DVD Talk Forum

DVD Talk Forum (https://forum.dvdtalk.com/)
-   DVD Talk (https://forum.dvdtalk.com/dvd-talk-3/)
-   -   "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium (https://forum.dvdtalk.com/dvd-talk/557368-official-dvdtalk-challenges-compendium.html)

ntnon 09-11-16 07:09 PM

Re: ;)
 

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895537)
Comedy can stay, though as I've previously mentioned, I think swapping it with Criterion would be a benefit to both. September feels like more of a funny month to me than November, and November feels more like an art house month to me than September.

Isn't the perpetual and widespread argument that post-Horror trumps all other arguments - a wind-down after scares, gore and violence. Detox, almost.

I can see the case for switching them, though.

LJG765 09-11-16 07:14 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 
Love:
Animation
Sci-fi/Fantasy (I think I may be contractually required to love these as I host them...:) )
Holiday (I love holiday sappy movies. I don't even watch that many TV shows for the challenge, but stick with movies. With Hallmark making a ton of them every year, I DVR them and binge throughout the challenge on them. The ones I don't watch, I keep on the DVR till next year and finish them up then. I'll even go through the stores during Nov and Dec and just blind buy as even when they are awful, they're so awful they're good. Totally a guilty pleasure for me.)

Like:
TV on DVD
Academy Awards
Action/Adventure/Crime
Comedy
MYOC (I go back and forth on this one, participating wise. I sometimes take it slowly as it's a bit of a break since I do participate in the majority of the challenges and let's me generally watch what I'm in the mood for rather than trying to watch something that is related to the current challenge)
Criterion (I like this one because I have found a few movies I love that I would never have found before, but definitely felt going into it that it was going to be a lot of pretentious films. That is true, I've definitely found a lot more films I've disliked than liked. However, the ones I have loved, more than make up for it.)

Dislike: Horror (I know, I know, please don't shoot me but I am not a horror fan in general and the one time I participated I did not feel like the Halloween type shows and movies I was watching fit in with the rest of the people participating)
Historical (Never did figure out what was ok and what was discouraged)
Drive-In

Travis McClain 09-11-16 07:28 PM

Re: ;)
 

Originally Posted by ntnon (Post 12896322)
Talking point: Is personal engagement directly linked to challenge content?

Or is it just a personal (read: arbitrary, changeable, "human") thing?

And, if the latter, does adding/removing/moving/changing challenges help with this theoretical community engagement - or would not trying to get "the community" engaged in existing challenges be more of a good starting point?

No one should feel obligated to take part in challenges that don't interest them (or, watch things they don't care about*). But equalling sitting on the sidelines and decrying a lack of participation is... well. :)


*Excepting that BRANCHING OUT is an 'important' side-effect, and "engagement"/discussion can be negative as well as positive - or argumentative and rhetorically persuasive.

I've read this four times and I'm still not confident I understand it.

ntnon 09-11-16 07:28 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Trevor (Post 12895788)
Bored waiting for the NFL games to start......

So, we wait a week or two and check the poll results? How many is enough to start another Challenge?

"WHEN" is as important as "IF". You don't often decide to creat first and then thrash out the what and when second: it's a bundle.

"Should there be another challenge?" is not Yes/No, it's "yes, IF" or "no, BUT". Flawed options will create arguments second. Particularly since the whole debate is being driven over not by suggestions and contrary opinions. This now smacks of change for change's sake, rather than the initially-mooted idea of adding a specific challenge at a specific time.

ntnon 09-11-16 07:49 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
First things first. Dimension X, I am sincerely sorry for upsetting you by maligning your challenge. (I'm also greatly impressed by your research and table making work.)

I like to think that Dimension X was critiquing your math/science rather than just acting out of a sens of personal pride. Certainly that's how I read - and agree with - it.


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
Regarding HA vs. MYO: by any measuring stick, HA is a flop of a challenge that I screwed up. I wasn't holding it up as a superior challenge to MYO. I was illustrating that even relative to such a dismal disappointment of a challenge as HA, MYO's numbers are dubious.

Framing criticism as self-criticism doesn't absolve it from requiring accuracy or critiques. Numbers and statistics are notorious for their ability to prove any argument under different lights. You consider it a flop. I do not. Your opinion isn't necessarily more valid than mine.


