Subjectivity In Art

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CJ The X

CJ The X

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 3 800
@raegan_1018
@raegan_1018 2 жыл бұрын
Love that you got Adam Neely for this video. He always has something insightful and meaningful to add to discussions about art analysis. His contribution really tied this whole project together
@maxinator317
@maxinator317 Жыл бұрын
Very happy I didn't open the comments until the very end of this video lmao
@Dima-yd5me
@Dima-yd5me 2 жыл бұрын
As someone who speaks English as a second language nothing boosts my self esteem more than understanding what you're saying
@CloppingIsMyThing
@CloppingIsMyThing 2 жыл бұрын
English being the only language I know, I only understand half of what he says.... idk if that says more about me or the English language.
@a_rinass
@a_rinass 2 жыл бұрын
I'm in the process of getting a Linguistics degree, and these videos are not only highly educational, but also a brutal exercise in simultaneous interpretation. I crank the playback speed down a notch and practice, my brain gets fried in like three to five minutes, but it's still fun as hell. CJ, you're fantastic at what you do and your insight is highly valuable, but for the love of god don't be a speaker on any international events, save an interpreter's life...
@GibusWearingMann
@GibusWearingMann 2 жыл бұрын
this is the best backhanded compliment I have ever seen on the internet holy shit
@drnecro1086
@drnecro1086 2 жыл бұрын
SAME
@k.k.8796
@k.k.8796 2 жыл бұрын
Omg same haha need to backspace here and there but none the less it's very entertaining and informative :D
@jadetortellini6150
@jadetortellini6150 2 жыл бұрын
I liked encanto cause the message was it's okay to be mid and that resonates with me
@sarasthoughts
@sarasthoughts 2 жыл бұрын
The message was actually "don't psychologically abuse people putting absurd expectations on them that will bend them into an unhappy life just to please you" bestie...
@drmeggman7602
@drmeggman7602 2 жыл бұрын
@@sarasthoughts touch grass
@philiplarson5297
@philiplarson5297 2 жыл бұрын
@@sarasthoughts yeah ok but what if you got bitches instead
@exquisitecorpse__
@exquisitecorpse__ 2 жыл бұрын
@@sarasthoughts no it was its okay to be mid.
@shapeshifta2994
@shapeshifta2994 2 жыл бұрын
@@drmeggman7602 ur mid
@joshhickman77
@joshhickman77 11 ай бұрын
I think you're right about generational trauma not being a promise Encanto delivers on, but I think the thematic cohesion you're looking for is easier to spot if you realize the theme is about "family as performance". That's why the dinner looms weirdly largely in their mind in We Don't Talk About Bruno -- it's the performance they're in the middle of while Mirabel goes on her adventure. Things aren't going well and they need to _appear_ differently. The (perceived) failure of the family at dinner is that the actual dysfunction and worries were acknowledged, providing a complete inversion from a healthy relationship. In the beginning, they can all feel like they're doing their best and helping people and that's good -- but it leaves no place for Mirabel. The end of the movie is about trying to disintermediate the relationships they have with each other and their community -- to love and relate to each other, and not just the performance of each other.
@s0ulcode
@s0ulcode 10 ай бұрын
Fully agree. I think Encanto was… okay? But I think this message was executed well. No one in the characters family is actually close or concerned about their emotional well being. I wish the film went harder into its serious moments.
@JessieGender1
@JessieGender1 2 жыл бұрын
Yours are the only videos that I quite literally cannot watch at double speed.
@isla.g
@isla.g 2 жыл бұрын
i always watch them at double speed because it makes me feel very powerful lmao
@rakuranhawke8600
@rakuranhawke8600 2 жыл бұрын
Nice to see you hear Jessie! Just watched your Earthsea vid about the power of names after going on a LaGuin binge again. Glad to see you watch this content too!
@Noahsjpgs
@Noahsjpgs 2 жыл бұрын
i rewatched several minutes often and i still have to watch the entire video a few times to really get what he is communicating 😅
@anuel3780
@anuel3780 2 жыл бұрын
jokes on you, i watch it on double speed!!! i have to pause regularly to process ;-;
@jeromes3rdaccount296
@jeromes3rdaccount296 2 жыл бұрын
Oh, hi.
@FDSignifire
@FDSignifire 2 жыл бұрын
"Everything I say is a good tweet" 10/10
@saladcaesar7716
@saladcaesar7716 2 жыл бұрын
Based !
@ez45
@ez45 2 жыл бұрын
I am also inclined to agree
@maybeitsgabriel3035
@maybeitsgabriel3035 2 жыл бұрын
6/10 lol
@amys0482
@amys0482 8 ай бұрын
I love when I see my follows on each other's channels
@salmin1711
@salmin1711 3 ай бұрын
@@amys0482 yes yes yes yes yes
@supercoolmeeee
@supercoolmeeee Жыл бұрын
“Who needs DMT when you’re the chosen one” is my absolute favorite joke you’ve ever made
@eleanorsherry4620
@eleanorsherry4620 2 жыл бұрын
obsessed with how the flowers are always shaking behind you, as if they too have something to contribute but are trapped within their floral vessels and are cursed never to escape
@vysharra
@vysharra 2 жыл бұрын
Love watching them wilt over the course of the video too. … _sigh_ of course he addresses it
@soupforfree
@soupforfree 2 жыл бұрын
giving crowley from good omens
@Envy_May
@Envy_May 2 жыл бұрын
HFDFDASFDGFGH
@noviatoria2436
@noviatoria2436 2 жыл бұрын
The appeal of Umbrella Academy is in its over the top wattpad-esque writing. It's pulpy, campy, comic-book warm trash, and that's a lot of fun. It also has fun action scenes, an interesting visual style, queer main characters, and lots of cathartic "fuck you abusive dad" moments.
@v_bunny
@v_bunny 2 жыл бұрын
that’s probably the best description i’ve seen so far of the show, and i love the show so much because of these reasons. also klaus gang 😦🤞
@TomWonderful
@TomWonderful 2 жыл бұрын
When it was primarily known as the comic by My Chemical Romance's front-man, people were much more prepared going into it. Watching it from the front page of Netflix with no context, I can understand why some might be side-blinded by the camp emo-ness in a superhero story.
@kohhna
@kohhna 2 жыл бұрын
Sophie From Mars ka Curio did a cracking early video on how its a dissection of traumatic abuse, how each character represents a different way that it manifests in later life.
@benenwren4110
@benenwren4110 2 жыл бұрын
Tldr: people read fanfic for a reason
@JodediahHolems
@JodediahHolems 2 жыл бұрын
@@kohhna i kinda want to watch this video but i'm having trouble parsing your comment into search terms. can you post the end of the youtube url (i.e. ?v=GPrNWuppMcc)?
@hibitybopityboo8129
@hibitybopityboo8129 2 жыл бұрын
“i have a brain disease where everything that passes through my mind has to go through this gauntlet of analysis to see if it’s optimized for meaning” (15:10-15:18) i felt this in my soul
@SarahZ
@SarahZ 2 жыл бұрын
IT'S FUCKING PURPLE BABEY
@treadmillgaming5963
@treadmillgaming5963 2 жыл бұрын
I had an art teacher once who asked me if art needed an audience. Me at the time defining art as: "any piece which intends to transmit something abstractly," said yes, art has to have an audience otherwise it's just information. My art teacher told a story about a gentleman who built a series of pylons on top of a mountain, they were built in such a way that when lightning would strike them it would create rudimentary images. But because of the way, you know lightning works, the phenomenon is completely unobservable. You could check afterwards and make sure that the image worked, but no one would have seen it, no one could have seen it due to the danger, we just know that it existed in the trail that the lightning followed. He asked me if I thought this was art, if there was a transmission of emotion in knowing that art existed at one point. I was a bit stumped by this He then unasked the question completely, he told me that he made this whole scenario up, there was no old man no mountain and no lightning art. He asked how I felt about that I told him honestly, I felt a little betrayed because I thought the idea was so romantic. He then said that the betrayal, was art. Maybe the most important thing I learned in all of college
@abbyyoung8398
@abbyyoung8398 2 жыл бұрын
this is really interesting to me. I feel like this speaks to the existence of performance art (speaking as someone with little to no experience with performance art) - the knowledge that someone did that thing, hearing the story of it, thinking about what the thought process and motivations must have been around all that, for something that would not produce anything tangible - you're thinking about those subtleties where you can't describe the concept literally, you need some sort of metaphor or abstraction like the lightning pylons to feel the intention or meaning behind it. that it wasn't a true story is definitely a twist but also definitely still feels like art, just turned on its head a bit.
@potatoman-oe5jy
@potatoman-oe5jy 2 жыл бұрын
Was the betrayal art because your transfer produced an emotion in you with a story? Was art the emotion you got from the story?
@treadmillgaming5963
@treadmillgaming5963 2 жыл бұрын
@@potatoman-oe5jy my current understanding, with more than a decade of reflection, is that the betrayal itself, the feeling the sensation, that information was the art.
@egg_bun_
@egg_bun_ 2 жыл бұрын
God. That's actually fucking hilarious.
@claudiaivery1569
@claudiaivery1569 2 жыл бұрын
I feel like here, you were not betrayed yourself by the art that never happened but compelled by the beauty of the story to realise this art. As C.J the X acutely describes in this video if the photographs had died with the lady then we would have never known and therefore would have never been able to care, the art or 'art moment,' would essentially cease to exist to us. I guess what I'm trying to say here in a roundabout way is that the story your art teacher presented to you was the art in question, this was a transition in motion from him to you and therefore the lightening house itself would have never been art because it wouldn't ever have been observed by anyone, due to this everyones ability to care is stripped away. Maybe I'm making no sense but it's nice to voice my thoughts.
@TheLaughingDove
@TheLaughingDove 2 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised by your read of "We don't talk about Bruno" , it makes me curious about your experience of family, because I thought "time for dinner" captured a unique and intimately familiar kind of dread, of the performance of the social game and everyone playing discoherent parts, it's a performance leading -into- the social performance of a really tense table of family members who are so busy pretending to be fine that they can't even begin to address how unstable their performance is. I have... Sat at tables like that, where the call to "normality" is the lash of conformity, a honey covered whip. I do think.... It was an unbaked narrative. It was structurally strange, but I respect the bravery of trying to weave that many motivations into a cogent narrative. I think Coco did a better job of that kind of collective minded storytelling, but I'm excited to see more of it.
