El Dorado News-Times

Must I glue my eyes to the TV?

- DANNY TYREE Columnist

I had forgotten about it, but my father once reminisced about finding elementary school-aged me habitually “watching” TV with my back turned to the set.

He said I explained that I could imagine more interestin­g scenes in my mind.

The real demonstrat­ion of my creativity was that I could conjure a more tactful response than “How about springing for a color TV, Ebenezer?”

I still have trouble giving the boob tube my undivided attention.

My wife and I dearly enjoy certain programs; they are not just background noise. But our busy lifestyle forces us to multitask. In my case, I scroll through newspaper PDFs, outline a column or answer email while casting glances at the screen.

But several recent trends make even the most visually boring programs a hassle to take for granted.

Perhaps the most innocuous is the unexpected transition to a scene where characters are conversing in American Sign Language (ASL).

Truly, it is heartwarmi­ng that the hearing-impaired are no longer marginaliz­ed as nonexisten­t; but when I recognize a conspicuou­s silence and scramble to rewind to play catchup, it’s just one more example of Hollywood guilt-tripping me.

(“You can’t dance like celebritie­s on ‘Dancing with the Stars’ or sing like contestant­s on ‘The Voice’ or spend money like the clowns on C-SPAN. You didn’t even learn ASL. Or marry a doctor who knows ASL. Or give me grandchild­ren who used ASL in the delivery room…”)

Next are the shows where characters perfectly capable of speaking English suddenly go all Tower of Babel and subject us to a mind-numbing string of don’t-blink-or-you’ll-miss-it subtitles. Perhaps the writers are practicing for their own travels. (“Where is the library? Do they have cocaine in the library?”)

Most annoying is the unheralded shift to characters engaging in a rapid-fire texting marathon, with pivotal messages that are readable only with an IMAX home theater.

Yes, texting is ubiquitous in 21st-century society and writers are trying to “keep it real.” But griping about the skyrocketi­ng cost of streaming service subscripti­ons is ubiquitous in 21st-century society as well, but no one feels compelled to put those sentiments into the mouth of a dopey dad or hooker-with-a-heart-of-gold. Weird.

Also, the attempt to keep programs cutting-edge and relevant will seem merely quaint in a few years, when we all have brain implants and communicat­e telepathic­ally. (“What are they doing in this old show?” “I think they called it texting …on an intelligen­t-phone. She’s probably inviting her friends to buy Pet Rocks and churn butter.”)

I know all the writers, actors, directors, set designers and wardrobe coordinato­rs think there is a social contract that we are obligated to keep jumbo-size Visine handy and scrutinize every blankety-blank frame of every program, but that “all or nothing” volley against multitaski­ng may push more viewers to turn off the set and focus on their pets, reading or getting a weekly colonoscop­y.

What’s a good compromise? Maybe programs could have a warning siren when there is about to be a jarring change from a run-of-the-mill conversati­on. Not an Amber Alert, but more of a Pretentiou­s Artiste Alert.

(We need a separate warning for “Stop sorting your grandmothe­r’s recipe cards! This inane chitchat will be interrupte­d by your favorite character getting creamed by a hit-and-run driver. Again.”)

I wish my father was here to help. He probably even knew “Bah, humbug!” in Spanish.

Danny Tyree welcomes email responses at tyreetyrad­es@ aol.com and visits to his Facebook fan page “Tyree’s Tyrades.”

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