight up didn’t eat meat for a week and avoided suitcases like the plague.

  • @AlexG-kp8sv
    @AlexG-kp8sv Жыл бұрын

    Came for Brandon Sanderson; stayed for Dan Wells

  • @adrianfedot6552

    @adrianfedot6552

    Жыл бұрын

    GOAT comment

  • @spencercreaghan6579

    @spencercreaghan6579

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here! Love hearing from Dan as much as Brandon

  • @warbrothers7745

    @warbrothers7745

    Жыл бұрын

    They’re are great and work well off each , also because of their deep friendship.

  • @mystry4022

    @mystry4022

    Жыл бұрын

    Came for Brandon Sanderson; didn’t have the stamina for Dan Wells

  • @saurabhh9572

    @saurabhh9572

    Жыл бұрын

    OMG I WAS SUPPOSED TO SAY THIS😭

  • @FastTx66
    @FastTx66 Жыл бұрын

    Would love to see Brandon's take on Andor because I saw a lot of parallels with it and Mistborn. Mistborn is a fantasy heist against an evil empire and Andor starts as a star wars heist against an evil empire. The prison arc gave me some bridge 4 vibes from Stormlight. I also don't think liking or hating Rogue One relates to whether or not you would like or hate Andor.

  • @saurabhh9572

    @saurabhh9572

    Жыл бұрын

    Yesss this is so true.

  • @rapflapfl

    @rapflapfl

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep, completely agree

  • @paraalso

    @paraalso

    Жыл бұрын

    Agree on that. I didn't like Rogue One, and I thought Andor was the best Star Wars has been since Empire Strikes Back.

  • @huntersimmons2560

    @huntersimmons2560

    Жыл бұрын

    *Agreed was pretty mixed on Rogue One and thought Andor was superb*

  • @graceclee2679
    @graceclee2679 Жыл бұрын

    Helloooo! I watched Avatar in my formative years and its safe to say that it has shaped me as a person! I consider the depth of the story and the "what's going to happen to this character" to not be surrounding Jake or Neytiri but to be about Eywa and Pandora. I want to know what happens to them!!! Basically the film shaped one of my core values... the world... and I'm studying engineering to help save it from our (humanities) mistakes 🤷‍♀️ It's what I'm dedicating my life to.

  • @dallinadams9422
    @dallinadams9422 Жыл бұрын

    I love Stormlight Archives for it's variety. Each character has their own flavor in that way there is something for everyone.

  • @AhruKhaawe
    @AhruKhaawe Жыл бұрын

    That entire food heist checks out so hard. I'm from the area, and I find this accurate and hilarious. Locking carts? Yup. Shady meat practices? Yeah, I could see it. Am I still going to all my fave restaurants/diners in the area when I go to visit family? Absolutely.

  • @nimthiriel9
    @nimthiriel9 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this discussion! So much of online culture seems to be focused on bashing things and making people feel self-conscious for liking things. That is the main reason why I keep my art preferences to myself online.

  • @scotwilcox1771

    @scotwilcox1771

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh no, you like the thing! Did you not know that Thing Bad? You must be uncultured swine for liking Thing Bad. I bet you've never seen Thing Good, it is so much better than Thing Bad. I am better than you.

  • @TheHonestLee
    @TheHonestLee Жыл бұрын

    I remember in an episode where Dan asked if he could decorate the background of his side with his own things and you guys agreed. It's been a long time and the background still hasn't changed. Did something happen behind the scenes to prevent that? I really wanted to see Dan's decorations. Still waiting. Thank you.

  • @hkfifty871

    @hkfifty871

    Жыл бұрын

    Plot twist: Dan has decorated his side. He simply happens to have the same stuff as Brandon, and really just wanted the mental comfort of knowing that it was HIS stuff around him.

  • @KevinJennissen
    @KevinJennissen Жыл бұрын

    "It's OK to disagree" is an important takeaway in general.

  • @Panamaniac3D
    @Panamaniac3D Жыл бұрын

    I appreciate Dan’s explanation of why he doesn’t like Andor, especially about how if he sat down with someone such as myself who loves the show, we would probably say the same things on which actors were incredible, which sequences were a little long, etc. even though I love the show a ton, I can see myself agreeing with him on those points. Very good explanation and thanks for finally giving us some more of your thoughts on it.

  • @ifuckinglovenurdrage

    @ifuckinglovenurdrage

    Жыл бұрын

    i feel like im taking crazy pills here - . if you like the show, and he doesn't, there are clearly things you *dont* agree on. highlighting that there are probably many things you have in common with the show is not an "explanation of why he doesn't like andor" - in fact, it's almost the opposite! very frustrating and strange, like just dig in and tell us man. i can only assume this is a religious/moral issue with how guarded he acts about it.

  • @Panamaniac3D

    @Panamaniac3D

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ifuckinglovenurdrage I don’t think so. I think he is not wanting to talk specifics until Brandon has seen it. I am his same religion and I can’t see anything that he would be unhappy with. Like he said, he loved most of it until the very end. I’m guessing that he doesn’t like how morally grey Luthen is, or perhaps he didn’t like the battle at the end of the last episode. He mentioned that he likes Star Wars to be campy and Andor changes that a lot, making the Empire more understandable and the Rebels not as heroic. Andor also gives a lot more meaning to death, whereas in normal Star Wars people either never die or millions of Storm Troopers die and nobody cares. I’m guessing that those are his issues but he won’t talk about it until Brandon has seen it. In regards to us agreeing about most things, I think he would agree with me that the show is well written, that the acting is great, that the shots are beautiful, etc, it just isn’t the type of show that he enjoys to watch. He said that he knows that it is good as a work of art, but that is different than enjoying it.