@ctons
@ctons Жыл бұрын
time for dinner 💀 (i've not seen the film)
@harrisoncarter7614
@harrisoncarter7614 Жыл бұрын
I definitely think this is what they were going for. I really never understood. That was the “climactic conclusion” idea I think, but I don’t think it was very well established or displayed… I say, 11 months after you typed this lol
@thedevicebook
@thedevicebook 9 ай бұрын
I love your take on the "time for dinner" meaning. It brings new bittersweet meaning to Bruno making himself a plate and seating to join dinner for many years even with a wall between them. He wanted to be part of the family act of dinner but knew his gift brought a level of honesty that didn't fit with the roles everyone else would play.
@JessieGender1
@JessieGender1 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you CJ the X for articulating what I've been thinking about; how I don't wish to get more views, but make work that means a lot to those who see it. My only goal in caring about analytics is hoping it can reach those who it will be meaningful too, and also making sure I can live in this capitalist hellhole.
@Sparky3281
@Sparky3281 2 жыл бұрын
Your 12 Minutes video popped up in my recommended a few weeks ago. I started watching it while playing Breath of the Wild and ended up pausing my game to focus entirely on your video. I've thought about it fairly often since then and returned to your channel several times, it's even been the basis of several in depth conversations I've had recently about women and the way they're often fridged or treated as a plot point rather than a person whose opinion matters. I thought you'd like to know that one of your videos made its way to someone who valued it and gave her a new perspective, resulting in interesting discourse. Like you said, your video meant a lot to someone who saw it.
@marinecomponentvandefensie5351
@marinecomponentvandefensie5351 2 жыл бұрын
capitalist hellhole is just human life.. in reality no one should be rich and everyone should help providing the things we can’t live without
@quirkyfemmepeach
@quirkyfemmepeach 2 жыл бұрын
♥️
@jasonjacoby
@jasonjacoby 2 жыл бұрын
thought, meaning, and care 💜
@EvanC881
@EvanC881 2 жыл бұрын
CJ is the only youtuber who can turn the camera on me, who makes me feel like I'm being watched instead of them, who makes me self-conscious in a way that isnt comfortable but isnt uncomfortable. They make me more aware of myself and my thoughts and my taste not just generally but In Real Time as I watch. These arent background noise videos. They arent even on the couch with popcorn videos. These videos are like take me to church and bring me closer to God videos.
@mollusc3125
@mollusc3125 2 жыл бұрын
I watch a lot of videos while naked, so I’m really glad I don’t relate to this 😅
@TheAngryMarshmallow
@TheAngryMarshmallow 2 жыл бұрын
YES. you put words to the feeling
@bringinthedope5929
@bringinthedope5929 2 жыл бұрын
@@mollusc3125 holy shit lol
@tannersievert6885
@tannersievert6885 2 жыл бұрын
i usually just giggle a lot but hey go off
@EldritchBumblebee
@EldritchBumblebee 2 жыл бұрын
Same. It puts words to debates I have about concepts internally that I struggle to communicate externally.
@Roebey
@Roebey 2 жыл бұрын
46:00 I fucking love this section. For perhaps the first time in the channel's history, there is nothing but visual information. So much of this channel's structure is based on there being constant audio and visual information, but in this one instance, there is no audio for a long time. It makes you pay attention to the photos you're seeing, it forces you to take in what you think they mean. It was genuinely jarring, so much so that I stopped eating my bowl of frosted flakes just to take it in. It's very small but I think it's fucking brilliant. Well done, CJ.
@threebirdsinatrenchcoat
@threebirdsinatrenchcoat Жыл бұрын
every time I watch this video- I usually listen to videos and barely half watch them, but for that section- I do the same. pause whatever I'm doing to experience the images flatly replacing each other on screen in silence. truly brilliant
@KariTalks
@KariTalks 2 жыл бұрын
Give Sarah Z a fucking Oscar for her line reading of “ITS FUCKING PURPLE BABY!!!!”
@SarahZ
@SarahZ 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you thank you
@KariTalks
@KariTalks 2 жыл бұрын
@@SarahZ not to be parasocial but you responding to my comment gave me a rush of dopamine
@smallbabyedwards
@smallbabyedwards 2 жыл бұрын
Of course they had you read a Tumblr post. Typical Hollywood typecasting.
@SheliakDragon
@SheliakDragon 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, I came here looking for this specific comment. That line reading made me *feel* things
@Envy_May
@Envy_May 2 жыл бұрын
@@smallbabyedwards LOL
@KeithBallardA
@KeithBallardA 2 жыл бұрын
Bro I'm a let's player and even I'm deeply unsettled by Mr Beast's bizarre way of saying deeply cynical things in a weirdly positive way. It's like he lists all the worst things about the platform but is like, yeah, I love it!
@benandrew9852
@benandrew9852 2 жыл бұрын
no one is happier with the rules of the game than the winner
@danieloconnor4638
@danieloconnor4638 2 жыл бұрын
Oo wow it's the funny disco elysium man watching cjthex
@jasonlu9562
@jasonlu9562 2 жыл бұрын
It's like the mountains climbing metaphor, this is a game to Mr.beast. Just like how the mountain climber who wouldn't accept a helicopter ride, Mrbeast wouldn't start his own platform or make a change on this one because that would ruined the fun.
@Envy_May
@Envy_May 2 жыл бұрын
@@jasonlu9562 in summary, he's not an artist, he's a gamer
@jasonlu9562
@jasonlu9562 2 жыл бұрын
@@Envy_May couldn't have said it better myself
@alanamccool7409
@alanamccool7409 2 жыл бұрын
The art that Vivian Maier experienced when she took her pictures, it was different from the art we experience when we look at her photographs. There is connection in the experiences, but they are still separate arts, separate experiences. Finally I understand why for me, my drawings, they are very little to me when I finish them, but to my friends they are really important. I say, you can put it up outside, do whatever with it, it is fine if you lose it or rip it, and they say, no I need protect it, laminate or put in a frame. Because the art for me was the experience of draw it, make it happen. But for them, the art is the experience they have every time they look at it. Thank you, this really helps.
@freedom_mayor
@freedom_mayor 2 жыл бұрын
yes! and visual art connects feelings between the artist and the viewer on a level before words/intellectualizing the experience. we can only use words to describe the feeling. like how a specific aroma can take you exactly to a specific memory. Vivian MAier's photos take us back to that specific second in time and tell us what she was thinking and experiencing. it humanizes and demystifies the past
@rachelhuang8179
@rachelhuang8179 Жыл бұрын
Alana your words are very beautiful
@alanamccool7409
@alanamccool7409 Жыл бұрын
@@rachelhuang8179 thank you
@barkley2824
@barkley2824 Жыл бұрын
so beautifully put!! you’ve helped me understand vivian maier’s work a little better
@robinstrickler2302
@robinstrickler2302 Жыл бұрын
So for you, it's the process, the experience that matters. That's cool. More like what dancers or singers experience, maybe.
@KSchannel23
@KSchannel23 2 жыл бұрын
“You’re love is more beautiful than the movie...” that’s why I love fanfiction. Most of my favorite media is only my favorite because of the love random people on the internet expressed and explored through writing about that media.
@incorrigibletoo
@incorrigibletoo 2 жыл бұрын
i feel the same way but with edits
@dizzy388
@dizzy388 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, absolutely! It's one of the only mediums that is just a pure expression of love and enjoyment which hasn't been corrupted by capitalism (for the record, I don't think we should overturn capitalism, but it still sucks). There are thousands and thousands of exquisite writers, creating novel-length stories taking months and years of their time for absolutely no reward beyond a few kudos and comments. It's beautiful!
@KidTheFail
@KidTheFail 2 жыл бұрын
YES! I'm a Potter fan, has been since I was like seven, and while there is pretty much nothing I like about the source these days (Jesus fucking CHRIST they are badly written, also fuck JKR) I still interact with the fandom every day. It's part of me and my life in a way it never would have without this enormous community of other people also loving a thing. A thing we all decided deserved more attention, quality and time than was originally put into it.
@ShoulderMonster
@ShoulderMonster 2 жыл бұрын
I looooove Miraculous Ladybug fanfiction, just so many wonderful stories delivering 10 fold the best of what the show could ever offer. I'm so excited for CJ's follow up review of it!
@key_987
@key_987 2 жыл бұрын
YES ABSOLUTELY FANFICTION AND FANDOM CULTURE IS JUST AS MUCH ART AS THE SOURCE MATERIAL
@deeduml
@deeduml 2 жыл бұрын
"Did every culture in history invent a kind of religion and God because we're all coincidentally the same kind of fucking stupid-or because God was there to observe and interpret?" you can't just fucking drop that on me like it's nothing
@marinecomponentvandefensie5351
@marinecomponentvandefensie5351 2 жыл бұрын
It’s the first one
@deeduml
@deeduml 2 жыл бұрын
don't start an argument about the existence of God under my comment guys
@deeduml
@deeduml 2 жыл бұрын
oh cool 80 likes
@marinecomponentvandefensie5351
@marinecomponentvandefensie5351 2 жыл бұрын
@@deeduml but i want tooo
@razagan1343
@razagan1343 2 жыл бұрын
@@marinecomponentvandefensie5351 they were polite about it, be nice.
@dunia4893
@dunia4893 2 жыл бұрын
I'm a 4th year art student, I've been in three different schools and I SWEAR if any of my teachers were anything like you, it would have saved much confusion, art blocks and therapy
@justjulia1720
@justjulia1720 2 жыл бұрын
CJ's speech is like if my mouth could actually keep up with my ADHD brain. They put things into words so well, and also takes things from perspectives I might's not considered before. I'm also not a native English speaker, so I appreciate their use of the language bc I feel like I get to understand it a little better when they use it in a way I'm not used to.
@PauLtus_B
@PauLtus_B 2 жыл бұрын
As another ADHD brain you just wonderfully described that. It's like that crazy incoherent train of thought suddenly upholds when you're trying to express it and not get distracted by other thoughts like right now where I totally forgot what I actually had to add to your comment.
@tannersievert6885
@tannersievert6885 2 жыл бұрын
you can learn to speak that fast! It's a skill like any other and can be practiced and honed. I learned through speech and debate in highschool.
@justjulia1720
@justjulia1720 2 жыл бұрын
@@tannersievert6885 Aw, that actually encourages me :) Thank you!
@constants_are_variable
@constants_are_variable 9 ай бұрын
After hearing that ADHD brain insert I instantly felt the weight of self disappointment when I realized that I can’t ever dream of being able to express myself as clearly and coherently as he does. True talent.