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
My point was to establish whether there's room for a new challenge by looking at how effectively existing challenges service the function of community-building. To that end, the raw numbers are only part of the story. You've shared nothing about the substance of those comments.

Shall we dig through Horror threads and see how many comments are about eligibility? How many are criticising participants' choices, or noting competition deadlines? Can we weigh lengthy posts equal to single words; are tailored/quoted replies of more "community" value than the generic? Are discussions between two people over multiple pages better or worse than brief agreement from a dozen individuals? These are unquantifible, even philosophical debates.

And even if they were possible, useful or necessary, two cautions: it's all predicated on YOUR (albeit reasonable and tacitly agreed-upon) definition of the purpose of the challenges. Why not see them as communal space rather than conversation starters? Victorian Gentlemen's Clubs offer community and commonality while allowing/encouraging non-interaction; coffee houses fostered debate and intellectual stretching; pubs and clubs allow shared interests to lead to comversation or friendships. Is DVDTalk equivalent to an amalgam of these? Or "other"? Are the Challenges intended to foster a sense of community via discussion, or do they merely allow it as a side-effect to being a discrete collection of linked personal lists?

Do you feel part of a community? Do you feel less so in months you do not participate in challenges? More so when engaging in debate or agreement? etc


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
71 posts were before this year's MYO challenge started, mostly sharing themes either chosen or considered, with some side conversation about Gimp. (A dozen were from shadokitty.)

Which is still community discussion and interaction.


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
pacway is right to note above that "and for sure, not one post in MYOC discussion is "should film x count?" I've made no secret of how grating I found having to field that question with HA, and yeah, if you audited any given HA discussion and removed the posts that were strictly about that, you'd probably lose half or more of the entire thread. Sidestepping that issue doesn't necessarily help MYO discussions, though. There's no interactivity between posters until post 96 on 9 May, when Cardsfan111 commented about TheBigDave's point about 1984 being such a cool year for movies.

Auditing a thread (with an agenda, no less) is very anti-community building... it's literally (pun!) DECONSTRUCTION...


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
I've perceived the entire discussion about the nature and value of the challenges to be purely about the extent to which they service the community. DVDTalk is a ghost town for various reasons, one of the greatest being the alienation of several prolific longtime members by a flurry of questionable moderation choices over the last two years. That's something entirely outside the purview of challenges to compensate for or offset.

We have a very simple choice: Content ourselves that the paltry numbers we have today are as good as it's gonna get anymore, or be willing to upend some stuff in hopes of rejuvenating some folks.

A) Who? Rejuvenating those here, or reaching out for new people? B) If upending causes disgruntlement and alienation in the engaged, wouldn't it be a wash even if there were additions..? All of which is guesswork and future-casting, but... treading lightly isn't a terrible idea. Or listening to dissenting voices.


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
I don't believe we're going to have much success luring in many newcomers, but I do believe there are a lot of existing members who may be more interested in participating on the forum if there was something new and interesting for them to discuss.

How do you propose reaching them? Are any of them engaging in this discussion? Is there even a net gain amongst those here that another/new/different/revised challenge would increase engagement rather than get backs up..?

ntnon 09-11-16 07:57 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12896205)
Two weeks is a curious denomination of time. I can certainly look back on challenges where, after two weeks, I was already reaching a point of burnout and I know that's common.

...is that not a perfect stopping point, then?!


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12896205)
50 movies in 2 weeks is a different critter from 100 movies in 1 month. I could be talked into giving it a go; I do see some appeal and potential to it. But I'm wary that it would just be too limited.

I see where you're coming from.. I tend not to put a number on it. Two Weeks to watch SOME films. 30 is two a day, if you want a point to reach/exceed.


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12896205)
Another thought: What about moving Criterion to February? That and Oscars seem to be two that several challenge regulars both skip, and some of those who do participate in them have indicated waning interest and desire to see some kind of alternative or expansion. Granted, for me it would suck because that would have my two favorites competing for my viewing time simultaneously, but I'm also well aware I'm in a small minority.

A minority of at least two. :)

I don't like that idea. At all.