  • @johnslash8508

    @johnslash8508

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Panamaniac3D Yeah I agree I think he likes thinking of the rebels as the good guys and the empire as the bad guys which Andor does show some of. I think the whole "the ends justify the means" attitude is part of Dans issue with the rebels though and paints them more like the empire than he likes, even if its compelling it ruins his image of the rebels. I think it's similar to how I feel about Luke in episode 8, even if it is a compelling story or interesting take it ruins my image of Uncorruptable Jedi Knight Luke from episode 6.

  • @reginaldforthright805

    @reginaldforthright805

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Panamaniac3D original Star Wars isn’t campy and the modern trend making things morally grey and realistic is both nihilistic and lacking in imagination.

  • @danwells9305

    @danwells9305

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ifuckinglovenurdrage I have no moral complaints about the show, I just didn't enjoy it, and I don't see any value in sharing my thoughts on why because it feels like pooping on a thing that a lot of people love. I prefer to recommend things I love rather than bash things I dislike. But, if you insist: I liked maybe five of the episodes, but found most of it to be poorly-paced and dull. Some of the side characters are fantastic (I literally started watching Killing Eve just because of how much I liked Fiona Shaw in Andor, and I would watch that cranky Imperial Intelligence guy in literally anything), but others--particularly Andor himself--were wooden and bland. The production design was great, but I'd prefer to watch something interesting while admiring sets and costumes. Overall it was a pretty boring slog that had very little to say and ended up going nowhere; that's why the last episode turned me off so hard, because they cut a lot of narrative corners for not much payoff. I hear "it's the most mature Star Wars series" a lot, and sure, I guess, but that's an extremely low bar, and compared to any number of other political or espionage dramas (Slow Horses, Tehran, etc.) I found it facile and superficial. A Child's Treasury of Espionage Cliches, that seems to treat "joyless" and "important" as synonyms. But I also recognize that a lot of people found things in it that I didn't, and that's okay. We're both right. I'm not trying to convince anyone not to like it, because people like different things. Like what you want to like. In the spirit of recommending rather than bashing, here's a list of shows I've watched in 2022 and adored: Slow Horses, Tehran, Russian Doll, Reservation Dogs, The Crown, and of course what might be my favorite show of all time: Derry Girls.

  • @Osyrous
    @Osyrous Жыл бұрын

    Watching dan smile whenever he makes brandon crack up makes me smile.

  • @ashirtthatjusthaspantswrit3806
    @ashirtthatjusthaspantswrit3806 Жыл бұрын

    100 Years of Solitude was one of those books that I didn’t like until I put it down and thought about it. And the more I thought about it the more I liked it. So the discussion on appreciation vs liking is pretty cool to see the direct correlation with my personal experience. Especially since I read it because of Brandon’s suggestion.

  • @xavierreichel8254
    @xavierreichel8254 Жыл бұрын

    I think this has to be my favourite episode of IB. Your earnest and enthusiastic opinions about art - with the nuances we'd expect, coming from artists - were so compelling. It's not a perfect podcast episode, but...

  • @JarnoJansen1978
    @JarnoJansen1978 Жыл бұрын

    I really enjoy when these dudes philosophize about writing and stories. It's good to hear understanding and perspective when there's so much hyperbole and polarization about what people are supposed to love or hate. If I'd bump into these guys at an airport, I'd happily miss my flight to talk about the artistic merit of schlock

  • @MSRomsa
    @MSRomsa Жыл бұрын

    That's a food heist and a bad story idea all in one. 😂

  • @kirkwagner461
    @kirkwagner461 Жыл бұрын

    I live in Maryland, and all of our grocery stores have wheel locking shopping carts. Otherwise people in this area steal them, play with them, and dump them once they are wrecked. Since shopping carts are surprisingly expensive, the wheel lock systems pay for themselves pretty quickly.

  • @weckar

    @weckar

    Жыл бұрын

    UK here - same for the big stores!

  • @balfizan
    @balfizan Жыл бұрын

    OK so locking wheel shopping carts have been around since the 60s. There's a row of magnets under the ground/pavement at the edge of the parking lot that trips a mechanism in the wheel that pushes a metal rod through a hole in the rear wheels when they pass over the magnets. I think there are more modern computer based ones too but I think walmarts use the magnetic line method still.

  • @HallowqueenCrafting
    @HallowqueenCrafting Жыл бұрын

    those shopping carts have been around since like 2005 - a new built supermarket near my college campus had them back then. The shopping carts from other stores would be consistantly stolen and taken to apartment complexes.

  • @lpfaint99

    @lpfaint99

    Жыл бұрын

    They are also just fenced in by a strong magnet

  • @vintagezebra5527
    @vintagezebra5527 Жыл бұрын

    What a great discussion! I loved the ways that you drew the lines and illuminated the differences between appreciating something, liking something, and the quality of that thing. Your insights as creators of art were very valuable. The internet is where nuance goes to get trolled and doxed, but I believe that this is MY favorite episode of your podcast.

