> Life is about more than optimizing the movies you watch.
Where did I say it wasn't? That's a straw man.
But if you're going to watch a movie for the next two hours, then yeah -- your life is going to be about that movie. So why not choose wisely?
> Watching a bad movie is not going to harm you. Maybe you'll take something away, maybe you won't.
Straw man again. And again -- why not choose quality instead of choosing ignorance and rolling the dice?
> Much like having a bad day is unlikely to ruin your life - it'll just give some nice context to the good days.
Again, straw man. Nobody's talking about ruining your life. But why intentionally choose a bad movie...?
> And we're talking about watching them on the plane, so the "busy person" argument really doesn't apply here.
To the contrary. For a lot of busy people, the plane is one of the few moments they have time to watch a movie. So it sure does apply.
You're arguing in favor of choosing bad things, because it's not going to ruin your life. Huh? Shouldn't we have a higher bar for the things we try to choose to spend our time on? You're describing standards that are the lowest of the low -- as long as it doesn't harm you, it's fine. Don't seek anything better. Yikes. I've rarely come across a life philosophy more depressing.
This isn't a straw man - I'm not claiming you think life is all about movie optimization. I'm making the point that the effort of optimization might not be worth it in the broader context.
> Straw man again. And again -- why not choose quality instead of choosing ignorance and rolling the dice?
Also not a straw man. I'm illustrating that the downside of a bad movie is so minimal that extensive optimization might not be justified. This directly addresses your argument about opportunity cost by suggesting the cost is actually quite small.
> Again, straw man. Nobody's talking about ruining your life. But why intentionally choose a bad movie...?
Again, not a straw man. I'm making a proportionality argument about how much a sub-optimal movie experience actually matters in practice.
> To the contrary. For a lot of busy people, the plane is one of the few moments they have time to watch a movie. So it sure does apply.
Even on a plane, the stakes just aren't that high. A less-than-perfect movie isn't going to meaningfully impact your life regardless of how busy you are.
> You're arguing in favor of choosing bad things, because it's not going to ruin your life. Huh?
You're interpreting my position as "arguing in favor of choosing bad things," but that's just not accurate. I'm suggesting that the effort of optimization might outweigh the minimal downside of occasionally watching something mediocre. There's a middle ground between actively choosing bad things and obsessing over choosing only the very best.
> A less-than-perfect movie isn't going to meaningfully impact your life regardless of how busy you are.
There are movies I've seen that changed my life. If I'd watched a dumb movie instead, yes my life actually would have been meaningfully impacted for the worse. That's the power of art.
> I'm suggesting that the effort of optimization might outweigh the minimal downside of occasionally watching something mediocre.
It takes a few seconds to check Rotten Tomatoes. A movie is around two hours. In what universe would you rather waste a couple of hours in order to save a few seconds?
And it's not occasionally watching something mediocre. Most movies are mediocre. You have the choice of usually watching something mediocre, versus usually watching something high-quality.
Again, you're strawmanning with "obsessing over choosing only the very best". Where did I describe an obsession? I'm just saying, check Rotten Tomatoes to help pick a good movie. There's just no universe in which the tiny effort to do that is going to outweigh the two+ hours of boredom and frustration of a bad movie.
I genuinely don't understand how you can take the position you're taking with movies, when checking Rotten Tomatoes takes seconds (a minute if you're checking several) and a movie lasts for hours.
Where did I say it wasn't? That's a straw man.
But if you're going to watch a movie for the next two hours, then yeah -- your life is going to be about that movie. So why not choose wisely?
> Watching a bad movie is not going to harm you. Maybe you'll take something away, maybe you won't.
Straw man again. And again -- why not choose quality instead of choosing ignorance and rolling the dice?
> Much like having a bad day is unlikely to ruin your life - it'll just give some nice context to the good days.
Again, straw man. Nobody's talking about ruining your life. But why intentionally choose a bad movie...?
> And we're talking about watching them on the plane, so the "busy person" argument really doesn't apply here.
To the contrary. For a lot of busy people, the plane is one of the few moments they have time to watch a movie. So it sure does apply.
You're arguing in favor of choosing bad things, because it's not going to ruin your life. Huh? Shouldn't we have a higher bar for the things we try to choose to spend our time on? You're describing standards that are the lowest of the low -- as long as it doesn't harm you, it's fine. Don't seek anything better. Yikes. I've rarely come across a life philosophy more depressing.