Dimension X 09-11-16 07:59 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
First things first. Dimension X, I am sincerely sorry for upsetting you by maligning your challenge.

Here's where I know we're two different types of people. I didn't post that just because you "maligned" "my" challenge (I stayed out of this thread, other than to thank one post, when you were maligning the challenge), but mostly because you maligned the MYOC participants when you condescendingly said

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895522)
People may love concocting their little challenge schemes for themselves, but conversation is more about "What's your idea?" than the actual viewed content.

You talk about wanting to build a community, then belittle the efforts of 40+ people. That's not what I consider community building. Look, there are a few challenges that I don't like, but I don't badmouth them on this site, I claim a spot in the list thread and try to watch and list a few items during the month. Call me crazy, but that seems more community-minded to me than just cutting and pasting a post I wrote on some other site about a random movie I watched last night.

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
(I'm also greatly impressed by your research and table making work.)

The tables were just the ones Trevor posted, slightly modified.


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
Regarding HA vs. MYO: by any measuring stick, HA is a flop of a challenge that I screwed up. I wasn't holding it up as a superior challenge to MYO.

And yet you think you "screwed it up" by making it more inclusive and opening it up to more peoples' interests. -rolleyes- If I were to try to psychoanalyze you, I'd say this is on par with your thinking that since you don't like the MYOC, then it should go away, regardless of what 40+ other people think (those same people you belittled earlier).

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
I was illustrating that even relative to such a dismal disappointment of a challenge as HA, MYO's numbers are dubious.

Your stats were ridiculous. The MYOC is pretty much on par with the majority of the monthly challenges that don't occur in October. If it drops to a low number of participants, I'll be happy to drop it.

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
My point was to establish whether there's room for a new challenge by looking at how effectively existing challenges service the function of community-building. To that end, the raw numbers are only part of the story. You've shared nothing about the substance of those comments.

I didn't read the fucking threads for those three years. Neither did Trevor.

Part of the reason behind that post was to point out how ridiculous it was just to compare numbers.

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
71 posts were before this year's MYO challenge started, mostly sharing themes either chosen or considered, with some side conversation about Gimp. (A dozen were from shadokitty.)

Why are those post any less "community-building" than talking about movies? I get you think reviewing is the gold standard of conversation, yet you cut and paste reviews from another site without taking any effort to modify it to this site, to this audience. (Okay, I'm assuming here, because I don't read overlong posts like that from anyone. If I were like you, I'd project my feelings about those cut and paste reviews and tell you to quit wasting your time posting crap no one is ever going to read.)


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
pacway is right to note above that "and for sure, not one post in MYOC discussion is "should film x count?" I've made no secret of how grating I found having to field that question with HA, and yeah, if you audited any given HA discussion and removed the posts that were strictly about that, you'd probably lose half or more of the entire thread. Sidestepping that issue doesn't necessarily help MYO discussions, though. There's no interactivity between posters until post 96 on 9 May, when Cardsfan111 commented about TheBigDave's point about 1984 being such a cool year for movies. And, as davidh777 noted:

How is two guys talking back and forth more "community-building" than one person posting to the group?


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
I'd also like to note the following exchange:

Back to the present conversation:

I've perceived the entire discussion about the nature and value of the challenges to be purely about the extent to which they service the community. DVDTalk is a ghost town for various reasons, one of the greatest being the alienation of several prolific longtime members by a flurry of questionable moderation choices over the last two years. That's something entirely outside the purview of challenges to compensate for or offset.

I'm sure belittling peoples' "little challenge schemes" will make people want to stay around.


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895922)
We have a very simple choice: Content ourselves that the paltry numbers we have today are as good as it's gonna get anymore, or be willing to upend some stuff in hopes of rejuvenating some folks. I don't believe we're going to have much success luring in many newcomers, but I do believe there are a lot of existing members who may be more interested in participating on the forum if there was something new and interesting for them to discuss.

Funny, in May, there's a challenge where people come up with "something new and interesting" every year.

ntnon 09-11-16 08:06 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by BobO'Link (Post 12896194)
[Don't Like] Criterion - Many of these are "art" type films for which I have little affinity or tolerance. After discovering I'd be watching the same 30-50 films every year because of this I stopped participating.