  • @annaboo27
    @annaboo27 Жыл бұрын

    I love your friendship so much 😂 I actually have the same wacky tastes as my father in law…my husband thinks we’re nuts. We’re always riffing quotes from old movies and cartoons. My husband just shakes his head, but I think it’s good…I introduced him to stuff and likewise he has too! I’ve felt the fear of being the one who likes something the majority doesn’t…but now it’s just more fun to find new things to like from everyone around me.🤷🏻‍♀️ (or not. Lol)

  • @Woollenlotus81
    @Woollenlotus81 Жыл бұрын

    Love seeing Jenny getting a shout out here. Her content is top tier

  • @aoBubs

    @aoBubs

    Жыл бұрын

    I was totally about to bring up Jenny once Avatar fans were mentioned lol

  • @roach1628
    @roach1628 Жыл бұрын

    My favorite episode so far I think. Very interesting to think back on things I enjoyed and others didn't, or vice versa, and try and understand why I felt the way I did about those things.

  • @ryanwraight5630
    @ryanwraight5630 Жыл бұрын

    As someone who has a Walmart with wheels that lock up, I believe it is done with magnetic in the ground. Although I live in Canada and usually snow is the best shopping cart theft protection.

  • @cklempay17
    @cklempay17 Жыл бұрын

    This podcast (and the lecture content on your channel) has unironically helped me a great deal as I’ve focused on learning the basics of story telling and built the structure that suits how my brain works. I always return to your content when I figure something out or feel like I’ve “unlocked” some perspective on building in order to feel if I’m on the right track. Love everything that you bring to storytelling, Brandon! Thanks for your indirect influence and inspiration.

  • @cklempay17

    @cklempay17

    Жыл бұрын

    @@aristeo7495 thanks! I’ll check it out

  • @phillipgray9327
    @phillipgray9327 Жыл бұрын

    Great job! This was the first episode that I found engaging enough to listen to all the way through. I think it's because your conversation didn't meander as much. The stuff you guys said about art really resonated with me.

  • @avr01
    @avr01 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for your explanations, I really loved this episode - not that we were “owed” anything, but because it opened my mind about the difference between appreciating and liking. I can now understand why Brandon doesn’t like R1, because I’ve had similar experiences with other things that people have liked…one thing turned me off and it was game over. The older I’ve gotten the more willing I am to abandon a media item if I don’t like. I know that can potentially rob me of things that are great “later on”…how many times have we hated something first go around, but then absolutely loved years later? This happened to me with School of Rock. Hated it at first. But several years later, loved it…it’s a rare movie I’ll re-watch. There’s so much media surrounding us…it’s okay to be more discerning and picky. While media volume has grown immensely, the amount of time I have to enjoy it has declined, and God won’t give me more time, so I have to be more choosy. :)

  • @balfizan
    @balfizan Жыл бұрын

    "I don't think it sucks I don't like it" yeah fair enough.

  • @Isoquant
    @Isoquant Жыл бұрын

    Very refreshing topic today. Great episode!

  • @davidtronche875
    @davidtronche875 Жыл бұрын

    i watched avatar when i was 19 loved it. the main reason it didn't obsessed me the way star wars obsessed you is that there were very few supplemental material. star wars had comics and novel almost immediately and the sequel came out 3 years latter.

  • @glass12

    @glass12

    Жыл бұрын

    This! I think people forget that Star Wars or Star Trek had a constant influx of material in several mediums after their debut. Meanwhile, for Avatar there was just one film, for 13 years. It seems weird to compare those two different scenarios, so much.

  • @michaelkennedy5119
    @michaelkennedy5119 Жыл бұрын

    Oh my gosh! Thank you for everything 💗

  • @aleczanderruggles7419
    @aleczanderruggles7419 Жыл бұрын

    I am glad Dan talked about this show and why he didn’t like it, I also understand if Brandon doesn’t end up watching it. However I really do hope Brandon gives it a watch. As a listener since the beginning of this podcast, and a massive Star Wars fan, the reason I wanted the two of them to see the show is because I believed that Brandon and Dan have the same issues with current star was as I do. If you are a Star Wars fan, I think that Andor is a brilliantly made show in that universe. It also lacks all of the things that have disillusioned me from Star Wars in recent years.

  • @spencerurban1092
    @spencerurban1092 Жыл бұрын

    Could you guys discuss - doesn’t have to be an entire episode - StarCraft or other games you enjoyed playing in college? Strategies that were fun or effective, etc. - ?

  • @taelorreid2006
    @taelorreid2006 Жыл бұрын

    I love Avatar. I was a sophomore in high school when it came out and still love it at 30 yrs old. Pandora in florida is a dream come true. The second movie is even more amazing and has a bit more depth to its storyline. Avatar moved me like no other movie has in my life. I understand why others don't love it, but I connect with it. It is a light story in the first one, but it has a great message. The experience also drew me in, like Dan said. I had no expectations going into Avatar and came away completely fulfilled. There are many factors why each person enjoys something different, and I believe age, like Brandon said, does have some influence on our enjoyment. I love this podcast and these two amazing authors! Thanks for being a great example of how to discuss differences in a healthy and non-judgemental way. I look forward to the next episode!

