Sunday, August 07, 2016

A Red Pill Analysis of HGTV

An interesting analysis.

4 comments:

  1. On the occasions I've caught it, all the shows are some variant of ''flip this house''. I.E. remodeling/rehabbing to resell.
    The 'stars' of course are the products and tools, the people are just there as models/demonstrators.
    I don't agree with his take on Hillary, if anything she's studiously avoided anything resembling 'domestic life' from the time she was the wife of the Governor of Arkansas. Anything to do with the home/family is something for the 'staff' to take care of. She had ''much more important'' things to take care of. I doubt she could even prepare something to eat that doesn't involve a microwave - or ordering an underling to do it for her.
    Mind you I don't think Trump's much different in that regard. I doubt either one has even driven a car by themselves in many years - or could even do basic things like filling the gas or checking the oil.

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  2. It's Not A Wonderful Life3:03 PM

    One of these shows features a format that's identifiable
    by being nearly identical to the format used by Gordon
    Ramsay in his upwardly-aspirational shows about making
    somewhat shoddy cooks into potentially brilliant chefs
    with amazing restaurants...

    Each episode works like this:

    -- Meet with the participants
    -- Look at their current situation
    -- Show everyone in lurid detail how awful it
    is as compared to their aspirations
    -- Show the participants what it's like to be "better off"
    -- Deliver a public bollocking/dress-down of beliefs,
    practices, and behaviours that are unrealistic or
    untenable
    -- Engage the participants with a sham religious
    conversion ritual where they dare to be "better off"
    -- Watch them go through all of the sordid motions
    required to be "better off", including the rather
    public discarding of pipe dreams and other effluent
    -- Become highly amused as they do things that are
    meant to be representative of actual work
    -- Witness the successful religious conversion as a
    "better off" group of participants who are happy
    in their new situation; or
    -- Observe the catastrophic collapse of their dreams
    in full-frontal confrontational mode, sometimes
    involving the show's hosts and crew

    The show I'm thinking of is actually filmed and produced
    in Canada, most of it in the Greater Toronto Area, but
    it's essentially a Gordon Ramsay show with properties
    and gussied-up estate agents.

    If you'd like to make your brain fat on Christmas Eve-
    like aspirations, sugar faeries, and that sort of cack,
    there is in fact a source for that sort of thing, but
    I'd recommend you try it out on your cat first.

    "OH LOOK I COULD TOTALLY HIDE IN THAT KITCHEN PANTRY."

    That sort of thing could be deadly ...

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  3. Anonymous4:29 PM

    HGTV makes me want to gouge my eyes out. It's basically a commercial for a bigger better (read more expensive) house (not home) to acquire.

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  4. CC., you guys have it wrong. HGTV is the Playboy channel for women. Good looking handymen making over your house with a new kitchen, bathroom and walk-in closet--THAT's our G-spot.

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