Can I somewhat tongue-in-cheek-ly suggest a compare-and-contrast with your comment on the 'Neverending' Challenge. Viz: "I use it to be "forced" into watching movies I've put off viewing for one reason or another."

I wonder if you might not be surprised regarding affinity and tolerance for many of the CC film if you 'forced' yourself to watch them... (Note "many," not 'all' of course.)


Originally Posted by The Man with the Golden Doujinshi (Post 12896286)
Same here.

Whenever I see someone bring up quality or greatness with their releases, the first thing the pops into my mind is Armageddon, and then I can't take anything they say seriously. That's not a reflection of the person, that's just me hating Armageddon.

To each their own and all that. But that film is so, so clearly an outlier that using it to judge (or as a stick to beat them with) is clearly flawed...

And on a purely theoretical level, would you not agree that the CONTENT of the Armageddon release is still top-notch even if you hate the film? The theory and background and peripheral material stand apart from (as well as complementing) their releases. Even with Bay films.

Travis McClain 09-11-16 08:11 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by ntnon (Post 12896358)
A) Who? Rejuvenating those here, or reaching out for new people? B) If upending causes disgruntlement and alienation in the engaged, wouldn't it be a wash even if there were additions..? All of which is guesswork and future-casting, but... treading lightly isn't a terrible idea. Or listening to dissenting voices.

How do you propose reaching them? Are any of them engaging in this discussion? Is there even a net gain amongst those here that another/new/different/revised challenge would increase engagement rather than get backs up..?

I kinda figured I've been enough of a minority in the last few days of this thread that I *was* one of the dissenting voices! The occasion to reconsider the landscape of the challenges came up, and I've chimed in with what I think can reasonably and fairly be characterized as some unpopular views.

Regarding which theoretical group to try to court, I'd say presently active members. Placing the burden of attracting new forum members on challenge organizers seems unfair, even if it is ultimately in our own self-interest. As for how to try to engage them, I suppose I'd start with a thread to ask why they have so far abstained from challenges. Feedback there could indicate some areas we've overlooked, or it could close the door and make clear that it's a lost cause entirely.

I do think that it's time we again revisited asking to have a Challenges sub-forum created, though. These threads all being in DVD Talk make them far less visible to those who frequent instead, say, HD Talk or Movie Talk. Being more conspicuous on the home page couldn't hurt, right?

ntnon 09-11-16 08:11 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12896297)
Yeah, it's important for any challenge to not be so niche it's of no interest, but this was an instance of one that was never really interesting because it was too inclusive. Out of all the years I was part of Historical Appreciation, I can only remember two substantial conversations. One was about Marshal Petain and the other was whether X-Men: First Class should count. We had a whole lot more debate like the latter than we ever had chatter like the former.

Devil's Advocate says saying "sure" to the latter clears it out of the way, leaving time for the former...

(maybe)


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12896297)
Any given HA discussion thread consists more of debates about what someone wanted to justify watching than what they had actually, you know, watched.

People on the defensive feel bound to defend their choices to the time-based exclusion of discussing them...? I certainly see your frustration, but blithely okaying Abbey or Mad Men would surely foster discussion about them without the associated cloud of defensiveness. Or at least "hopefully".

ntnon 09-11-16 08:21 PM

Re: ;)
 

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12896338)
I've read this four times and I'm still not confident I understand it.

Your stated goal is to get people engaged and talking.

You said you sit out the Holiday Challenge.

Without calling that hypocrisy (because it isn't), I wanted to muse over whether people are more likely to chat and discuss if everything went through upheaval, or whether it isn't more wise to try and foster engagement within existing confines.

Don't throw the baby out because you feel there are better options - perhaps new challenges would get greater participation/engagement. Or perhaps some people just aren't ready/able to engage. A personal choice, and nothing wrong with that.

Sitting on the sidelines decrying a lack of participation (spelled correctly) should be self-evident, if arch and mildly rude. There's an element of 'armchair umpire' in some of the thoughts here (me too) - we all know how best to fix things from the outside. But fixing them from the inside is surely more useful and helpful - get in the middle of things and stir up debate; don't sit things out and complain. Engage rather than just shouting into the wind. Ask questions and react to the answers.