@mustang4636
@mustang4636 14 күн бұрын
​@@PauLtus_Bliterally me you and op
@SyntheticReign
@SyntheticReign 2 жыл бұрын
Gonna offer an alternative perspective on the "Time for dinner" line: I think, whether purposeful or not, that line is actually great. Because the entire song is saying they don't talk about Bruno. It's taboo. And just when everyone is maybe considering opening up in a big way, Isabella's boyfriend arrives, it's time for dinner, and the conversation stops, with all of their stories overlapping because it's still milling about in their minds. The social propriety falls back into place, which is mirrored later when Mirabel brings up the puzzle piece and "ruins" dinner. They CAN'T talk about Bruno now. That music hits like it should be triumphant, but the lyric makes it evident that there could've been more. They were all right on the cusp, but Abuela's strictness for tradition and making sure the family looks good trumped any revelation. Obviously this could be a stretch, but I think it's a valid interpretation, again, regardless of intent.
@SyntheticReign
@SyntheticReign 2 жыл бұрын
But overall, yes, hard agree on Encanto wasn't very good. It was entertaining, I liked most of the songs. But the movie, from a writing perspective, hurt. I don't like plot holes overall, and I REALLY don't like plot holes when they can literally prevent the movie from existing.
@cosa_oscura
@cosa_oscura Жыл бұрын
I actually agree with you on this. Where in Hamilton it’s got all of those repeating motifs and then there is some level emotional catharsis, I felt like LMM was trying to subvert that catharsis and create discomfort in us. We’re like Mirabel, we desperately want the release of talking about the elephant in the room but the second we are about to get it musically it devolves into overlapping themes and more tension, just in time for us to have dinner and everything to go crazy. It just ratchets up the tension to 11 musically for me in time for a tense scene.
@ThatBaseddGuyy
@ThatBaseddGuyy Жыл бұрын
Interesting perspective, I hadn't considered that.
@soyy4571
@soyy4571 Жыл бұрын
exactly what I came to the comments to say!
@ballman2010
@ballman2010 Жыл бұрын
​@@soyy4571 And *I* came to the comments to say this! We're getting a "it me" russian nesting doll going on here. I haven't seen Encanto. But, from what's presented here, I totally could interpret this failure to resolve the build of tension as intentional distraction mirroring the social expectations placed on the main character. But, like I said, I didn't see the movie, so maybe that doesn't hold up structurally in context.
@saccharinesilk
@saccharinesilk 2 жыл бұрын
"i wonder if this is true, what im saying" is honestly an eternal mood and im gonna start using it to communicate uncertainty in my own ideas where applicable
@leftpawedpolarbear
@leftpawedpolarbear 2 жыл бұрын
Genuinely, saying “If someone could just explain the point of their art then they would just explain it and not make the art in the first place” articulates my frustration with people asking what they should be getting out of art instead of engaging with the art so much more comprehensively than Death of the Author. Like Death of the Author is part of it, but it doesn’t adequately explain why I also feel like the ARTIST is getting cheated by placing all of the emphasis on their intent, and this does.
@Ulyssa12
@Ulyssa12 2 жыл бұрын
What if their relationship to the media and all the contents is so distant that they need something like the artist's intent or other people's ideas on it to begin to feel like they can engage with it? Like, I have to ask "why do people like noise music" to begin to hear anything other than the static CJ played, to begin to feel anything beyond displeasure. I want to understand what others value in it, to be able to enjoy the interaction on some level, and engaging in others' aesthetic testimony is a part of engaging with the art with more appreciation. So, to me it's frustrating when people try to make others engage with art in the way *they* would - in this case an example would be a friend of yours asking that question and you responding with "you're supposed to engage with it without knowing the answer to that question". I'm sure there are contexts where I would understand your frustration, but like... do you get what I'm saying?
@leftpawedpolarbear
@leftpawedpolarbear 2 жыл бұрын
@@Ulyssa12 You're absolutely right, of course, and I think a cool and necessary expansion of CJ's point in this video about art being more than the sum of the artist + the thing + the audience is that when members of the audience engage with the art and with each other, those interactions are ALSO more than the sum of their parts. And I don't think anyone should be forced to engage with anything on someone else's terms, though I certainly see the merit of doing so of one's own volition. I should clarify that I'm talking more or less specifically about the assumption that you cannot under any circumstances engage with or interpret the art on your OWN terms unless you are already armed with the artist's explanation of their intent. This is sort of counterintuitive, but if art is at its most basic level communication, then to me the unilateral refusal to engage without that explanation actually suggests that you DON'T want to understand what's being communicated. Or that you don't trust the artist to communicate through their art. I'm not saying asking questions is unhelpful or wrong, I'm not saying looking in the space around the art for additional context is unhelpful or wrong, but I am saying if you think an artist's (or another member of the audience's) explanation of the art can always communicate the same thing as the art itself, 1) you're missing something, and 2) you're depriving the artist of something.
@abbyyoung8398
@abbyyoung8398 2 жыл бұрын
yeah I guess to butt in on both of you here it sounds like the difference between saying "I don't get it, what should I be listening for here" as 1) a cop-out to avoid critical thinking about the thing vs. 2) an honest good-faith attempt to experience the thing more fully to work through a lack of prior experience with that thing because you're interested in becoming more experienced with that thing. like the noise music example referenced here, or say with students in a high school English class. there's an apathetic version and a genuine version, and people can choose whether or not to engage with that kind of question accordingly.
@XerxesTexasToast
@XerxesTexasToast 2 жыл бұрын
@@Ulyssa12 If my input is worth anything, I consider noise music to be an expression of meditative displeasure itself. The abstract synthetic noise equivalent of depictions of violence
@Ulyssa12
@Ulyssa12 2 жыл бұрын
@@leftpawedpolarbear ah yes this makes sense to me for sure. I think we're on the same page.
@adaydreamin1738
@adaydreamin1738 Жыл бұрын
The Animation in Arcane is GORGEOUS but it does not take away the genius writing you’re missing lmao 😭 (coming from an old Arcane hater) those are the best written characters I’ve ever seen in media especially women characters
@sereniteea
@sereniteea 10 ай бұрын
yeah i was watching this video and then CJ went "the first episode was so boring that i didnt watch the rest" and i went "?????????? oomfie u are, cross my heart and hope to die, missing out on one of the most heartfelt pieces of western animation to ever exist"
@Sandstimes
@Sandstimes 9 ай бұрын
Yeah that sat off with me lol like you stop at what is basically just a prologue and refuse to watch the parts that made the show unique and memorable and then say it's not worth ur time? Like ig it's in ur right but don't talk about it like you have anything important to say then lol
@AgentSteffi
@AgentSteffi 3 ай бұрын
@@sereniteea I get what you mean, but I understood him. I also didn't vibe with it at the beginning. It took like 2 or 3 episodes for me to get hyped about it. I only continued because my significant other was intrigued and wanted to
@luvuberrymuch49
@luvuberrymuch49 2 жыл бұрын
"Was encanto good or did you just like it" is EXACTLY how I felt watching the movie. It looked amazing and beautiful but the story wasn't neaaaarly as tight as I would have expected from a big 2021 Disney movie. I don't want to disrespect the people that it represents and I wanted to LOVE it but it felt like a baby light show..... a GORGEOUS baby light show but a baby light show nonetheless. 5/10 not as good as emperors new groove ;p
@lotta_kannfastalles
@lotta_kannfastalles 2 жыл бұрын
LOL, I first watched it in the middle of a depressive episode on 2 hours of sleep, in bed at 10am after a work meeting, and I bawled my eyes out the whole way through.. I somehow thought that meant that it was wholesome and nice, so I watched it again with my family and was just a bit embarrassed for having recommended it.. I have to say though, that I‘m not an English native speaker and while we can just ignore lines like „time for dinner“ and „abuela get the umbrella“ as just English pop nonsense, when it‘s translated, it just cheapens the experience even more.. it is colorful and pretty though
@blacknoisyblue
@blacknoisyblue 2 жыл бұрын
I ran, I'm here to be fed my parasocial milkshake aaaah.
@LactoseClergy
@LactoseClergy 2 жыл бұрын
Slurp mm very delicious
@annaannaanna354
@annaannaanna354 2 жыл бұрын
🤤🤤
@ewwpoorpeople5684
@ewwpoorpeople5684 2 жыл бұрын
Parasocial milkshake? Nah, hun. This is the parasocial primordial soup.
@Cymricus
@Cymricus 2 жыл бұрын
i wanted to like this but it’s at 420
@Cymricus
@Cymricus 2 жыл бұрын
nevermind it’s at 421 now
@kyraseifred691
@kyraseifred691 2 жыл бұрын
I would say that art as a hobby is still art and you still deserve to be defined as an artist even if your work isn't shared. The essence still exists between your communication with yourself, therefore creating the substance which gives art value. Through this communication with art that is only seen by the artist they bring that essence with them everywhere they go, communicating the essence to others in an even subtler form in daily life. I would go even further to say that art as an interaction exists everywhere all the time and therefore every human can be considered an artist, at least in specific moments. That's why I love art, because I love people and I seek to find art every day in it's most subtle forms.
@bon.8819
@bon.8819 Жыл бұрын
fuck yeah you're so real
@iltoncortes2018
@iltoncortes2018 6 ай бұрын
Style is substance 🙏
@AjeyPandey216
@AjeyPandey216 2 жыл бұрын
CJ’s devotion to art-art as a facet of God, really-is actually helping solidify my comfort with leaving my own art in the past. I used to make music, I’ve repeatedly flirted with fiction writing, and I even wrote a tabletop role-playing game; but my day job is in renewable energy. Even at the height of my (Twitter-dependent) tabletop RPG “career,” I repeatedly said I didn’t intend to write full time. I understood that my higher calling was NOT art-it’s helping design a better society at a small scale. So when the audience for my work came for me with pitchforks (Twitter), I dropped artistic excellence entirely and picked up cycling to replace that time. I’m not writing that second edition of that role-playing game, even though it would be aesthetically better, because my calling is elsewhere. I incentivize and convince people in four towns to install solar panels and electric heat pumps-and I’m better at that than at making art. I still love music and writing, but I’m not On The Side of Art like CJ is-and thus I’m happy being a hobbyist and consumer.
@MarielHawke
@MarielHawke 2 жыл бұрын
I personally feel like “I’m on the side of Art” simply as an appreciator of Art.
@xiomaraa
@xiomaraa Жыл бұрын
that's a really interesting perspective, i suppose i haven't ever really thought of it like that. because i suppose i'm definitely "on the side of art", like i genuinely couldn't fathom a reality where i'm not making art, consuming art, thinking about art, all the time. i also am surrounded by people who are like that so it's a nice reality check and interesting perspective i hadn't really considered lol.
