Lol no need for a personal attack cause I think this show sucks. Slice of life is my favorite genre, so I know…
It’s just a difference in opinion. But hey, if you’re this passionate about it, maybe that says more about you than it does about the show itself. Your whole argument seems more like an emotional outburst than a well-reasoned critique, though. You keep throwing out buzzwords and vague generalities about ‘intellectualism,’ but none of that actually addresses my original points. Just because you repeat something doesn’t make it true.
Also, on this whole ‘AI detector’ thing—let’s be real, those things are notoriously inaccurate. If you honestly think a random detector is the key to proving who’s right or wrong in an argument, then you’ve missed the mark. Just because a machine tells you something doesn’t make it gospel. I guess if you’re desperate enough to hide behind technology to feel validated, that’s your choice. But I’m not relying on anything but my own reasoning here.
You also keep coming back to the idea that I’m being ‘condescending,’ yet, ironically, it’s your whole tone that comes off as condescending. I’m not here to tear anything down for no reason. I’m just sharing my thoughts. But you seem to be so caught up in defending your opinion that you’ve completely missed the point of respectful discussion.
At the end of the day, art is subjective. You like the show? Great. I didn’t. But this whole back-and-forth isn’t about who’s right or wrong—it’s about respecting that opinions can differ without turning it into a personal attack. If you can’t handle that, I’d suggest stepping back from the keyboard and realizing that a difference in taste doesn’t make anyone less intelligent or insightful.
So, no need for the dramatic, emotional defenses. Let’s just agree to disagree and move on. After all, there’s no reason to make this any more complicated than it needs to be.
Lol no need for a personal attack cause I think this show sucks. Slice of life is my favorite genre, so I know…
Girl, I know you didn’t just write a whole thesis trying to sound like the protagonist of a courtroom drama. All of that over a show? Let me make this clear: your 10-paragraph monologue did nothing but scream ‘I’m desperate to win an argument on the internet.’ Spoiler alert: nobody’s giving you a gold star for that.
First of all, the fact that you’re this pressed about me calling ‘When the Phone Rings’ dogwater is hilarious. You’re out here treating it like it’s the pinnacle of human achievement when it’s just another mediocre show that’ll be forgotten in two months. Calling it ‘mid’ is being generous. And let’s be real, I don’t need to explain why it’s bad because the lack of originality speaks for itself. But sure, go ahead and keep pretending it’s groundbreaking while everyone else yawns.
Second, your whole ‘effort deserves acknowledgment’ take is exhausting. Nobody’s out here clapping for effort when the result is garbage. If someone puts hard work into something and it still flops, that’s tough, but it doesn’t mean I have to pretend it’s good. You’re acting like people are obligated to praise mediocrity just because someone tried. Nah, I’ll pass.
And what’s with you trying to make this personal? Saying I’m insecure and bitter because I don’t like the show? Sweetheart, the only insecure one here is you, writing all this nonsense to defend a fictional TV drama like it’s paying your bills. You’re so busy diagnosing other people’s emotions that you forgot to check your own. If someone not liking your favorite show has you this in your feelings, that’s a you problem.
Oh, and the Mr. Sunshine thing? Nobody’s gatekeeping anything. I brought up a quality show to highlight the difference between good writing and whatever mess ‘When the Phone Rings’ is. If that comparison hurt your feelings, maybe it’s because deep down you know this show isn’t all that, and you’re just mad I said it first.
Lastly, your little lecture on ‘art is subjective’—no shit, Sherlock. But you seem to forget that subjectivity swings both ways. Just like you’re allowed to like this basic-ass show, I’m allowed to call it trash. The difference is, I don’t need to write an entire dissertation to make my point. You’re out here trying to sound profound, but all you’ve done is prove how fragile you are when someone doesn’t share your opinion.
So here’s some advice: next time you feel the need to defend your favorite show, try doing it without writing a whole damn novel. You’re out here trying to sound deep, but all you’re doing is drowning. Stay mad, though—it’s entertaining.
Lol no need for a personal attack cause I think this show sucks. Slice of life is my favorite genre, so I know…
U bum ass bitch, you really sat there typing up a whole essay just to sound intellectual over a mid-ass show? First of all, ‘When the Phone Rings’ is about as complex as a coloring book. Don’t sit here acting like it’s some groundbreaking masterpiece when it’s literally recycled storylines slapped together with mediocre acting. Just because you managed to romanticize every plot hole doesn’t mean the rest of us have to eat it up.