  • @sspearss9112
    @sspearss9112 Жыл бұрын

    I think I enjoyed Andor so much because it had a lot to say about real life and it said it very well. We already know how this is going to end because of Rogue One, but I am so excited for the next season. I’ve seen so many people mention how they’re surprised that Disney released this, but they kinda addressed this in the show. They’re not listening because they don’t have to.

  • @galmannmedbart
    @galmannmedbart Жыл бұрын

    geo-locked shopping carts may be one of the most dystopian things i have ever heard of after hobo spikes.

  • @metumortis6323

    @metumortis6323

    Жыл бұрын

    They have them at most stores on the west coast of America. The worst part is the often lock up halfway through parking lot sometimes, especially of you park in the back.

  • @galmannmedbart

    @galmannmedbart

    Жыл бұрын

    @@metumortis6323 gross! I am not very familiar with large American shopping centers, but there are so many better ways to handle shopping carts.

  • @metumortis6323

    @metumortis6323

    Жыл бұрын

    @@galmannmedbart well cart theft is pretty common in places with a lot of homeless and unfortunately the west coast of America has a lot of that. But yeah there has got to be a better way. Certainly a less annoying one

  • @alanrice6077

    @alanrice6077

    Жыл бұрын

    @@galmannmedbart how would you handle the repeated and steady theft of your shopping carts if you owned a shopping center? At least the locking up thing is non-violent and non-confrontational.

  • @galmannmedbart

    @galmannmedbart

    Жыл бұрын

    @@metumortis6323 I am 100% sure that replacing cats is cheaper than developing and implementing geo-locked carts. I figure one of the big problems is that they have set up a system where there are paid employees going around to fetch the carts is the incentive here.

  • @underthelidar
    @underthelidar Жыл бұрын

    I can appreciate Brandon’s take on Star Wars and how the new material is radically different in tone and in how seriously it takes itself. Despite the fact that it wasn’t the intent of the franchise back in the 70s and 80s, it works well for me in the case of recent additions like Rogue One and Andor because like real life, the good v evil story actually has layers and depth to it. A New Hope is a veneer over a more complex and nuanced story that includes the flawed individuals in Rogue One, and Andor shows that not all imperials had the same outlook on individuality. I guess I’m in the target audience.

  • @arcadelinkauthor
    @arcadelinkauthor Жыл бұрын

    1:52 Yes, shopping carts lock when outside of a certain range. It has screwed me over on a couple occasions. We've had it around here for at least 10 years. Another interesting shopping cart thing: At big local mall (Metrotown in Burnaby BC), just in front of the Superstore, there are these escalators that come up from the underground parking, but they're not the stair style escalators, just a diagonal conveyor belt that has the same sort of metal slatted appearance of escalators. Getting shopping carts up and down this has been a problem, because if you have a particularly heavy cart, you really have to brace yourself from the bottom to make sure it doesnt roll down and take out everyone along the way. Strike, ten points. I once helped an elderly lady who would have had a serious problem managing that - worst thing that happened was that her lil dog rolled off of the cart, poor lil fella. He was fine though. Anyway, just the other day, they implemented this thing that seems to magnet the cart's wheels in place on those escalators so they don't roll down. I have no idea what changed, or if it was just broken for a long time. But it's neat, and probably should have been fixed right away if it was broken. 😅😅 It went for at least a year of me shopping there with carts being an issue.

  • @Supaawesomeification
    @Supaawesomeification Жыл бұрын

    I discovered that shopping carts do that when I was a kid. Targets in CA do that… don’t worry about how I figured that out lol

  • @zackjohnson8632
    @zackjohnson8632 Жыл бұрын

    I did avoid duckduckgoing "suitcase full of meat," mostly since I forgot.

  • @greggg9876
    @greggg9876 Жыл бұрын

    Really dig how thoughtfully Dan and Brandon give their opinions, even on art in general. Well done, gents **thumbs up**

  • @UvaroviteKing
    @UvaroviteKing Жыл бұрын

    Titanic is my favorite movie! It’s a perfect romantic adventure movie turned tragic horror and the pacing, characters, score, visuals hit all the marks!

  • @ElanorNarmolanya
    @ElanorNarmolanya Жыл бұрын

    I love that you guys had this discussion! Fascinating stuff! I think I was just caught off guard by Dan disliking Andor because the show seems right up his alley with the more dynamic morals and gritty setting. But it's very fair to have your own opinions. :) I adored Andor personally even though I don't typically love darker stories

  • @katealvarez4483
    @katealvarez4483 Жыл бұрын

    Just listened to Dark One: Forgotten today! I LOVED it! So clever.

  • @kaimcdragonfist4803
    @kaimcdragonfist4803 Жыл бұрын

    Today I learned I’m probably a significantly worse person than Brandon because I actually kind of enjoy thinking about the things pulpy sci-fi/fantasy stories gloss over, in a sort of, “That’s horrible/that’s hilarious” kinda way. But I also grew up watching Robot Chicken’s early seasons (up to the first Star Wars special) which…yeah

  • @thelvey1
    @thelvey1 Жыл бұрын

    Dan, I love your Mirador books! Reading them for a second time.

  • @jonathankey1533
    @jonathankey1533 Жыл бұрын

    When I went to the world of Avatar it was packed to the gills, and this was a few years after the park opened. Got there early in the morning, made a B line to flight of passage, and waited three hours. Also I loved avatar when I was a kid and when I grew up I thought it sucked but was still fun

  • @davidroberts5211
    @davidroberts5211 Жыл бұрын

    I felt very similar when I got to the end of Andor. Everything was really well done and I enjoyed the individual episodes, but I got to the end and felt something was missing.