@minimooster7258
@minimooster7258 2 жыл бұрын
I'm not sure I agree about poetry being inherently a typographic medium. There's so much poetry that I've struggled to understand until I've read it aloud. I'm not necessarily a huge fan of slam poetry, but to my mind, a significant part of the art in poetry is the sound of it. A poem isn't just a series of words, it's also the sound and the rhythm and the flow of the verse. I do agree that lyrics are not poems, and vice versa but there is a reason people conflate the two, they're definitely sisters more than cousins.
@weirdnerdygoat
@weirdnerdygoat 4 күн бұрын
THIS!!!! that's the main reason for rhyme and rhythm and whatnot as i understand it
@baxterjaye3984
@baxterjaye3984 Жыл бұрын
Watching a CJ the X video is like reading an old foundational text for a particular field of study or school of thought, like Das Kapital or Aristotle's Poetics, but formatted differently for the modern day. I feel like I am witnessing cultural and philosophical history being made in my lifetime. I am an original disciple of CJ.
@cyberdeathrat
@cyberdeathrat Жыл бұрын
this is so real
@salemmarz3809
@salemmarz3809 Жыл бұрын
so true
@AidenAlien
@AidenAlien 7 ай бұрын
Holy glaze
@phantomgrape
@phantomgrape Ай бұрын
you put it into fucking WORDS
@namunaama
@namunaama 2 жыл бұрын
my heart stopped when everything everywhere all at once came up i was rly scared our parasocial relationship will be ruined but by the midpoint of the vid i realized i don’t place that much value on your criticism but more so on your analysis
@Noahsjpgs
@Noahsjpgs 2 жыл бұрын
haha i had the exact same journey
@chantzgaming
@chantzgaming 2 жыл бұрын
fr cj i was about to leave you
@egg_bun_
@egg_bun_ 2 жыл бұрын
I got scared too, but then I didn't think it got criticized all that much.
@Asummersdaydreamer14
@Asummersdaydreamer14 2 жыл бұрын
I was not scared, but I was mentally preparing to watch Miraculous Ladybug for the first time with the bad faith intent to dislike it a lil bit
@dreguzman8489
@dreguzman8489 2 жыл бұрын
"Time for dinner" is actually a perfect closing phrase, its like in every shitty family where after the fighting and screaming and blaming, it's time to reel it all in and act like a perfect happy family because you're having guests for dinner. Any latino family will know the STRESS involved when your parents are organizing a big, extended-family dinner. That line is the cue to finally shut the f up about Bruno, for real for real, shut the f up Mirabel. (and if you're a cycle-breaker, you know how absolutley demented you feel when everyone seems to ignore the pain and abuse around you and everyone tells you to just shut up.)
@kid14346
@kid14346 2 жыл бұрын
I am autistic and my family was the same way. My autism regularly clashed with this behavior so much so at one point after our family had a huge argument and our grandparents had just pulled up in their car I loudly proclaimed, "GRANDPA IS HERE EVERYONE PUT ON YOUR SMILING MASKS!" Needless to say my parents were pissed at me...
@letitiathomas7185
@letitiathomas7185 2 жыл бұрын
I get you my family can be like this but in the song, none of them shut up after
@kid14346
@kid14346 2 жыл бұрын
@@letitiathomas7185 I mean you keep going right up until the guests are at the door. The Guzmans were still like a few minutes away. In my family that is the rapid everyone tries getting their last little snide remarks in time before suddenly shutting down.
@letitiathomas7185
@letitiathomas7185 2 жыл бұрын
@@kid14346 that's very true please mind me western media norms. But I think we can all draw the line at Bruno living in the walls
@kid14346
@kid14346 2 жыл бұрын
@@letitiathomas7185 I mean yeah, but if we are drawing lines are realism... THERE IS A MAGICAL LIVING HOUSE!
@Pikachu-kw4fv
@Pikachu-kw4fv Жыл бұрын
I find it a tragedy that you cannot get through the first episode of arcane. As someone who just doesn't do movies or series in general after noticing I don't have the patience for most of them. I watched arcane. And though I skipped through most of the first episode. The series was amazing. Both in artstyle but also in storytelling. And since I admittedly am not experienced in the field of storytelling it might not be the masterpiece my mind makes it out to be but I genuinely think this is a piece of art where everyone involved cared to make art. In character development, world building as well as visually. It tells two different stories of two different worlds at the same time untill these worlds ultimately converge in a way I have never seen before (though again I haven't seen much so it might not mean much) I don't know if you'll see this but I hope you consider dredging trough the first episode (i don't remember if the second was better) and I promise you might not regret it
@lylahh.2484
@lylahh.2484 2 жыл бұрын
51:27 “If you hear ‘art is more important than us’ and you think this is tacit endorsement for suffering for art, you’re still thinking that art resides in objects.” This part reminds me of a quote from my absolute favorite author, Hanif Abdurraqib. “I know that I stopped thinking about extreme grief as the sole vehicle for great art when the grief started to take people with it. And I get it. The tortured artist is the artist yay gets remembered for all time, particularly if they either perish or overcome. But the truth is that so many of us are stuck in the middle. So many of us begin tortured and end tortured, with only brief bursts of light in between… I am, of course, in favor of letting all grief work through the body and manifest itself creatively. But what I’m less in favor of is the celebration of pain that might encourage someone to mine deeper into that unforgiving darkness, until it is impossible for them to climb out.“
@lucabadini4908
@lucabadini4908 2 жыл бұрын
What i feel like that "Time for dinner" was trying to achieve is the family finally doing what the title of the song says, they aren't talking about bruno, they're having dinner, ignoring the uncomfortable part of their family and simply moving on with the mondaneity of their lives without aknowledging the issue
@sumgirl720
@sumgirl720 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, I was going to say something like this. It's part of how Abuela runs the family; it's time for dinner, it's time to stop acknowledging everyone's stories. It isn't aware of what's going on in the rest of the song because Abuela isn't aware of what's going on with the rest of the family. It isn't cohesive precisely because the family isn't cohesive. Which adds to the layers of the song being in the style of a madrigal, the name of the family.
@JambleBramble
@JambleBramble 2 жыл бұрын
I've seen this movie once months ago and I caught that. The movie is, like, fine, but this seems like a stretch of a criticism
@lucabadini4908
@lucabadini4908 2 жыл бұрын
@@sumgirl720 Oh I hadn't thought about the lack of cohesion to be because of that, showing a "lack of care" from abuela's part for everyone's stories and personal motifs, clever!
@soaribb32
@soaribb32 2 жыл бұрын
To me, that idea expressed really well which makes the song cohesive cuz the ideas go together. But it may not work for you because it's anti climatic even thought that is part of the story.
@veronicafalls116
@veronicafalls116 2 жыл бұрын
That umbrella academy take is 100% accurate, I love the show but 3 seasons in and the characters still have no ability to communicate with eachother
@Broeckchen
@Broeckchen 2 жыл бұрын
The other day, a friend showed me dice made out of the glass that is used for camera lenses (according to her). It caught the sunlight in gorgeous ways, breaking it down into delightful colors. I like the sunlight already, but the way this glass split it into its many parts let me admire and enjoy it in a completely new and different way! I think you're like that glass, CJ. You take things apart in a way that adds to my enjoyment of them. And you also are an incredibly healthy influence on me as an artist, with your advice helping me break down many of the walls in my brain that kept me from making stuff.
@sael91
@sael91 2 жыл бұрын
This was a very lovely thoughtful sentiment to read.
@salemdion1504
@salemdion1504 2 жыл бұрын
how lovely
@taurasuzdila
@taurasuzdila 2 жыл бұрын
In case anyone was wondering, it probably was a dichroic cube. They are used in projectors to split white light into didferent colors, so you only need one LED instead of three different ones.
@KidTheFail
@KidTheFail 2 жыл бұрын
Not only was that beautifully put, but true. CJ really does take things apart in a way that makes me rethink them, and see both the good and the ugly.
@nicklessrt
@nicklessrt 2 жыл бұрын
The part of this video that most caught my attention was the brief aside where you said "I wonder if this is true, what I'm saying." I'm constantly asking that question of myself and other people when talking about art, or really anything at all. And the conclusion I inevitably come to is that even if it's not true, it might be useful. I found this video incredibly useful regardless of truthfulness. For example, my imposed dichotomy of truthfulness vs usefulness. Maybe it's purple, baby.
@Kay-kg6ny
@Kay-kg6ny 2 жыл бұрын
Me too. I really liked that quick little aside.
@emmaragnhof2866
@emmaragnhof2866 2 жыл бұрын
"All models are wrong, but some models are useful" You'll run into this in many aspects of science if you go on pursuing it.
@SeymourDisapproves
@SeymourDisapproves 2 жыл бұрын
@@emmaragnhof2866 literary analysis too
@user-qv2qf1jk5o
@user-qv2qf1jk5o 2 жыл бұрын
i also liked it bc - as he described himself - i was 50% like "TOTALLY" and 50% like "no, what the fuck? no!" and that reminded me that, yeah, this is a discussion abt art, it's always like... objectively a bit bullshit. (not that i would have been offended without the disclaimer or whatever). i pretty much always have that feeling reading (in this case, watching) a work that really engages with "what is art" beyond Philosophy 101 - raising questions AND actually trying to answer them. (I cannot tell you what I would do for a CJ the X video that had "The Art of Cruelty" in its bibliography. I simply cannot). Anyway, I lied earlier when I said I wouldn't have felt offended or whatever bc i literally DID, in a visceral, irrational way - what i MEANT was that it would have significantly impeded my enjoyment of the video. i have enough experience with this topic to know my own reaction to it, and be able to navigate it. and that made me appreciate that little moment all the more - it's like the reminder i would have had to give myself was built in, which i think is oddly fitting, thematically, considering how much this covers anticipating the needs of your audience
@JunoBug427
@JunoBug427 2 жыл бұрын
God DAMN. This comment felt like art, ngl. Not sure what that says about my understanding of the video I just watched.
@austinz9310
@austinz9310 Жыл бұрын
“I don’t think that art is subjective, I think that your subjectivity is part of the art”. That really feels like it. It feels so spot on, and it’s why it’s so hard to debate whether art is objective or subjective. Because art is bigger than either of those things.
@TheCurlsandguitars
@TheCurlsandguitars 2 жыл бұрын
Honestly the way I feel about this channel is like I'm auditing a 400 level class titled Aesthetic Philosophy in a Modern Cultural Context. Subtitled The Elevation of Art Through Applied Reason and Logic.
