this is because to fandomites, the point of art isn't to find meaning from it or to convey a story/feeling/etc. to fandomites, the point of art is that it's content featuring their fave OCs, and in their mind once the content is made it is now wholey theirs, becoming their OCs.
Weirdly enough you couldnt make steven universe today
Pearl would “set gay rights back 1000 years” and then so would lapis and jasper, peridot would be wasted potential that she didnt date lapis. Rose would set gay rights back. And then theyd hate amethyst too cus shes fat.
Responses to this clip have proven one thing only;
If you speak to your audience with anything above a 9 year olds vocabulary you’re automatically pretentious and smug
that digital circus ending has some people dropping some of the worst takes ive ever seen and i feel like 70% of that comes from fandom-type people not knowing how stories work
@barl3yy transphobes are dumb, they dont even realize the show is queer.
anything more subtle than a character looking straight into the camera and stating "I am a transgender individual" goes right over their heads.
Games Are Art discussion is plagued by the idea that "art" means "impressive or high-quality." Lots of art is bad, that doesn't make it not art. People's deviantart OCs are art. So are sonyshit moviegames. We can say they're bad without invalidating the concept of art.
Games are art. It should be a simple, descriptive term, but it’s tied up with controversy because people use the term as some kind of quality assessment.
Once we simply accept that games are art as a mundane fact, we can then have more interesting conversations about it.
Lo de Digital Circus demuestra que buena parte del público requiere aprender más de lenguaje cinematográfico que no sea decirte todas las cosas directamente.
Comentarios como "no explicaron nada" solo demuestran falta de atención.
Idk how hot of a take this is but I wish more people acknowledged the Digital Circus as a show with a focus on its message where the characters are a means to convey that message instead of a FNAF-style puzzle box with a focus on the characters themselves.