As a general rule, it will ruin it if you don't allow yourself to be in the correct state if mind when you encounter it. If you are too analytical of it at first, it will lose its effectiveness, and even if you take a step back afterwards, it won't be as effective because it won't be new to you.ABED wrote:It won't ruin it. I can take a step back, and by the time I'm analyzing something like a joke, I've pretty much worn it into the ground already and it is no longer making me laugh.rereboy wrote:Scholar eye is an critical eye that actively wonders and seeks what's beneath the surface. Regarding a joke, it might be the analysis of the timing of each word, the value after you've taken in the joke in a more relaxed manner, with a consumer eye. If you do not and start off with the mindset of a scholar eye as you take the joke, conscious reflexion of the comedian mannerisms and expressions, the cultural significance of its contents, the conscious pursuit to determine the reason for its effectiveness in being humorous, etc.ABED wrote: I'm not sure what you mean by scholar eye. Humor mainly functions on subverting expectations. However, after you hear a joke many times, it loses it's effect. You may still enjoy it, but it's not nearly as funny as when you first heard it. At that point, I think it's fine to dissect it and see how it works, in which case I think it's arguable that you can gain greater appreciation for it.
All this can be very helpful if you want to appreciate the joke in a more objective manner, but all it will only increase or decrease what you consider to be its objective the joke will hardly be effective since you are putting yourself in a position that you are not meant to be as when you encounter the joke, and your over-analytical stance will ruin it.
I don't see how Abridged is significantly different. I can surely use my scholar eye to analyze its jokes and situations in a analytical view and determine a objective value to it, but that can only be actually useful if I put myself first in a position that allows me to appreciate its humor. Now, I realize that Abridged is a little different from a simple joke or a stand-up because there's actually some stuff there for the viewers to appreciate that is not necessarily on the surface and that might require some scholar eye to fully appreciate, and as such, the show would not be as ruined by a permanent scholar eye as a simple joke. However, it would still severely damage the experience to have a critical and analytical stance from the get go. Like pretty all all humor, it requires first a consumer eye, an appropriate relaxed and neutral position in order to be effective, and only then, perhaps a more scholar eye, to detect particularities that might enrich the experience or not.
You completely ignored the basic fact that someone can have a "consumer" eye and simply not find something funny, while another (with also a "consumer" eye) finds it funny. That's called subjectivity but my point was never about that.ImmaDeker wrote:I like that the scholarly eye argument implies I'm incapable of finding things funny because I'm too analytical despite already admitting to enjoying the simplistic frat boy farce of Nick Swardson and Power Rangers comics for six year olds. If anything, I'm an oafish, easily pleased simpleton. (EDIT: I just remembered I've called myself a Filthy Frank fan. Oh yeah, scholarly eye's really got me killed there.)
"He doesn't like Dragonball Z Abridged" is actually the source of a debate about people being too analytical to experience joy. Are you fucking joking? You actually leap to "He can't experience joy" before leaping to "Maybe he just thinks it's shitty." This is fucking incredible.
Because you know, if someone doesn't like what you like, the problem HAS to be with him.
My point was about the correct stance that people should have regarding something like this so that they can enjoy it. Obviously the correct stance won't guarantee that they will enjoy it, but without the proper stance its practically guaranteed that they won't really enjoy it (at the least, its effectiveness will be severely affected).