@YTwoKay
@YTwoKay 2 жыл бұрын
The Biography in the description feat. SchoolboyQ alongside Roland Barthes really sends home the feeling of grad school. CJ should give us their "syllabus" ahead of the video's drop dates.
@DataMinsa
@DataMinsa 2 жыл бұрын
My favorite part of encanto was when Bruno said “it’s morbin time” and morbed the magic back to the family.
@pankakemancer4952
@pankakemancer4952 Жыл бұрын
I do really hope CJ gives Arcane a try someday and realizes that the art style isn't even its main selling point
@allisond1645
@allisond1645 2 жыл бұрын
Sarah Z screaming "it's fucking purple baby!!" about graped soda brings me joy in a purely subjective manner
@ckmonet
@ckmonet 2 жыл бұрын
00:00 Intro 04:10 Part 1: Was Encanto good, or did you just like it? 08:25 Part 2: A lyrical analysis of We don't talk about Bruno 12:40 Part 3: I shit over everything you love 18:00 Part 4: What is art critique? 30:40 Part 5: Aesthetic engagement and gameplay 42:55 Part 6: What is art? 45:10 (Vivian Maier) 52:27 Part 7: Essence & Interpretation 1:03:10 Part 8: The Mr Beast to CJ The X continuum 1:17:00 Part 9: the resurrection of the author 1:31:30 (conclusion)
@le-ore
@le-ore 2 жыл бұрын
Merci, Monet
@Flipitmixit
@Flipitmixit 2 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU , god this man needs timestamps
@le-ore
@le-ore 2 жыл бұрын
@@Flipitmixit (I don’t think they like being called that)
@Flipitmixit
@Flipitmixit 2 жыл бұрын
@@le-ore o
@ElDanteDelAnte
@ElDanteDelAnte 2 жыл бұрын
For a while I've been saying "Art is people communicating to each other" and I think that summarizes this video pretty well.
@Acidtesting123
@Acidtesting123 2 жыл бұрын
This is the kind of education I tell people I receive from KZbin. Not college but good enough for me. Thank you for making art that helps me understand my relationship to art better.
@kwelikaley
@kwelikaley 2 жыл бұрын
I went to college (and law school) and I have learned just as much here if not more. I mean both from Prof. CJ and KZbin, generally.
@icicloui
@icicloui 2 жыл бұрын
This was perfect -I disagreed with most of it, and it took me 3 hours to watch it, because I went on lengthy rants, I loved it so much. 9.5/10, watch mother!
@hwimilk
@hwimilk 2 жыл бұрын
you seem so cool :0
@strawberriandromeda
@strawberriandromeda 2 жыл бұрын
These are the kind of videos I miss. My feed is drowned out in a lot of noise and ambition and loud garbage that i love to waste my precious hours to. But every video of yours i watch isn't a waste. It's the first time i feel like I'm spending my time on something, sharing it, transcending it beyond the ticking seconds and flying numbers, and just ugh. Thank you is never enough :7
@Mateo-ph9js
@Mateo-ph9js 2 жыл бұрын
"Aesthetic testimony is not enough" This is so true and it makes me so sad that for so long I've interacting with media just by the testimonies of others. I grew up on KZbin and instead of watching the endless shows and movies the youtuber I was watching had an opinion on I consumed the opinion of the youtuber and that was it. I did not interact with media, I interacted just with the opinion of the media that was more entreteining to consume. I was a child and I did not have enough capacity to consume that media that the youtube revierws were reviwing but by just watching the reviews I fucked up my relationship to media. I'm literally incapable to watch a series, it is to hard for me to stay consistent or watch hours of the same thing, while I spend hours on KZbin. It is not all bad, I realised how fucked it was and I try everyday to get away from that mindset (I'm very far away from where I used to be). I can now experience media by my self and little by little I'm trying to reduce my social media use in general, I try so I do not consume content acritically. Your channel for has given me the apreciation for art I always had (I watches the reviews beacause at that moment I felt they were an accesible way to understand a higher art that my child brain would not process) and to experiment it for myself. The only video I have not watch of your channel is the arrival one because you explicitly say to go watch experiment the movie for myself and, for the first time, I decided to do so and Im waiting to watch the movie. I know it is not the central point of your video but truly, that phrase was putting into words a fealing I've had for a long time. If someone is reading this comment, please let yourselfs experiment art and do not find an easy way to *consume* it. Social media and consumerism in general makes your relationship with people worse is something most of us agree on, but it also makes your relationship with media worse and as with the former, you can get help with that.
@allisond1645
@allisond1645 2 жыл бұрын
This is a really good comment, I identify a lot with the "stuck in a cycle of watching reviews/analyses of art and not the art itself" sentiment. For me it was about energy -- experiencing art takes more energy and thought than passively consuming video essays does. I had to break the cycle of doing the easier thing and instead reap the rewards of actually experiencing the art itself.
@deltaslushie
@deltaslushie 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah.. The combo of the video and this comment made me realize I do the same thing and have been since childhood for similar reasons. It has recently started to bother me in recent years but I never was able to put a finger on why until now. I'm 23. Now I need to start that journey of actually experiencing art myself too. So, you're not alone, thank you for your comment putting into words how it feels.
@kaepeterman4394
@kaepeterman4394 2 жыл бұрын
I used to do the opposite and avoid things because other people said they liked them. Then I realized I liked enough things everyone else did that what was better for me was to just wait to watch things either before I hear anything about them or until other people stopped talking about it so. That way it’s easier for me to have my own opinion first.
@toatrika2443
@toatrika2443 2 жыл бұрын
for me, personally, watching analysis/interpretation of media/art makes me feel the exact same feelings as consuming art itself. Essentially, analysis/interpretation can be art, too.
@Envy_May
@Envy_May 2 жыл бұрын
i think people call the emperor's new groove words like "perfect" because it's very aesthetically and tonally cohesive in a highly stylised way, consistent and densely packed, and holds people's attention and gives them enjoyment at a high level throughout - they could like other things more and not call them "perfect" for that reason, it's just easy for someone to like every second of the emperor's new groove because the level of quality is largely similar across it, and it's a pretty good level of quality all things considered especially if it tickles your sense of humour well i watched it for the first time not that long ago btw i think it also says something that the emperor's new groove is so beloved when it's like _the only_ disney movie with a "riskier" sense of style that isn't all homogenised like the media landscape tends to be
@LiteralmenteFadul
@LiteralmenteFadul 2 жыл бұрын
I call The emperor's new groove perfect because I watched it dubbled in portugese and it just straight up fixes the film.
@KillahMate
@KillahMate 2 жыл бұрын
This, exactly. It's like, 'perfect' seems like a value judgment but it's _not,_ it's more of a... comment on how a thing is structured, I think? Something being 'perfect' and 'beautiful' are not the same things, in fact sometimes they can be opposites.
@KillahMate
@KillahMate 2 жыл бұрын
@@LiteralmenteFadul Well now you have to explain that in a bit more detail 😁
@elyseshires6314
@elyseshires6314 2 жыл бұрын
i think a lot of people just have nostalgic and sentimental ties to it, but i do agree that the timing is very well done
@isadora6092
@isadora6092 2 жыл бұрын
@@KillahMate at risk of being wrong i'm assuming they're talking about the brazilian dub, which honestly manages to elevate the movie so much on its own. i already liked it with the original voices and all, but the brazilian dub was so good it's ingrained in that generation's childhood and is still a staple when you rewatch it as an adult.
@JerryBeBass
@JerryBeBass 7 ай бұрын
"remember to download ad-blocker" -CJ the X, right as a YT ad interrupts them mid-sentence
@kelseydonegan8690
@kelseydonegan8690 2 жыл бұрын
For most video essayists I enjoy, I can usually somewhat predict their takes or points about to be made. With your videos, I can never even come close. However once I rewind the same 20 second segment 6 times and my brain feels satisfied that it understood your point, it always feels poignant and coming from a place of sincerity. Your arguments somehow simultaneously feel like something interesting and new to me, as well as something that's been lingering in the back of my mind for years and I haven't been able to put into precise words.
@franzferdinand1782
@franzferdinand1782 2 жыл бұрын
I have definitely run up against the idea of media 'not being worth my love'. I've been involved in fandom for years now and I have devoted hundreds of hours to shows and movies and books that are just not very good! And some of that time is spent criticizing it and thinking about how it could be better. But a lot of it is just love despite the flaws. I love the good parts enough that I want it to be good. And sometimes that sucks because the creators of the media don't respect or like their fans. But overall it's just-- I can see the good parts and I want it to be great so desperately. And I just don't know how to get away from it!
@marys4038
@marys4038 2 жыл бұрын
Do you happen to be a supernatural fan? Because after nearly two years of it being over, I’m finally starting to become less involved in its fandom, despite the fact that it was mostly a bad show. Mainly because it introduced a lot of concepts that allowed creators in the fan community to make genuinely good and enjoyable art or analysis. If you aren’t a fan, know it can always get worse on the “this media doesn’t deserve my love” front lol
@franzferdinand1782
@franzferdinand1782 2 жыл бұрын
​@@marys4038 I have seen some Supernatural and interacted with the fandom (I'm still on tumblr lol) but I was more the Sherlock and Doctor Who type haha. It is definitely a good example of a show that is just. Not good! But people have created some truly fantastic works of art based off it.
@franzferdinand1782
@franzferdinand1782 2 жыл бұрын
@@BooksRebound Book: Harry Potter. It's not just a bad book, the author is doing her best to make the world a worse place to live :// Movie: This is a hard one! I watch a lot of movies that aren't 'good' but no one watches them for art, they watch them to have fun, like Bill and Ted or A Knight's Tale. Maybe the Star Wars sequel trilogy or the X-Men movies are good here. TV Shows: There's so many, probably because TV has the most people writing, producing, directing, and acting, and there's more time to make mistakes with however long a show goes on. I'd say the entire trifecta of SuperWhoLock, Doctor Who being the least offensive of the bunch. The Book of Boba Fett show was also such a huge let-down for me but I still continued to draw fanart for it and read fic and stuff.
@g.j.9515
@g.j.9515 2 жыл бұрын
ngl i think youll do yourself a favor if you leave that sinking ship. there is stuff out there worthy of your love.
@marys4038
@marys4038 2 жыл бұрын
@@franzferdinand1782 also still on tumblr lol, mainly because it’s the most tolerable social media in terms of the system of it imo
@camillenovak8359
@camillenovak8359 2 жыл бұрын
Really appreciate this video, your conversation specifically about how you can love certain movies even if you're not sure you like them is relatable. Reminds me of one of my favorite quotes from Christopher Nolan (whose films I definitely love bc of sentiment) - 'Films are subjective - what you like, what you don't like. But the thing for me that is absolutely unifying is the idea that every time I go to the cinema and pay my money and sit down and watch a film go up on-screen, I want to feel that the people who made that film think it's the best movie in the world, that they poured everything into it and they really love it. Whether or not I agree with what they've done, I want that effort there - I want that sincerity. And when you don't feel it, that's the only time I feel like I'm wasting my time at the movies.'