Second, miss ‘you probably don’t even understand,’ save that condescending energy for someone who asked for it. I do have my own opinion, and it’s that the show is garbage. If you think me calling it ‘dogwater’ is outdated, then maybe take your overused, ‘appreciate the hard work’ lecture back to 2015. Not everything needs to be blindly hyped just because people worked on it. Effort doesn’t equal quality.
Also, please don’t bring ‘Mr. Sunshine’ into this. That’s a show with depth and actual artistry, so leave it out of your desperate attempt to defend mediocrity. If you like the show, cool. Enjoy your poorly written drama and let me hate in peace. Stop trying to force people to validate your taste because I’m not the one
Also, on this whole ‘AI detector’ thing—let’s be real, those things are notoriously inaccurate. If you honestly think a random detector is the key to proving who’s right or wrong in an argument, then you’ve missed the mark. Just because a machine tells you something doesn’t make it gospel. I guess if you’re desperate enough to hide behind technology to feel validated, that’s your choice. But I’m not relying on anything but my own reasoning here.
You also keep coming back to the idea that I’m being ‘condescending,’ yet, ironically, it’s your whole tone that comes off as condescending. I’m not here to tear anything down for no reason. I’m just sharing my thoughts. But you seem to be so caught up in defending your opinion that you’ve completely missed the point of respectful discussion.
At the end of the day, art is subjective. You like the show? Great. I didn’t. But this whole back-and-forth isn’t about who’s right or wrong—it’s about respecting that opinions can differ without turning it into a personal attack. If you can’t handle that, I’d suggest stepping back from the keyboard and realizing that a difference in taste doesn’t make anyone less intelligent or insightful.
So, no need for the dramatic, emotional defenses. Let’s just agree to disagree and move on. After all, there’s no reason to make this any more complicated than it needs to be.
First of all, the fact that you’re this pressed about me calling ‘When the Phone Rings’ dogwater is hilarious. You’re out here treating it like it’s the pinnacle of human achievement when it’s just another mediocre show that’ll be forgotten in two months. Calling it ‘mid’ is being generous. And let’s be real, I don’t need to explain why it’s bad because the lack of originality speaks for itself. But sure, go ahead and keep pretending it’s groundbreaking while everyone else yawns.
Second, your whole ‘effort deserves acknowledgment’ take is exhausting. Nobody’s out here clapping for effort when the result is garbage. If someone puts hard work into something and it still flops, that’s tough, but it doesn’t mean I have to pretend it’s good. You’re acting like people are obligated to praise mediocrity just because someone tried. Nah, I’ll pass.
And what’s with you trying to make this personal? Saying I’m insecure and bitter because I don’t like the show? Sweetheart, the only insecure one here is you, writing all this nonsense to defend a fictional TV drama like it’s paying your bills. You’re so busy diagnosing other people’s emotions that you forgot to check your own. If someone not liking your favorite show has you this in your feelings, that’s a you problem.
Oh, and the Mr. Sunshine thing? Nobody’s gatekeeping anything. I brought up a quality show to highlight the difference between good writing and whatever mess ‘When the Phone Rings’ is. If that comparison hurt your feelings, maybe it’s because deep down you know this show isn’t all that, and you’re just mad I said it first.
Lastly, your little lecture on ‘art is subjective’—no shit, Sherlock. But you seem to forget that subjectivity swings both ways. Just like you’re allowed to like this basic-ass show, I’m allowed to call it trash. The difference is, I don’t need to write an entire dissertation to make my point. You’re out here trying to sound profound, but all you’ve done is prove how fragile you are when someone doesn’t share your opinion.
So here’s some advice: next time you feel the need to defend your favorite show, try doing it without writing a whole damn novel. You’re out here trying to sound deep, but all you’re doing is drowning. Stay mad, though—it’s entertaining.
Second, miss ‘you probably don’t even understand,’ save that condescending energy for someone who asked for it. I do have my own opinion, and it’s that the show is garbage. If you think me calling it ‘dogwater’ is outdated, then maybe take your overused, ‘appreciate the hard work’ lecture back to 2015. Not everything needs to be blindly hyped just because people worked on it. Effort doesn’t equal quality.
Also, please don’t bring ‘Mr. Sunshine’ into this. That’s a show with depth and actual artistry, so leave it out of your desperate attempt to defend mediocrity. If you like the show, cool. Enjoy your poorly written drama and let me hate in peace. Stop trying to force people to validate your taste because I’m not the one