The high cost of most entertainment…

The exception is books! But first, a bit of history…

It all started with cable’s “On Demand”-type offerings (most cable companies had and have that), then HBO with premium movies, and now a whole Jurassic menagerie of streaming services and streaming bundles, a business so lucrative that even Disney jumped in and now competes with other streaming T-rexes. Expensive movie subscriptions, anyone?

And those video games! Lawsuits have been lost or won about who owns them and who can sell them, and they’re so popular that there are people now who make a living treating other people addicted to them. Big business creating cottage industries?

Your ordinary family movie matinee afternoon followed by dinner for four, even at McDonald’s, can easily cost parents $100 or more. That’s a hit on the old family budget!

Entertainment is big business in America, and Americans are willing to spend big bucks to get it.

What’s missing here? Books and reading! I still just make do with regular cable, mostly because I like to keep up on the news (CNN and network news) and PBS shows (new ones for the latter seem to have disappeared with Covid, though). But sometimes I look for a movie in the “On Demand” catalog, but I generally back out of there fast!

As Mr. Biden says, here’s the deal: Let’s say an “On Demand” service charges $3 for an old flick that I’ve missed (more chances for that now with Covid), and that movie lasts two hours. For $3, I can download a damn good novel that will take eight hours to read, say. In other words, for the same price, I get four times the entertainment! And that book is usually far better entertainment. Movie scripts nowadays are notoriously bad, often with no plot or interesting characters, just a lot of special effects. It’s incredible that I can buy a well-thought-out novel for $3, a story that’s almost guaranteed to be more entertaining than most movies.

Of course, I have to be selective, but I am for both media choices, and that’s another plus for books: There’s a lot more selection! There are more books because it doesn’t cost $100 million-plus to make a book. And with the book’s blurb and a “peek inside” (most online book retail sites have these features, and you use them also as you browse in a library, where a book is zero cost to you), I can home in and find a very entertaining book. Movie trailers all too often just show the few good parts of a movie, so I’ve learned to distrust them (same for book trailers, of course, especially James Patterson’s).

Conclusion: The best entertainment is found in books; the least expensive entertainment is found in books. Books are better. Period. Go out and spend a lot on other entertainment if you like. I’m sticking with books!

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Comments are welcome…but see the rules on my “Join the Conversation” web page.

Oktoberfests. I think my only mention of them is in Death on the Danube, and that only occurred as a reasonable facsimile at the beginning of Esther and Bastiann’s honeymoon river cruise (the beer gets to Bastiann, though!). We actually took the cruise that novel is based on in October through multiple European countries, so the reader can see most of what we saw by riding along with those two lovebirds. We didn’t have a murder on our cruise, of course, and there was no Interpol agent like Bastiann around to take over the investigation if we’d had one! This novel is in the middle of the five-novel “Esther Brookstone Art Detective” series, forming a bridge between the first two more international books and the last two, where the sleuths solve crimes on Esther’s home turf. Available in ebook and print format.

Around the world and to the stars! In libris libertas!

 

3 Responses to “The high cost of most entertainment…”

  1. Scott Dyson Says:

    I’m not terribly selective; I’ll watch or read almost anything. (One of the reasons I’m not a good reviewer!) We pay for Disney+ and have HBO Max as part of our cellphone bill (because we bought a new phone for my son recently) and Peacock Premium as part of our Comcast XFinity subscription. Then my son has a Spotify student subscription for music and with that he gets Hulu (with ads) and we can watch it. Add Amazon Prime to that (because we pay the fee every year and save at least that in shipping) and my issue is deciding what I want to watch.

    I have so many books on my Kindle (I still haven’t gotten into the last two Esther Brookstone books but I will soon…) that I have the same problem there – deciding which to read next.

  2. admin Says:

    Hiya Scott,
    I’m happy you can find something worthwhile on streaming video to watch. I see the previews of series and movies, and very little motivates me.
    I used to watch some drama and nature series on PBS, but they all seem to be reruns, and network TV has too many stupid game shows (cheap to make, I suspect) and the writers have to cram everything into forty-five minutes so there can be fifteen minutes of commercials. Ever watch ABC News with David Muir? He summarizes the day’s events at the beginning (teasers), goes over them all again, and then dishes them out to reporters. That’s 15-20 minutes in the half hour. The rest is commercials. CNN is almost as bad, and their ads usually seem like scams, many of the snake-oil salesmen ole TV personalities!
    I repeat: Why pay big bucks for trash when my free entertainment time is better spent with a good book?
    r/Steve

  3. Scott Dyson Says:

    Last night I finished a series on D+ called THE MYSTERIOUS BENEDICT SOCIETY, based on the YA book series of the same name. It was fun, if not terribly deep. I like the Marvel content as well; my boys turned me into a big fan of the genre.

    Of course, as I said, I’m easily entertained. I want to start Silicon Valley, the series on HBO Max, and I really enjoyed Mr. Robot (on Amzaon Prime – not sure if it’s still there). I don’t watch a lot of news. Usually the local news and World News with David Muir. As you say, way too many ads!

    But I agree – books are better!