@zamsparkle6883
@zamsparkle6883 2 жыл бұрын
CJ actually putting the bibliography in the description is like, CJ actually putting the bibliography in the description. Thank you, King!
@SnoFitzroy
@SnoFitzroy 2 жыл бұрын
I was confused by this comment but now I understand so much after clicking "show more" on the description. Odd choice to just literally write it there but honestly that is more convenient
@rosalinecapulet
@rosalinecapulet 2 жыл бұрын
@@SnoFitzroy how is it an odd choice? I thought it was standard practice for people on the more “academic” side of video essays
@eggbort413
@eggbort413 2 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you're making intellectualism more accessible, considering how seemingly (at least in the circles of the internet I've seen) so many are anti-intellectual
@korta4817
@korta4817 2 жыл бұрын
When fucking fantano appeared and he said I'm the internets busiest music nerd I literally stood up with my hands on my head, this is my avengers
@thailai3277
@thailai3277 8 ай бұрын
LMAOOO UNDERRATED ASS COMMENT
@Loch.Nessie
@Loch.Nessie 2 жыл бұрын
Honestly, Encanto is a conglomeration of amazing scenes that feel like they should have more in between them to connect them. I enjoyed the movie and the messages that the songs conveyed, but I feel there needed to be a bit more to flesh out the whole story
@KillahMate
@KillahMate 2 жыл бұрын
That sounds like the majority of musicals I've ever seen.
@briannenurse4640
@briannenurse4640 2 жыл бұрын
I love Encanto, Arcane, and Umbrella Academy but I also think you're completely correct in your critiques about them and I appreciate you being willing to share your views. Whether you present them with a more positive or negative spin, I love it. Maybe it's that cult leader charisma.
@calvinjohnson6242
@calvinjohnson6242 2 жыл бұрын
You haven’t reeally watched Arcane until you get to the third episode…
@briannenurse4640
@briannenurse4640 2 жыл бұрын
@@calvinjohnson6242 True, but CJ's inability to make it to the second episode is still a valid critique and I appreciate hearing critical opinions of things I love because it helps me see them more fully. Do I think CJ is missing out? Absolutely. Does that make their opinion moot? Not at all.
@calvinjohnson6242
@calvinjohnson6242 2 жыл бұрын
@@briannenurse4640 It may be the one flaw in Arcane that the first episode doesn’t paint a clear picture of what the rest of the show will be like. It’s very formulaic compared to the rest of the series. There are some elements that take up most of episode one that are cut down for episode two and three, and completely cut from the show by episode four. And some major elements of the show that are completely completely absent in episode one.
@briannenurse4640
@briannenurse4640 2 жыл бұрын
@@calvinjohnson6242 Yeah I had a similar reaction. Anticipating how annoyed I was gonna be by them, and then ep 3 happens. I think you're absolutely right.
@happygucci5094
@happygucci5094 2 жыл бұрын
Same - I am not a fan of Lin Manuel Miranda ( Sondheim he is not) period, but I liked Encanto. Broad brushes intergenerational trauma and how one copes within a family like that 🤷🏾‍♀️ so from a family systems theory it was ok
@bridgerparker4275
@bridgerparker4275 6 ай бұрын
"You don't have to feel like a genius, you are simply the conduit through which genius passes. Be honored for every scrap of it." Is such an incredible quote
@emoryogaard513
@emoryogaard513 2 жыл бұрын
I think one of the things I love most about these videos is that I can just *barely* keep ahold of the concepts being discussed. It's like an intellectual challenge that forces me to rewind and relisten. It becomes, well, a game.
@teacupofwonder
@teacupofwonder 2 жыл бұрын
0:00 Introduction 4:11 Part 1 - Was Encanto good, or did you just like it? 8:30 Part 2 - A lyrical analysis of 'we don't talk about Bruno' 12:40 Part 3 - I SHIT ALL OVER EVERYTHING YOU LOVE 18:00 Part 4 - What is Art Critique? 30:40 Part 5 - Aesthetic Engagement and Gameplay 42:58 Part 6 - What is Art? 52:25 Part 7 - Essence and Interpretation 1:03:10 Part 8 - The Mr.Beast to CJ the X continuum
@eliasmg9144
@eliasmg9144 2 жыл бұрын
Cj should pin this
@dinkle9197
@dinkle9197 2 жыл бұрын
i love part 6, putting words to so many of my thoughts
@andreapaulson3331
@andreapaulson3331 2 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU!!!
@TheAngryMarshmallow
@TheAngryMarshmallow 2 жыл бұрын
Ooooh yes thank u
@SGJetPro
@SGJetPro 4 ай бұрын
Here to see your detailed apology to famous (infamous) youtuber little joel. I expect that this video will be edited with the CORRECT take by the end of the day. This means a lot to me.
@katszulga1888
@katszulga1888 2 жыл бұрын
I heard someone the other day say that the idea of having "good taste" goes back to the roots of knowing the difference between the taste of wholesome foods versus the taste of poisonous food, and now I'm terrified that the granny aesthetic catalogue of consumer goods that came with some vinyl tiles I ordered for my bathroom means that my sense for interior design will be fatal to me, but also I really want that chenille bedspread for my guestroom. I don't have a guestroom, but if I did it would have a chenille bedspread in it. And so many kitschy cardinal ornaments with motivational phrases like "every time you see a cardinal an angel is near" which was another thing for sale in that catalogue. Along with a selection of nearly identical beige high waisted shorts, and a variety of pastel tee shirts. And a pot smoking garden gnome.
@user-qv2qf1jk5o
@user-qv2qf1jk5o 2 жыл бұрын
i love you
@witchy-trials
@witchy-trials 2 жыл бұрын
homie that IS taste / hj
@iffydonatello
@iffydonatello 2 жыл бұрын
I thought the "boyfriend" line was ultimately about the tension of expectations. The pressure of the marriage (important that the song begins with a wedding that 'went wrong'). The dinner, which should be a communion with family, has turned into a pressure pot be abuse of a pressured marriage proposal and an unrequited love. I dunno, just me.
@firelordwaffle2987
@firelordwaffle2987 2 жыл бұрын
Good read! I didn’t really think of that because Camilo go brr
@CatHasOpinions734
@CatHasOpinions734 2 жыл бұрын
The boyfriend line never really felt exceptional to me, like it was an effective line about familial expectations but that's 80% at least of all of the lyrics in this movie and that specific line had less punch than many of them. By contrast, for me, "time for dinner" was honestly a little bit brutal (in a good way) because there have been SO MANY TIMES that "time for dinner" in this kind of context has meant "sit down and stop talking, because whatever's bothering or important to you right now is less important than acting like a Rockwell painting for a little while."
@LunaWitcherArt
@LunaWitcherArt 2 жыл бұрын
To me was more of a "Hey, look! Someone outside the family is coming during a crisis! EVERYONE ACT NATURAL" and they are all arranging the table and the food like Mirabel didn't just spend the entire afternoon wreaking havoc and digging old memories and resentments up with every family member AND EVEN THE TOWNSPEOPLE
@yikesmcgee1283
@yikesmcgee1283 2 жыл бұрын
completely agree with this analysis
@ctons
@ctons 2 жыл бұрын
Time for dinner
@Hannah-rk7ry
@Hannah-rk7ry Жыл бұрын
For as long as I remember, there are specific art objects, usually paintings, that just instantly make me weep. It’s like the thing is so beautiful that it floods my senses in surround sound, and there’s nothing else to do but cry. I’ve never been able to articulate why until the part of this video where Cj says ‘this is art, you seeing it. This moment.’ That photo hit me in the same way, where it felt like something beautiful was being delivered through time and space. Thank you for these videos CJ, you often hit on something felt or divine that I typically think of as impossible to explain.
@Tiphuhnee
@Tiphuhnee 2 жыл бұрын
I think it’s really interesting how you prefer the objective analysis side of art instead of subjective cause I’m the complete opposite. I exclusively experience art through vibes and what makes me feel good. The only time I care about the “technical” side of art is when I already like whatever it is that I’m consuming. Objective analysis of art doesn’t make me like something that I previously didn’t before, it does give me an understanding of it and in that way I can appreciate its existence but it wouldn’t make me like it. I’m just so inclined to my personal taste that anything that doesn’t cater to that isn’t that important to me, but I can respect that it might be important to others for whatever reason. I think the way that I value the human experience leads me to value personal taste over “taste”. It’s fun how humans can experience the world so differently, kind of almost makes me like being a human :)
@Tiphuhnee
@Tiphuhnee 2 жыл бұрын
I guess that’s my art consumer mindset vs your art discoverer/creator/interpreter mindset
@undercover_idiot
@undercover_idiot Жыл бұрын
You've articulated a sentiment I've been struggling to for months! Thank you sm you don't understand how helpful this is!
@Dizma_Music
@Dizma_Music Жыл бұрын
My reaction to art is also very personal and emotional. If I love a melody or the way a painting looks, I get an instant connection, no information required. My attachment to it will be introspective. Any behind-the-scenes content thereafter is me going into research-mode. :D
@Desotto1
@Desotto1 2 жыл бұрын
I always saw the "Time for dinner" line as a harbinger. The dinner scene is when the straw finally breaks. The last line of the family image goes away as the family has a public breakdown. Stuff was already happening but much like the rumors the song was about, it was all intentionally ignored and under the surface. The song is part of the whole film, so reading it in a vacuum does it a disservice. I see it more as a foreshadowing song, hence the "he's here" line and the "I'm fine, I'm fine" lines
@rosewomelsdorf
@rosewomelsdorf 2 жыл бұрын
MAYBE "isabellllaaaa your boyfriend's heere~ TIME FOR DINNER" is commentary on the mundanity of life and how when you're part of a big chaotic family that's going through a lowkey traumatic experience together time doesn't stop, it just rolls relentlessly on - dinnertime comes and the boyfriend arrives and you all have to set the table and sit down and eat and put on a good show for the guest regardless of the trauma cloud constantly hulking in the background but idk i never watched the movie; the only experience of encanto i have is watching this video twice lmao
@GiantPetRat
@GiantPetRat 2 жыл бұрын
There were a lot of reasons I fell in love with Encanto, but perhaps the biggest one for me was that they didn't vilify the whole family- or even Abuela, arguably. Like, I grew UP with story after story featuring a protagonist getting shit on mercilessly by literally all of the other characters (looking at you, JK); with Encanto, it was an extremely refreshing change of pace to see how Mirabel's family, for the most part, truly loved her- and vice-versa- even if they had trouble grappling with the fact that she wasn't also gifted. That's what differentiates this movie from the usual kid-friendly Disney fare for me; for the most part, these characters felt like real people and talked like them, too. How often does this actually happen in kids films? Not a heck of a lot.