  • @rio425ee
    @rio425ee Жыл бұрын

    On the subject of the quality of something being decoupled from personal enjoyment of that thing, it's entirely too normalized that people conflate their enjoyment of media meaning that media MUST be good, by pure virtue of "I enjoyed it". And then there is a second layer of "I'm responding to the negative opinions towards a thing I liked by over-projecting my reactionary response to their dislike into a moral dichotomy, that doesn't allow me to acknowledge any form of flaw in the piece of media I am now compelled to defend" that combines in a very frustrating way to make discourse just awful all around.

  • @corypeter739
    @corypeter739 Жыл бұрын

    I worked for Walmart for 13 years. Walmarts in bigger cities and high theft areas have shopping carts with locks on the wheels that automatically lock when they get a certain distance from the store to deter people from stealing the carts. Most smaller town Walmarts don't have them.

  • @DaveTheChronicler
    @DaveTheChronicler Жыл бұрын

    I was right at that perfect age when Avatar came out to latch onto the IP. I think what Dan said rings true. Loved it as a kid, saw it 3 times nearly back to back full 3D experience, played the game, but barely remember the story. In contrast I love Star Wars lore and world building. I didn't have such a strong tie to the Star Wars characters as others I think so when the new trilogy came out I thought it was cool that more planets, set design, and star warsy items were put out. Didn't really care how they handled Luke or if they rehashed past stories or not.

  • @adamburnett566
    @adamburnett566 Жыл бұрын

    One of the best episodes!

  • @ferchocolocholoco
    @ferchocolocholoco Жыл бұрын

    As a Latin American the stories stir up a lot of family trauma, its like listening to my family members talk about the past. But it depresses the hell out of me, I like to say "You don't like 100 years of solitude if you are a Buendía"

  • @noahearl
    @noahearl Жыл бұрын

    I was super curious why Dan didn't like andor. Then to have this discussion of the relationship between fans and Podcaster is 🔥. Thanks for such nerdy talks 😃

  • @paulbrooks4395
    @paulbrooks43959 ай бұрын

    Great episode. Also, I don't prefer all of Brandon's books. But I enjoy a number of them. Good, bad, popular--these are often also viewed through the lens of time (and timing). Quite a few artists and writers have been panned during life and very popular after they died. The odd truth is that there many things out there which people could enjoy, but only when the stars align do we get popular and notable works. Yet even then, few things are timeless. Enjoyment itself is often only for the moment or (at best) a while. Few things persist, last a lifetime, or become timeless, transcendent works. The size of the world we live in (and the number of years elapsed) has put each thing into a smaller and smaller place in history. There's little reason to get caught up in good and bad--because time marches on, and people produce new things...and nothing is perfect. The best way to approach likes and dislikes is as a means to navigate ourselves towards future things that we can enjoy. We should use our past decisions and experiences to inform our futures and not worry about "who likes what". Life is simply too short to get overly attached to any art. Instead, thinking about the future and making something else (iterating!) is the wiser way to live.

  • @Florkl
    @Florkl Жыл бұрын

    “South Euclid, Ohio” Alright, but what about the North Euclid and what’s the Meat Man’s SCP number?

  • @peachy19968
    @peachy19968 Жыл бұрын

    God i enjoy listening to you two talk

  • @MH-hv7oq
    @MH-hv7oq Жыл бұрын

    Hi Brandon, just wanted to say your books are solely what got me into reading. I’m on my sixth hard copy, which is Calamity. 👌

  • @gabrieleltz1773
    @gabrieleltz1773 Жыл бұрын

    I accept that everyone has their own tastes and reasons for likes and dislikes. Having said that, this is a podcast. I don't listen to it just to hear that you weren't fond of something. I want to hear why, that's the interesting part. That's why I listen in. It's the perspective. I have learned it's human nature to just assume someone's motivations, or thought processes, for their beliefs/opinions. Which is why I like hearing Brandon's takes on various subjects. The vast majority of the time. He can thoroughly, and concisely explain his perspective and tastes. I think this works very well for the format of the podcast. Dan sometimes does. Which is fine, he doesn't owe viewers a perfectly worded well thought out reason for his perspective/reasoning. But I am fairly certain that most will be disappointed. That's what a lot of viewership wants to hear.

  • @muriaal
    @muriaal Жыл бұрын

    Shopping cart wheel-locks are pretty common here in Toronto, Ontario. It prevents shopping cart theft or people trying to carry their groceries home with their carts

  • @LV99guy
    @LV99guy Жыл бұрын

    Many of the newer grocery carts have the locks in their wheels. I used to push grocery carts and every so often my manager would drive around the town and we would have to go collect the stolen grocery carts

  • @Trisjack20
    @Trisjack20 Жыл бұрын

    Can confirm that shopping carts locking up their wheels at a distance from the store is a real thing that applies all over the place including here in little old England.

