It was posted on reddit and most of the comments were like, "Oh my god, this is the most powerful scene in television history!" and at first I thought they were trolling because I found the scene to be pure cringe. But they were dead serious lmao
It's insanely cheesy, but it does have one important sentiment that ironically has been forgotten by its very creators: it's easy to channel your negative emotions into creating something ugly - what's difficult is using them to create something beautiful.
In the past, great artists took their suffering and used it as a drive to make their work. Some of the best artists, writers, and actors of all time had horrible lives.
Today, even a minor perceived slight is enough to send the average "creator" into a spiral of seething and hatred for 30 years, during which they'll intentionally destroy everything they can purely out of spite.
The only scene I've ever watched is this one: https://youtu.be/ubTJI_UphPk?si=CjSi1zCJrC9DBn6I
It was posted on reddit and most of the comments were like, "Oh my god, this is the most powerful scene in television history!" and at first I thought they were trolling because I found the scene to be pure cringe. But they were dead serious lmao
It's insanely cheesy, but it does have one important sentiment that ironically has been forgotten by its very creators: it's easy to channel your negative emotions into creating something ugly - what's difficult is using them to create something beautiful.
In the past, great artists took their suffering and used it as a drive to make their work. Some of the best artists, writers, and actors of all time had horrible lives.
Today, even a minor perceived slight is enough to send the average "creator" into a spiral of seething and hatred for 30 years, during which they'll intentionally destroy everything they can purely out of spite.