@malsummers6515
@malsummers6515 2 жыл бұрын
"I'm a genius, not an expert" from a fellow adhd goblin passionate about art is the reason this is my favorite channel on KZbin. Arcane is a masterpiece tho.
@matte5705
@matte5705 6 ай бұрын
I think people also often misinterpret or misrepresent the idea of subjectivity with every view or interpretation is equally valid in the same way people misunderstand the idea of something being a social construct as meaning something isn't real or doesn't exist when nothing is farther from the truth. I see this a lot surprisingly in my own field of mathematics. For a long time mathematicians were convinced that the goal of mathematics and logic was that there existed a set of rules which could fully describe mathematics and we could discover them. More specifically that there exists a set of definitions and axioms (statements we take as true without proof) such that every syntactically correct statement within that system could be proven to be either true or false. But then gödel came and proved that the existence of such a system is impossible. That no matter how many axioms you have your system will always either be inconsistent (lead to a logical contradiction, the existence of statements that can be proven both true and false thus) and thus useless, or incomplete (the existence of statements that cannot be proven at all). And thus inherently the very idea of truth is subjective. You can have two frameworks that hold different statements as true and yet you can't say one is correct and one is wrong. But the subjectivity of truth does not mean all frameworks are valid, because even though there cannot be a correct all encompassing framework there can be incorrect inconsistent ones. And even among consistent ones they can be more or less useful in terms of which statements they can determine the truth of. And i think the same is sort of in a roundabout way true for art. We may have different frameworks through which we perceive, analyze and determine the quality of art. And even if they are fundamentally incompatible that doesn't necessarily mean one is right and another is wrong. But that does not mean there are no frameworks that are objectively wrong nor does it mean all frameworks are equally useful in analysis or appreciation.
@smmar194
@smmar194 2 жыл бұрын
I honestly think reviews/analyses of art are my favorite artform? Like there are whole genres and mediums of art that I do not consume at all that I follow purely through review channels dedicated to them. It's almost like consuming a specific kind of remix; a different piece of art based on the original but in a new medium, filtered and reconstructed through the artistic interpretation of the reviewer or analyst, as they pull out individual components and arrange them to create a different kind of story, on that fits and highlights their subjective experience. I also often go to them not to get an opinion of the original artwork as a whole, but to get an opinion of the individual components that the reviewer has pulled out of its context to explore in relative isolation. It does help you interpret your own taste, not by copying opinions but by improving your ability to pick out things to have your own opinions about. It's a great way to identify tropes that appeal to you, reflect back and see how much of your favorite art contains it, and identify new ways you want to explore or use that trope yourself as an artist, or that you want to look for as a consumer. Like you can look at a sewing tutorial and thing "I never want to wear or make the thing they're making, but that, that one stitch, that one effect they got; I wanna know what that's called, I want to know how to do it, how to spot it in other contexts, how I can use it in a totally unrelated project.
@natasharedmane
@natasharedmane 2 жыл бұрын
I was all "aw, this is so good, too bad it must be halfway through already and will soon end" only to look and realize it was mere 16min in. Astonishing density of information and perfect pacing. You're amazing. Today we dine well, boys.
@tuben7097
@tuben7097 2 жыл бұрын
I can't explain why. But watching your videos helps me psych me up to study or just do stuff in generally I don't want to do. Something with your energetic energy and passion motivates me
@eleanorelmore
@eleanorelmore 2 жыл бұрын
“But what’d you really think about Encanto?” “I liked it fine.” “Yeah me too.” “A little full of itself but good music and imagination.” “Fair enough.”
@smallbabyedwards
@smallbabyedwards 2 жыл бұрын
I only realized I was looking for this when I saw it. Thanks.
@chesh1re_cat
@chesh1re_cat 2 жыл бұрын
*finger guns firing*
@molotawv
@molotawv 2 жыл бұрын
this is funny but i want to throw u into the sun for referencing what u are referencing
@trinifernandez8870
@trinifernandez8870 2 жыл бұрын
I will fight you on sight.
@123ili
@123ili 3 ай бұрын
LOOOOOL. i #getit
@greenworld966
@greenworld966 2 жыл бұрын
The effects of colonialism on what defines good taste has always made me wonder about where people and artists end up limiting themselves in an effort to prove good taste.
@blinkfilms1
@blinkfilms1 2 жыл бұрын
Could you expand on this?
@mueggsy
@mueggsy 2 жыл бұрын
Could you elaborate on this? Swear I'm not challenging you or anything, that's just an angle on this subject that I haven't considered and I'd love to learn more.
@greenworld966
@greenworld966 2 жыл бұрын
@@mueggsy To me the most obvious example I could draw would be music theory (scales mainly) that are seen almost in a way like gospel, academia specifically when it comes to art is very strict and often influenced by European standards and constructs. I know for me in an effort to prove good taste I wouldn't reference an artist like kikuo(an artist who often ignores theory) or my own culture's style of singing because likely it would either be interpreted as political or laughable to even those who identify as objectivists.
@mueggsy
@mueggsy 2 жыл бұрын
@@greenworld966 that's a really good point! Reminds me of a Sideways video I watched in which he talked about how the composers of Avatar (the blue people movie) were challenged to come up with "alien sounding" music for this alien culture, and they genuinely did come up with something entirely original with both the help of music historians, composers and anthropologists, but james cameron scrapped it because it was "too weird" and they just ended up picking vaguely african-sounding music for this alien culture instead. like, the perception of what is "human music" and "other," at least in that movie, ended up revealing some nasty colonialism that ironically went directly against the film's message
@greenworld966
@greenworld966 2 жыл бұрын
@@mueggsy omg yes that is a perfect example!! You get it fr
@MDaggatt
@MDaggatt Жыл бұрын
This is why I fuck with textile and fiber arts all much. They are so connected to people and the way they're observed and used that they have historically excluded from "art". When you crochet or quilt a blanket, you have to consider the feeling of the materials, make sure its the right size for the intended use, and when you're done, you'll cuddle up with it, sleep with it, use it to warm you. It's an art form so heavily built around both the objective and subjective, so tied to making sure people don't just see it, but feel it, share it, use it. A handmade outfit being ugly is subjective, but it not fitting is objective. Leather HAS to be used and cared for, or it will literally dry up. It's so public and also so private, being right up against your skin, in your most private spaces, but it's also the first thing other people see about you. It so easily moves between "art", such as high fashion, and "not-art" like your socks and sheets. The connection between humans and textile/fiber arts is really like nothing else.
@AmbivalentDreams
@AmbivalentDreams 2 жыл бұрын
I like Fantano’s use of “taste/tasting” in the verb sense because it really highlights the difference between “tasting” i.e. distinguishing between components of a thing and therefore being able to consider how they interplay; the pleasure of understanding. And “consuming” i.e. I don’t care how it tastes, just get into me; the pleasure associated with fulfilling a base need.
@sayanbiswas7364
@sayanbiswas7364 2 жыл бұрын
You need more likes for that "tasteful" observation, my guy.
@willowvin6627
@willowvin6627 2 жыл бұрын
I really like this because it also doesn’t make one thing better than the other. Both are valid forms of enjoyment, ones just more in depth.
@nosmoking5162
@nosmoking5162 2 жыл бұрын
Here's an interpretation: poetry isn't constrained to just be read off a page. It does work when read off a page, sure, but if given the change (ie the author is still alive and performs their poetry/there are recordings of them performing), then that is the way it should be consumed and reading it is therefore the equivalent of reading lyrics without knowing the song. Similar to plays for me. I hate reading plays. Even if I disagree with a character choice, set piece design, or anything about how the play is performed, it's infinitely better than reading the thing. I write poetry to be read aloud. I pick when and how to rhyme based off my speaking cadence and how I pronounce certain words. I write like I speak. To me, having someone read my poetry absolutely destroys 80% of the impact. However, some poems literally cannot be read aloud this way. Poems have this spatial property that other written texts often don't have. Deliberate indentations or line spacing, big blank parts of the page, changing typefaces, maybe the line itself is rotated 45°. That cannot be translated into a live reading. So poems are special to me in their flexibility. Depending on the author's intent they either almost have to be read aloud to do them justice, or can't be read aloud as they were written to live in the page. TLDR; poems can be read off a page if that's how the author wants it to be, and they can still be poems even if they are read aloud and given lyrical qualities.
@Mateo-ph9js
@Mateo-ph9js 2 жыл бұрын
I had the exact same though as you when I watched that part on the video! The poetry that has stucked most with me has been read out loud. There is this fantastic video of Allen Ginsgberg reading "America" with music in the background and for me "America", my favorite poem of him, is that video even if the music is edited, because is the way I experience it. Idk if it makes much sense, but man do I love a good read poem.
@nosmoking5162
@nosmoking5162 2 жыл бұрын
@@Mateo-ph9js Yes!!! Allen Ginsberg was someone I was thinking of as a famous poet who often performed his work but couldn't recall his name! Great example of poems that don't the same unless they are read aloud.
@goblinspoons
@goblinspoons 2 жыл бұрын
I don't know what I did to my algorithm that you've become part of my viewing rotation but light I'm glad I broke it this way. I've been loving all your videos, thank you so much for being so very extra and amazing.
@Eknashik
@Eknashik 2 жыл бұрын
That little moment about defining awesome as a sudden flicker of mutual understanding really resonated with me. I work retail, and those little tiny moments when the script falls away and you can actually be a real person talking to another real person, instead of being an employee talking to a customer are like magic. Those little tiny fragments of actualization are just special in a way that is hard to articulate.
