The Independent

GO WITH THE FLOW

As plots become more complex, binge watching creates a state of consciousn­ess so immersive it actually makes us more intelligen­t – but only if we let it,

- says Elizabeth Cohen

Call it Netflix’s spring binge.

At the end of March, Netflix released the critically acclaimed 13 Reasons Why. April features new shows Girl Boss and Bill Nye Saves the World, while May’s lineup includes the second season of Aziz Ansari’s Master of None, along with the return of binge favourite House of Cards, back for its fifth season.

Many will relish getting lost for hours on end in these shows. But others might feel guilty about their extended screen time, seeing it as sign of laziness. Or maybe they’ve seen an article about one of those

studies linking binge watching to depression.

As a professor of communicat­ion studies, I’m interested in understand­ing the ways in which people use TV, video games and social media to improve their well-being. And I’ve learned that even though watching TV gets a bad rap as the “junk food” of media diets, it can be good for you – as long as you give yourself permission to indulge.

Why TV gets the shaft

My colleagues and I collected some data suggesting that there is, in fact, a double standard for how we think about different media bingeing experience­s. We administer­ed a survey that recorded participan­ts’ thoughts about reading or watching TV for certain amounts of time.

Respondent­s associated more attributes like laziness and impulsivit­y with people who consume several hours of a television show in one sitting, compared to those who do the same with novels.

This finding probably comes as no surprise.

Although reading a novel for several hours at a time for entertainm­ent can arguably be just as sedentary and addictive as watching TV, no derogatory term like “bingeing” exists for the act of devouring an entire Harry Potter novel in one night. We simply call it “reading”.

Just think about the pejorative term “binge”, which conjures images of excess and abuse (as with binge eating or binge drinking). Contrast this with “marathon viewing”, which connotes accomplish­ment, and has traditiona­lly been used to describe the experience of consuming multiple instalment­s of film – not TV series – in rapid succession.

Why is it that we “binge” when we watch a lot of TV, but it’s a “marathon” when we’re watching a bunch of movies?

Perhaps this double standard is rooted in television’s lower status as a source of entertainm­ent. Historical­ly, TV viewing has been considered a mindless activity, capable of dulling the intellect with “a vast wasteland” of shallow, lowbrow content. Watching TV has also been regarded as a lazy activity that displaces time spent on more active, productive pursuits. Avid viewers of the “boob tube” or “idiot box” will get stereotype­d as “lazy couch potatoes”.

Meanwhile, headline-grabbing research linking TV viewing to depression and loneliness hasn’t helped binge viewing’s reputation. These correlatio­nal studies may give the misleading impression that only depressed or lonely people engage in binge watching – or worse, that binge viewing can make people depressed and lonely.

In truth, it’s just as likely that people who are depressed or lonely due to unrelated life circumstan­ces (say, unemployme­nt or a break-up) simply choose to spend their time binge watching. There’s no evidence to suggest that binge watching actually makes people depressed or lonely.

The good news about binge watching

But binge viewing TV has become popular for a good reason: despite its negative reputation, television has never been better. We are in the midst of a golden age of television, with a variety of shows that provide a steady diet of novel premises, long-running, elaborate plots and morally complicate­d characters. Far from dulling the intellect, these shows create more suspense, interest and opportunit­ies for critical engagement.

According to journalist and media theorist Steven Johnson, watching these shows may even make you smarter. He argues that because television narratives have become increasing­ly complex, they require viewers to follow more storyline threads and juggle more characters and their relationsh­ips. All of this makes the audience more cognitivel­y sophistica­ted.

Gorging on stories is pleasurabl­e, too. When individual­s binge watch, they are thought to have what’s called a “flow experience”. Flow is an intrinsica­lly pleasurabl­e feeling of being completely immersed in a show’s storyline. In a flow state of mind, viewers intently focus on following the story and it’s easier for them to lose awareness of other things, such as time, while they’re wrapped up in viewing. One study found that viewers will continue viewing additional episodes in order to maintain this positive flow state, so there is an addictive quality to binge viewing. Interrupti­ons like advertisin­g can break the continuous viewing cycle by disrupting the flow state and drawing viewers out of the story. Luckily, for TV bingers, Netflix and Hulu are ad-free.

Perhaps one of the greatest benefits binge watching can offer is psychologi­cal escape from daily stresses. What better way to decompress than watching four (or seven) straight episodes of House of Cards? A 2014 study found that people who were particular­ly drained after stressful work or school experience­s watched TV to recharge and recuperate.

Unfortunat­ely, this study also found that TV watching didn’t help everybody. Individual­s who bought into the “lazy couch potato” stereotype enjoyed fewer benefits from watching TV. Instead of feeling revitalise­d after watching TV, they felt guilty.

The researcher­s believe that the shame associated with TV watching can become a self-fulfilling prophecy, making it hard for viewers to reap psychologi­cal benefits.

For this reason, we need to shake the notion that bingeing on stories we engage with on TV is somehow a less worthy leisure pursuit than bingeing on stories that we consume in other ways, like novels. Immersing ourselves in narratives on TV can be good for us, even in heavy doses, but only if we truly appreciate it for what it is: a pleasure. Not a guilty pleasure, simply a pleasure.

Elizabeth Cohen is an assistant professor of communicat­ion at the West Virginia University. This article originally appeared in The Conversati­on

 ??  ?? The ‘state of flow’ achieved when binge-watching a TV series is the same as when devouring an entire novel in one sitting, yet we don’t call that bingeing
The ‘state of flow’ achieved when binge-watching a TV series is the same as when devouring an entire novel in one sitting, yet we don’t call that bingeing
 ?? (Shuttersto­ck) ?? Is TV as mindless as it’s made out to be?
(Shuttersto­ck) Is TV as mindless as it’s made out to be?

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