Also, while it's obvious that challrnges less appealing to each of us are the easiest to sit out, it's arguably beneficial to branch out and watch new things - if you do the Criterion Challenge, don't (just) watch the same 20 films.*


*Obviously it's not as easy as that. I know!

Dimension X 09-11-16 08:22 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by BobO'Link (Post 12896229)
In my likes/dislikes list I failed to include "The Neverending Watch The Movies You Should Have Already Seen Challenge" in my "likes" list. It's not tied to a month or genre (unless you tweak it for a challenge - something I feel is rather a cheat) and has turned out to be quite fun. I often use the film selected for me to break things up in the monthly challenges. Sometimes it syncs, often it does not. I use it to be "forced" into watching movies I've put off viewing for one reason or another. There are currently only a few participants which is a shame as it's such a easy challenge in which to participate.

I enjoy reading that list. The reviews are always short and to the point, with no spoilers. :up: to everyone there.

Originally Posted by ntnon (Post 12896269)
...I don't recognise that summation.

I disagree completely that it's a mistake to expand on war/western - as above, war/western is a valid subset and CAN be the WHOLE challenge on a person-by-person basis. No harm, no foul.

And everyone marathoning Mad Men..? Isn't it more accurate to say "a few" and add "..accompanied by much eye-rolling and complaints"...? There ssometimes seems to be a heavy hand of exclusion in some challenges (horror, history) which contrasts starkly to a more open hand of inclusion (holiday, Drive-In, MYOC) which - surely? - does more to foster community and discussion.

(That may read more vehemently or harshly than it's intended. Hopefully not, but..)

:up:


Originally Posted by ntnon (Post 12896358)
I like to think that Dimension X was critiquing your math/science rather than just acting out of a sens of personal pride. Certainly that's how I read - and agree with - it.

I'm glad someone got that. I don't even like to call it "my" challenge. That's the one challenge which literally belongs to the people who participate each year.


Originally Posted by ntnon (Post 12896358)
Framing criticism as self-criticism doesn't absolve it from requiring accuracy or critiques. Numbers and statistics are notorious for their ability to prove any argument under different lights. You consider it a flop. I do not. Your opinion isn't necessarily more valid than mine.

If you read his posts though, it certainly reads as if he thinks it is.

Originally Posted by ntnon (Post 12896358)
Shall we dig through Horror threads and see how many comments are about eligibility? How many are criticising participants' choices, or noting competition deadlines? Can we weigh lengthy posts equal to single words; are tailored/quoted replies of more "community" value than the generic? Are discussions between two people over multiple pages better or worse than brief agreement from a dozen individuals? These are unquantifible, even philosophical debates.

And even if they were possible, useful or necessary, two cautions: it's all predicated on YOUR (albeit reasonable and tacitly agreed-upon) definition of the purpose of the challenges. Why not see them as communal space rather than conversation starters? Victorian Gentlemen's Clubs offer community and commonality while allowing/encouraging non-interaction; coffee houses fostered debate and intellectual stretching; pubs and clubs allow shared interests to lead to comversation or friendships. Is DVDTalk equivalent to an amalgam of these? Or "other"? Are the Challenges intended to foster a sense of community via discussion, or do they merely allow it as a side-effect to being a discrete collection of linked personal lists?

Do you feel part of a community? Do you feel less so in months you do not participate in challenges? More so when engaging in debate or agreement? etc


Which is still community discussion and interaction.


Auditing a thread (with an agenda, no less) is very anti-community building... it's literally (pun!) DECONSTRUCTION...


A) Who? Rejuvenating those here, or reaching out for new people? B) If upending causes disgruntlement and alienation in the engaged, wouldn't it be a wash even if there were additions..? All of which is guesswork and future-casting, but... treading lightly isn't a terrible idea. Or listening to dissenting voices.


How do you propose reaching them? Are any of them engaging in this discussion? Is there even a net gain amongst those here that another/new/different/revised challenge would increase engagement rather than get backs up..?

I'm just going to save myself time and say "This." You said all this much better than I could.

Trevor 09-11-16 08:22 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 
Holy moley, and I get busy at work for a few hours and the discussion explodes. Wow, too tired to multi-quote and reply to the nearly 100 things I thought as I read everything.