@rakuranhawke8600
@rakuranhawke8600 2 жыл бұрын
I think a good point to raise with Encanto and with Everything Everywhere All At Once, is an exploration more of bonds, both familial yet equally toxic. Both explore it in different perspectives (notably both from perspectives of other cultural backgrounds, which narrows in the specific subjects it brings up), Encanto from the perspective of someone who is the descendant directly of a seemingly long-standing tradition and hierarchy yet is the black sheep due to a lack of quality; meanwhile EEAAO is from the perspective of a woman who has lived that life in the mires of parental issues with her father and is inflicting her own personal insecurity issues onto her daughter. I love both movies, they are great. Both have very similar messages. Their success is a statement to it's relatability to an audience, and their expression. HOWEVER. In statement to Disney's viewership, Encanto probably HAD to focus and spotlight their issues without going into deeper internal issues, battering all it's story bits within short snappy musical beats of which their could only be a limited amount. And focusing on a WHOLE FAMILY in the matter of EIGHT SONGS, so some of them get shafted with niche but cult-like fandoms and not full developments. Those are relegated to wattpad fanfics and mass fan consumption, getting fans to do more of the legwork to make this very successful show into a lasting franchise (which it is becoming). EEAAO is a concise story with different layers, and a smaller main cast focus; especially when most of the focus is on the dichotomy of mother and daughter. It tells it's story simply, leaving very little to the imagination but that is because they go into SPECIFIC detail of their relations. Other side characters are suitable for the roles they make and all of the arcs wrap nicely with it's themes (even if the expression of the themes are equally surreal and bizarre). I think though, Encanto would be remembered heavily because the use of song has a great way of embedding itself into one's mind. EEAAO however, should have the recognition that it deserves; a movie that explores many themes that go in tandem with the theme of generational trauma, potential, and the dimension hopping concepts that fit very well together. One that should be explored more in many other ways, not just in franchise ways but in just media shown; which I hope it does.
@betelgayze
@betelgayze 2 жыл бұрын
i found this randomly, and its beautiful, but something felt off and the whole time watching i was trying to articulate my feelings and i think i finally got it this feels not like a youtube video this feels like a movie, somehow i have never seen a movie like this, i dont know why it feels that way but i feel deeply impacted idk man
@betelgayze
@betelgayze 2 жыл бұрын
oh, also, this feels like the moments when i talk to myself while looking at myself in the mirror i love it
@emilynoce7980
@emilynoce7980 2 жыл бұрын
I wonder if you or any one else in the comments enjoying this have ever heard of, or would be interested in "The Anthropocene Reviewed." A lot of philosophy you have about art as an experience, subjectivity, and even number rating systems reminded me of parts of it. It especially reminds me of art being "art moments" and that anything can be art if it creates that moment. If you don't know, it's a collection of essays that facetiously provide number rankings for all sorts of things- weather, Sunsets, Halley's Comet, Penguins of Madagascar, an Icelandic hot dog stand- but none of it is wholly grounded in superficial rankings of that thing, its the experience of the thing, the history, the meaning. "There are no disinterested observers, there are only participants...when people write reviews, they are writing a kind of memoir, here's what my experience was." It's Ranking the Lascaux Cave Paintings art and history, but also it's interaction with people, ranking the way it is cared for and remembered, about how art is necessary and will outlast us as it continues to be experience. Its a favorite of mine that ends up being part memoir, part education, part musing on how humanity can make such beautiful things while also having such a great capacity for causing harm, and prose on how what we review is also what we experience, and that that is how we grow to love the world. the point. Might be worth a read!
@maddsb234
@maddsb234 2 жыл бұрын
it’s definitely worth a listen too :)
@claraschuman5609
@claraschuman5609 2 жыл бұрын
Totally agree! The anthropocene reviewed is a masterpiece, and I would definitely recommend listening to the podcast
@CoreenMontagna
@CoreenMontagna 2 жыл бұрын
Loved it. Get the audio book too, as John reads it himself
@TheZatzman
@TheZatzman 2 жыл бұрын
I literally have nothing to add with my silly KZbin comment. I think if we all loved each other the way CJ loves art, the world would be a better place. Thanks for making the video.
@ajeethavithiy1564
@ajeethavithiy1564 2 жыл бұрын
36:16 - aesthetic testimony 49:42 - interpretation 51:15 - the sum > parts 55:24 - art moment, essence 58:05 - ...
@Jessica-sh1js
@Jessica-sh1js 2 жыл бұрын
I though that enconto suffered from the medium it was shoved into. I think they wanted to say something and because it was so fast you got it of you related to it, but because it was a movie there wasn't enough time to rest with any of its attempted messages. We couldn't sit with Luisa and her pressure because the plot had to move We couldn't sit with Isabella pressure to be perfect because we had to keep moving We couldn't do anything with the yellow family because there was no time We couldn't take the time for the family to all have different feeling about Bruno leaving and returning because the credits had to role But a movie makes more money than an extended series. It was good for what it was, but I really want a show that is set before the movie so we can really dive into the family trauma.
@happygucci5094
@happygucci5094 2 жыл бұрын
THIS
@iantaakalla8180
@iantaakalla8180 2 жыл бұрын
Encanto was a 5 hour long theater blockbuster/series masquerading as a Disney movie. If there was time, Luisa would be elaborated on; Isabella would be elaborated on; Camilo would not just be a joke side character; the parents would get some time to explore their characters. That being said, it does work because the rushed pacing reflects that Alma literally forced the Madrigals to be nothing else but stewards of the town they live in, so their lack of focus reflect the lack of time to process their own personalities. But it would be just as likely that elsewhere, this conflict would be far more expansive.
@eliasmg9144
@eliasmg9144 2 жыл бұрын
So... Mirabel's Encantoed Adventure series when?
@rasmusmalmberg6468
@rasmusmalmberg6468 2 жыл бұрын
Most movies feel like this to me. I love a lot of movies, but like a good half of them are shortened for the sake of the medium severing the stories limbs one at a time in order for it to fit in the metaphorical suitcase that is a 2-3 hour runtime.
@alljammedup6781
@alljammedup6781 2 жыл бұрын
"I want the movie to honor your love" Really *slammed* into perspective some conversations I've had with a member of a webcomic Discord because she will regularly and consistently point out the ways in which the comic can Be Better and whenever I see it, I think 'But I love it already as it is! It means so much to me, I see so much value in it, why don't you think the value that already exists within it is enough? Why are you constantly asking for More?' and CJ saying (in paraphrase) "A person's love is more beautiful than a lot of the art they give it to." really flipped a switch in my brain and made me realize 'Oh. Oh she _doesn't_ do that because she Only Likes These Parts of the comic and wants the rest of it whipped into shape. She does it because she actually has a wholistic affection for the comic, and wants a wholistic discussion of it, which includes her saying 'These are the ways in which the comic is not excellent, which I want us to be aware of and get salient food for thought from.' and I am taking it really hard because it _is_ a statement of 'This is not worth so much of your trust and love', but I presumed it was coming from a place of 'therefore you're vapid and thoughtless for doing such a thing' instead of 'and I want you to reserve that trust and love for that which serves it better than some webcomic' which is the true spirit of her ethos.' So anyway, thanks for that. I feel like I have one of these personal revelations every time you upload.
@BriefDownpour
@BriefDownpour 2 жыл бұрын
I was talking to this complete stranger on twitter who really loves Harry Potter, and I believe our discussion(or argument) started because I said Joane wasn't that skilled as a writter. When she asked what I was talking about I said that I could explain the issues I had with the story, but it would be easier if she saw Shaun's video breaking down some of the flaws the story has. She said she wouldn't do it, because if she knew the video could make her love Harry Potter less then she had no reason to see it. I asked her if she wasn't worried about the possibility of loving something that doesn't exist and she couldn't understand what I meant, so I explained: If she loves Harry Potter, then she must be aware of the good and the bad aspects of it. That means she is aware of the flaws the books has and she doesn't believe the whole thing is without value just because of the presence of some flaws. I made it clear that if this is the case then I have no problem with it, she was free to like whatever she likes. And if that was the case, then seeing someone talk about these flaws shouldn't bother her, because she is already aware of them. And if she wasn't aware of them before, then after getting in contact with this new perspective she can then decide if she still loves Harry Potter, or if she had the wrong impression. I know I'm rambling here too, but I was trying to tell that person that sometimes the stuff we consume doesn't reflect our values. The things this girl liked exists, be it friendship, or fantasy, or bravery, etc. Whatever she believes makes a story great, it exists. But that doesn't mean it exists there on that story. Like, this person was terrified of finding out if her understanding of what HP is about matches the other people's understanding of what HP is about. Like, imagine loving someone like this. Imagine refusing to talk about their past in order to preserve this pristine image of them that you have in your own head. Is that love? I don't know if your friend is like me, but I'm SO open to talk about the flaws of the things I consume. Because if I really love something I want to be sure I'm looking straight at that thing, and not just projecting what I want to see. (She didn't watch the video BTW).
@memyself2868
@memyself2868 2 жыл бұрын
My favorite feeling when consuming art is feeling like the artist is reaching out and touching my soul. Like my subjective experience is being used as a link between the artist's intent and the art's essence, like my being is a part of this piece of art's creation. This happened to me before when reading The Myth of Sisyphus by Albert Camus, and it happens occasionally when CJ says long complex sentences that tickle my core.
@NexLegacyAccount
@NexLegacyAccount 2 жыл бұрын
"Aesthetic sincerity" made so many things click in my mind, both about how I perceive the world around me as well as aspects of my personal identity. You are fuckin inspirational and I can't thank you enough for sharing your essence.
@lucilleelliott6377
@lucilleelliott6377 2 жыл бұрын
thank you for the words "was it good, or did you just like it?" they're words i've been searching for for a while now when i try to explain to people why i love pieces of media that are... objectively not great
@lucyzethner4120
@lucyzethner4120 22 күн бұрын
I dont usually comment on videos, but this video is truly art and I wanted to let you know that I connected with and experienced your art and I'm so grateful I did. your chaos and overwhelming passion pushes me to share my art with the world,. thank u
@ashleyasphodel1912
@ashleyasphodel1912 2 жыл бұрын
I feel like watching your videos makes me better as a person. More tools and ways to think and relate to myself and things.
@beeameme9729
@beeameme9729 2 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah definitely. Most of the shows I like there is a character or a struggle or an idea that I identify within myself and I feel so strongly that I hate when people say it's bad. My netflix profile picture is Jinx
@isilikespeopleandthings
@isilikespeopleandthings 2 жыл бұрын
well said. mine is silco- not that i identify with him but .... idk i got bored of jinx
@raosthegray7090
@raosthegray7090 2 жыл бұрын
Something that blows my mind about your channel is that most of your videos have nearly as many views as you have subscribers, often even more. Really emblematic of the quality of your work. Keep it up my dude
@clementineshetheyfae8312
@clementineshetheyfae8312 2 жыл бұрын
You do genuinely make me feel not alone in the way I rant about things all the time. I am autistic and when I talk about a special interest it’s basically one of these videos but unscripted and messier lol.
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