multiplex said:
No, and it isn't a good comparison to begin with. The major studios shoot on location, and when they can't, they have lots where they simulate scenes, and plenty of props to set the scene, so actors can "feel" like they're in the scripted situation.
It's not for the actors. It's for the backgrounds. The cameras. The actors shoot wherever it's cheapest. Toronto, Czech Republic, or a back lot somewhere. But my point was the audience, not the location.
multiplex said:
Going by your argument, then, why are many TV situation comedies performed before live audiences?
Yep...some are done that way. But some just use the canned laughter. They also aren't done live or in "real time," put pieced together. I've been to TV tapings, and they do lots of retakes. The audience is asked to react as though it's the first time. But it's not. The whole experience is a sham and a recreation.
So VT would be OK with you if done with an audience. It could also be done in a simulated location. Of course the dramas don't have the audience. So Law & Order is a sham.
multiplex said:
You can psych yourself up all you want, but if you're in Palm Springs, you're not in Buffalo, sharing listeners' concerns and worries.
Huh? Have you listened to live & local radio? Most local DJs today don't share the listereners' concerns and worries. They instead talk about themselves.Music shows play songs recorded elsewhere, and their talk between songs isn't about concerns or worries, but rather happy stuff about vacations and time off. Talk shows use national talking points. Very little of what's on the radio, even when it's originated locally, actually deals with local "concerns and worries." It really comes down to traffic and weather, unless there's a major disaster.
The fact is that you get fooled every day by technology. You see TV shows that appear to be shot in one location, but they're actually done somewhere else. You watch comedies that sound like they were done before a live audience, but the laughter and reactions were actually dubbed in later by something called "sweeteneing." TV talk shows that appear to be live, but they're actually taped. Local weather forecasts that sound live, but actually come from Pennsylvania. And it's been going on for 30 years.
What it sounds like to me is you have a stereotype of the way radio should be done, based on your experience of the way it's been done during your lifetime. For you, nothing should change, and things should be done that way forever. But radio was done differently before you were born. We don't do things that way any more, because it was impractical, and because new technologies came along. It wasn't the exact same experience that your parents enjoyed, but it served the exact same purpose. You don't hear live music performed in a studio, but recordings of performances that were fine-tuned by electronical devices so all the imperfections were removed. That's the transition we're going through now. There's nothing wrong with it, and those who do it learn how to adjust. And it's not the same as it used to be, but traveling by car or plane doesn't provide the same connection to the environment that you got from the back of a horse. Things change, and that's just how it is. If everything stayed the same, we wouldn't be communicating on a computer message board.