  • @katieallen5752
    @katieallen5752 Жыл бұрын

    I come from the future! Which is to say I’m watching these podcasts in reverse order, and in a future one Brandon and Dan talk about their favorite books. I expected they enjoyed reading what they enjoyed writing, so I expected their lists to be filled with fantasy and horror “greats”. I like a variety of genres, and it would be okay if one of my favorite authors didn’t like all the same books as me, but never in my wildest did I imagine that the one book on both of our Top 5 Best Books lists would be Pride and Prejudice. It’s wonderful that we have access to so much art in the world that we can enjoy different things and find joy in finding someone else with some commonalities.

  • @DisneyBatchman
    @DisneyBatchman Жыл бұрын

    Growing up, we didn't have a car. When my mom went to the grocery store, part of the time she would take a shopping cart home to get the groceries home. The other half, she'd call a cab. (Especially if it was raining or something.) If she brought it home, I'd often be roped into taking it back to the store. Once while returning a cart, a truck hired by the store to look for and collect carts insisted on taking it from me, so they could get paid for delivering it back to the store. Soon after that, my mom ended up speaking to a manager and getting written permission to have a shopping cart at times, just to make sure she could get her groceries home. Fun times.

  • @brysenm2349
    @brysenm2349 Жыл бұрын

    I think it has more to do with how much we love your books, and we wonder how it is that the authors of some of our favorite stories can hate some of our other favorite stories / movies.

  • @koltonkulis4763
    @koltonkulis4763 Жыл бұрын

    I needed to hear this. I'm in my late twenties, and it has only been in the last year that I've let myself not finish a video game even if I'm not enjoying it. I have a large backlog of excellent, highly praised games that I now realize are not for me. I love Star Wars, and I liked Fallen Order, but I just couldn't finish it. It's okay. It wasn't made for me even if it was an excellent game. I am just now giving myself permission not to finish fiction books that don't interest me. I'm allowed to not like something and spend my time reading something else.

  • @DwayneRidgwayOfficial
    @DwayneRidgwayOfficial Жыл бұрын

    Terrible Taste? Can we get Brandon and Dan on the Trash Taste podcast sometime, please? I need Brandon's anime opinions.

  • @melvinlinderoth7108

    @melvinlinderoth7108

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol, altough why would getting them on trash taste lead to them sharing anime opinions is that something they talk about on that podcast. Never heard that

  • @DwayneRidgwayOfficial

    @DwayneRidgwayOfficial

    Жыл бұрын

    @@melvinlinderoth7108 Garnt, Connor and Joey are mostly known for their content relating to anime, and it usually comes up when they have guests on. Considering the occasion, I'd imagine it'd have to get brought up if Sanderson appeared on the podcast

  • @reflexjat3822

    @reflexjat3822

    Жыл бұрын

    Don’t think Brandon watches anime

  • @DwayneRidgwayOfficial

    @DwayneRidgwayOfficial

    Жыл бұрын

    @@reflexjat3822 He's a known Cowboy Bebop fan, and I know he's at least knowledgeable about Berserk, and likely knows some others. He may not be a fan of modern anime, but from what I know he's experienced it in his own way

  • @thisgirlislost

    @thisgirlislost

    Жыл бұрын

    Man that will awesome!!!

  • @adrianfedot6552
    @adrianfedot6552 Жыл бұрын

    Everything they said about art in this episode is so true.

  • @EvelyntMild
    @EvelyntMild Жыл бұрын

    I feel what Brandon said about going into a movie with no expectations. I have no expectations of a movie shown for free on KZread, but I put on Tokyo Godfathers a few days ago because I felt like seeing something I'd never heard of. That movie is possibly my favorite Christmas movie now.

  • @ReadChristopherColes
    @ReadChristopherColes Жыл бұрын

    As someone who was 9 years old when Avatar first came out, I can confirm that - while I distinctly remember my theatre experience - I remember very little about the story or characters and it left little impact on me. Around the same time I was discovering Star Wars and well... that was a completely different story.

  • @Kurodarkness

    @Kurodarkness

    Жыл бұрын

    same, also even as a teenager was always comparing Avatar with ATLA and how ATLA was superior.

  • @ReadChristopherColes

    @ReadChristopherColes

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Kurodarkness Oh ATLA is very superior!

  • @jamesesplin8712
    @jamesesplin8712 Жыл бұрын

    You need to check out the Harmon's in SLC City Creek area. They have those Geo fenced carts.

  • @zachclawson1186
    @zachclawson1186 Жыл бұрын

    The locking wheel system on shopping carts came out around the 70s. There is an electrified wire shallowly burried around the perimeter of the parking lot that trips the locks on the cart.

  • @dougsundseth2303
    @dougsundseth2303 Жыл бұрын

    The fundamental thing about the quality of a piece of art is that it's impossible for anything to be good at everything. (It is arguably possible for something to be bad at everything.) The result is that if you enjoy something, it did well a thing that you wanted done. In other words, if you enjoy something, it is objectively good, at least at the thing you wanted it to do. Doc Smith's fiction did a brilliant job of engaging my imagination when I was 13. I can't read it now, but it was objectively good at satisfying my desires at that time. If you did not enjoy something, it did not do what you wanted at that time. This does not make it objectively bad, just bad at that set of things.

  • @StephenRitter
    @StephenRitter Жыл бұрын

    People can’t control what they like or dislike. You either do or don’t. There is nothing wrong with you if you do/don’t like something that someone else does/doesn’t like. You can study something and learn to appreciate it. You can also start/stop liking something as you change and get older (or even as your mood or circumstances change) but you’re still not in control of that. Liking is a visceral reaction. So sit back, relax and just like what you like.

