I don’t, of course, seriously believe there is some kind of mind control at work, but it feels like it
Why don’t you think there is some kind of mind control at work? Surely advertisers and marketers are constantly attempting to control your mind using memes. If you are seeing crowd recommendations, then that’s probably a successful viral marketing campaign—and a “memune” reaction seems to be a pretty natural response to me.
I see. However: memetic engineering, domesticated memes, or wild memes—it is still the memes attempting to control and manipulate your mind for their own ends.
I can imagine why you might be interested in whether the resulting mind control originates from someone who is trying to sell you something, though. With the arts, that is usually the case, one way or another.
I think he’s referring specifically to My Little Pony, which became insanely popular among 16-30 year olds despite absolutely no advertising towards that demographic.
Aye, my girlfriend has gone so far as to watch the entire first season twice to try and see why there is such a large community of ‘bronies’. She is completely bewildered at its popularity, and even more by the demographic distribution.
Having watched it I feel that the simplest explanation is the best.
It’s got good animation, writing, and production quality.
It tells stories to provide characterization rather than plugging characters into plots. Though setup like a sitcom, it functions opposite to sitcoms.
It is transportive fiction. Like Harry Potter or Titanic, the aim of the show is to bring you into that world.
The characters and world are likable, good, and healthy. There is no grim darkness. You can feel good about the world by watching it.
Any one of these is rare individually and makes shows watchable. Two or more and you get Firefly or Harry Potter. All of these together creates a popularity storm where there really shouldn’t be one, and causes a series to be intensely popular despite all it’s flaws. Simply put, it uses the basics of children’s storytelling right.
Why don’t you think there is some kind of mind control at work? Surely advertisers and marketers are constantly attempting to control your mind using memes. If you are seeing crowd recommendations, then that’s probably a successful viral marketing campaign—and a “memune” reaction seems to be a pretty natural response to me.
The question is if it’s an intentional viral marketing campaign organized by the creators/advertisers, or if it’s something that arose naturally.
I see. However: memetic engineering, domesticated memes, or wild memes—it is still the memes attempting to control and manipulate your mind for their own ends.
I can imagine why you might be interested in whether the resulting mind control originates from someone who is trying to sell you something, though. With the arts, that is usually the case, one way or another.
I think he’s referring specifically to My Little Pony, which became insanely popular among 16-30 year olds despite absolutely no advertising towards that demographic.
She.
Sorry, my bad.
Aye, my girlfriend has gone so far as to watch the entire first season twice to try and see why there is such a large community of ‘bronies’. She is completely bewildered at its popularity, and even more by the demographic distribution.
Having watched it I feel that the simplest explanation is the best.
It’s got good animation, writing, and production quality.
It tells stories to provide characterization rather than plugging characters into plots. Though setup like a sitcom, it functions opposite to sitcoms.
It is transportive fiction. Like Harry Potter or Titanic, the aim of the show is to bring you into that world.
The characters and world are likable, good, and healthy. There is no grim darkness. You can feel good about the world by watching it.
Any one of these is rare individually and makes shows watchable. Two or more and you get Firefly or Harry Potter. All of these together creates a popularity storm where there really shouldn’t be one, and causes a series to be intensely popular despite all it’s flaws. Simply put, it uses the basics of children’s storytelling right.