  • @Duiker36

    @Duiker36

    Жыл бұрын

    You can kinda control it. On the positive side, taste can be acquired and refined; on the negative side, you can convince yourself to like something you actually don't, or convince yourself to dislike something you do. If you deliberately immerse yourself in certain cultural contexts and pick up different value systems, then different narratives and artistic choices are going to appeal to you. It's not cut-and-dried cause-and-effect or anything, but it's also not a purely intrinsic thing the way you're trying to say.

  • @revartillery9612
    @revartillery9612 Жыл бұрын

    The bit that sours me on wanting to go see Avatar 2 was the nearly decade long dedication to have a sequel even though there really didn't seem to be any more to the story. It was a visually stunning first movie which is why it did so well but it was done and I wish it would have just ended there. Drawing it out for a second installment smacks of a cash grab more than a passion project. And to be clear, a commissioned piece of art can be just as good as a passion project but it still feels bad to know that something was pushed out and advertised into your life just as a cash grab

  • @glass12

    @glass12

    Жыл бұрын

    I truly believe Avatar is more than a cash grab. The ideas and developments that occur in this second movie really add to the universe and paint a truly fantastical and crazy sci-fi story for future installments. I'm excited.

  • @JuanMarchetto
    @JuanMarchetto7 ай бұрын

    That food heist was the strangest Robocop reboot I've ever heard and I love it.

  • @stevenwojtysiak6392
    @stevenwojtysiak6392 Жыл бұрын

    Avatar world building: I always felt that unobtainium and the flux vortex were written as placeholders and just never replaced. It was hard for me to get past those terms in watching it. I did love the visuals though...

  • @CharlieQuartz

    @CharlieQuartz

    Жыл бұрын

    Plot twist: “Unobtanium” has been a term used by engineers since the 1950s for materials with absurd cost or that don’t even exist.

  • @fl0xtez
    @fl0xtez Жыл бұрын

    My understanding is that the Avatar theme park is very well attended. I know it wasn't busy when Jenny went but I think it's very very popular overall. Also, I was 21 when Avatar came out, so not exactly a kid, but I know a lot of people who love it. Maybe not with the fervency of star wars fans, but it left a mark on me for sure and I absolutely loved the second one. I'll be seeing all of the sequels in theatres more than once for sure.

  • @AeonCenturion
    @AeonCenturion Жыл бұрын

    I talk of my love of Avatar the way my mom talks about how much she loves star wars. I was 11 when the first one came out, I've seen the 2nd one in twice now, considering a third theater trip. I can clearly see the ways in which Avatar has had a major impact on the other art that I love now. But as far as an entire generation feeling this way, none of my similarly aged friends agree that Avatar was a formative art experience for them.

  • @glass12

    @glass12

    Жыл бұрын

    I believe this happened because, for a long time, there was just one Avatar film. That's it. Meanwhile, other stories like Star Wars, Star Trek, and many others had a constant influx of content for decades after their debut.

  • @PeteQuad

    @PeteQuad

    Жыл бұрын

    @@glass12 I think you hit on the key point. If there was an avatar movie every 3-4 years for a decade, people would remember and be impacted by it much more.

  • @balfizan
    @balfizan Жыл бұрын

    Most people have a complex and weird relationship with melodrama. Titanic is really a melodrama on the backdrop of the ship sinking. Avatar is really a lightweight turning native story ala Dances with Wolves which is also a kind of melodrama. So people think that has to be 'bad' or 'childish' because it doesn't seem new or complex.

  • @Aldric524

    @Aldric524

    Жыл бұрын

    I mean, people also often get annoyed if a story has its themes with the subtly of hitting you on the head with a hammer. That was certainly Avatar. I even overall agree with a lot of its "themes", but they felt like: MILITARY BAD! ECOLOGY GOOD! COLONIALISM BAD! Theoretically interesting points to make, but when made with such a lack of subtly -- it's hard to not roll your eyes and say WTF.

  • @catorch2450
    @catorch2450 Жыл бұрын

    I live near that wal mart. I do my shopping there very occasionally. Crazy!

  • @justinbowman3567
    @justinbowman3567 Жыл бұрын

    My favorite 'Bad Movie' of all time is..... Drum Roll "Johnny Mnemonic" featuring Keanu Reeves Love it. Hope Dan has seen it. Might have to add a bad movie segment every podcast there's no food heist. Love 'Bad Movies'.

  • @FinneyTheHuman
    @FinneyTheHuman Жыл бұрын

    I am reporting in the field from Northwest Arkansas, home of Walmart, my understanding is that most if not all Walmarts do have locking carts but this is not a feature common to most other retail stores as of yet.

  • @yodal_
    @yodal_ Жыл бұрын

    Those fancy carts have been around for a while and are probably set up at every shop you go to. They work like those "invisible fence" dog collars.

  • @ttt5020
    @ttt5020 Жыл бұрын

    Avatar’s success has always made me hopeful for Stormlight on the big screen.. Humans on a hostile world attacking a race of native aliens who are physically larger and stronger but with less advanced warfare- who also have vibrant striped colorations and a unique bond to their planet (hair for Avatar vs the Rhythms). The militaristic humans fight for the valuable resource (unobtanium/Gemhearts) that requires killing the aliens to get. Later on, it becomes a battle for the planet itself.. tbh, I am more worried that Stormlight will be viewed as ‘an Avatar ripoff’ 😅 especially toward the beginning without radiants

  • @jacobcrown7707
    @jacobcrown7707 Жыл бұрын

    Utah has had locking shopping carts for years. They can be found mainly in the downtown Salt Lake area to prevent them being taken by the homeless.

  • @latterdaycovenantliving
    @latterdaycovenantliving Жыл бұрын

    My Smiths in West Jordan just got the locking carts previously you’d see carts up to a mile or two away at bus stops and abandoned in fields. I had discovered the carts previously in big cities with large homeless populations.

  • @AnathemaMysticalcel
    @AnathemaMysticalcel Жыл бұрын

    I like how the add that keeps popping up to finish this video is a commercial for Andor.

  • @reillyliner
    @reillyliner Жыл бұрын

    I agree that Cameron’s old movies are iconic and his new movies are experiential. Everyone has quoted Titanic, T2 and Aliens for decades now. Nobody quotes Avatar.

  • @manuelvilar2242
    @manuelvilar2242 Жыл бұрын

    I listened to books that I don't like, but I'll keeping thinking about it, which will change my enjoyment of it.

  • @eldergoblinhobboblin
    @eldergoblinhobboblin Жыл бұрын

    One of the things I've always enjoyed about your show is that y'all don't agree on a lot of things. I think the episodes would be very short and boring if you guys agreed on all topics. I really enjoy hearing why you do or don't like something. Thanks for what you all do!

  • @bross92
    @bross92 Жыл бұрын

    Love it when people distinguish between enjoying and appreciating something. For my it’s film noire; I have never actively enjoyed a noire movie, show, book, etc (and I’ve done some of “the greats”) because it for some reason just doesn’t hit me right. But in the same vein I can clearly say that Chinatown is a work of art, that I appreciate having watched, but did not actively enjoy

  • @robbybevard8034

    @robbybevard8034

    Жыл бұрын

    I can appreciate that the Godfather is a perfect movie. Acting, cinematography, dialogue, music, all that. But I just don't like the films, I just can't get behind the mobster stuff.

  • @romeoreads3610
    @romeoreads3610 Жыл бұрын

    i work at a meat department in a grocery store in Cleveland (Around where Euclid and Garfield are) and that food heist story is actually really common around here, people steal and resell meat all the time, mostly Oxtails, Beef Roasts and Steaks. Also this is the first time i heard of shopping carts locking up, maybe its a Garfield thing lol

  • @ViperiusSerpentus
    @ViperiusSerpentus Жыл бұрын

    Your comments about the futuristic shopping carts are funny 🤣. We've had those intelligent shopping carts in Northern California for over a decade to prevent shoppers/homeless from taking the carts home with them. Love your podcast, so glad I got to meet y'all at Dragonsteel 2022, hope to see y'all again at Dragonsteel 2023. Your reaction to Andor reminds me of my feelings about drinking IPA beers. The taste and aroma is great, but I don't like that hoppy aftertaste/finish.

  • @TheRASDEL83
    @TheRASDEL83 Жыл бұрын

    I totally agree with the point being made here... Brandon is my favorite author and he is my kind of geek... I could have sworn he would love Full Metal Alchemist Brotherhood (my favorite anime of all time) if he ever gave it a chance... and it did not work for him. The fact that you like two things does not mean those two things will always go together... Brandon likes Speed Racer... those things seem to not work together yet they do 🤣 Dan the Man is becoming my spirit animal

  • @tomcallmusic4295
    @tomcallmusic4295 Жыл бұрын

    I think a good way to gauge the cultural impact of IP’s is Cosplayers and super-fans/con attendees. People still dress up as people from the earliest Star Wars trilogy, and I haven’t seen a cosplay of anything Avatar related for at least a few years.

  • @TheSchrimpRundung
    @TheSchrimpRundung Жыл бұрын

    Hey Dan and Brandon, regarding Avatar: I was born 1997 so 12 when me and my friends watched Avatar, but even in my generation Avatar had no impact on me or anyone I know. At that time Harry Potter was arguably still biggest thing as the movies came out from 2001 to 2011 and there were, aside from the books, also tons and games and stuff. Additionally, lotr and star wars prequels were also kind of the biggest things for many boys my age since we all grew up with them, even if we were not in the theatres for that. I think I played with star wars lego, star wars lego video games and lotr video games before even seeing these movies.

  • @bronwynecg
    @bronwynecg Жыл бұрын

    Yep. Geofenced shopping carts is a thing here on east coast US too…

  • @asaelponce6794

    @asaelponce6794

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol West Coast (California) too, everywhere but Utah I guess Lol

  • @cosmerelibrarian
    @cosmerelibrarian Жыл бұрын

    Dan is 100% percent correct in his assessment that Avatar did not captivate a generation the way Star Wars did. I will take a step further and say Avatar is more or less like a firework, ephemeral beauty that isnt' solid. (At least for the first Avatar) It felt like more people were interested in the background story and the process of how the movie was made than in the actual movie itself.

  • @mercharris5266
    @mercharris5266 Жыл бұрын

    King Soopers has those carts in CO. Super nice area, so absolutely no reason to have them. Funny story. Love this podcast

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