But one thing is certain, I freaking love you guys and girls, and love that people care about the community and this little favorite part of it for me. But while passions are inflamed a bit (it appears), as a birthday present to me can you all promise to at least virtually hug it out when this is over?

I'm leaning towards thinking we don't need to change anything, and certainly shouldn't tweak any Challenge to make it less inclusive. Let's just work to make what we have better and more inclusive. Sure, you can stress just war western and docs, or stress one of the three each rotating year, but if I want to watch sports and costume dramas in my personal HA list, then leave me alone. I'd rather be inclusive of the outliers amongst us even if the main group stress something "more pure" or whatever.

I should probably stop rambling, about 8 hours of sleep the last 72 hours. Did I already say I love you guys?

ntnon 09-11-16 08:23 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by LJG765 (Post 12896330)
Criterion (I like this one because I have found a few movies I love that I would never have found before, but definitely felt going into it that it was going to be a lot of pretentious films. That is true, I've definitely found a lot more films I've disliked than liked. However, the ones I have loved, more than make up for it.)

Well put.

ntnon 09-11-16 08:25 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Trevor (Post 12896390)
Holy moley, and I get busy at work for a few hours and the discussion explodes...

Sorry, Trevor. I finally got a few hours off, and-


Originally Posted by Trevor (Post 12896390)
I should probably stop rambling, about 8 hours of sleep the last 72 hours. Did I already say I love you guys?

-that. Although I've had nearly 10 hours sleep. :)

ntnon 09-11-16 08:35 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Dimension X (Post 12896368)
Here's where I know we're two different types of people...
Part of the reason behind that post was to point out how ridiculous it was just to compare numbers.

I got that, and appreciated it as an amusing - and heartfelt - rejoinder.

If I had had the time, I'd have probably done something similar (I like statistics), so I also appreciate you saving me the hassle..!

ntnon 09-11-16 08:43 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12896374)
Regarding which theoretical group to try to court, I'd say presently active members... As for how to try to engage them, I suppose I'd start with a thread to ask why they have so far abstained from challenges. Feedback there could indicate some areas we've overlooked, or it could close the door and make clear that it's a lost cause entirely.

Agreed on the first part (for ease as much as anything), and ambivalent on the second. I do think it might be worth raising as a question during October, to try and gauge opinions from challenge-amenable souls.

Though I imagine the two prevailing answers would be (in this order) "I (only) like Horror (enough to participate in a structured challenge)" and "once a year is enough (for reasons of time/ability/other)". Plus, prizes.


Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12896374)
I do think that it's time we again revisited asking to have a Challenges sub-forum created, though. These threads all being in DVD Talk make them far less visible to those who frequent instead, say, HD Talk or Movie Talk. Being more conspicuous on the home page couldn't hurt, right?

Maybe so. Certainly I miss a lot by only visiting certain areas - perversely (from a community standpoint) because my time is limited, I focus almost exclusively on challenge threads (and then not as much as many), meaning I miss dozens of other potentially interesting things... including some deals I'm very unhappy to have missed.

ntnon 09-11-16 08:54 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 
I want to ramble off-topic. Ignore me if you like. :)
Spoiler:


Originally Posted by Trevor (Post 12896390)
Let's just work to make what we have better and more inclusive. Sure, you can stress just war western and docs, or stress one of the three each rotating year, but if I want to watch sports and costume dramas in my personal HA list, then leave me alone. I'd rather be inclusive of the outliers amongst us even if the main group stress something "more pure" or whatever.

I have a degree in History. While most of my peers narrowed their focus each term/year, I deliberately expanded the scope. Which was not necessarily wise, but...

So many folk got a "History" degree in narrow(ish) fields (Spain in the early 20th Century; Germany between the wars; Tsarist Russia; Suffragism), while I took courses on the Vikings, the history of medicine from the Greeks to the 17th Century, Latin, British Landscape from 3000BC to the present, etc.

I don't know a lot about a small area/time. My degree is no more accurate or inaccurate than anyone else's. But I do tend to feel personally that I studied HISTORY rather than merely a small slice of it. To that end, I have much sympathy with both 'pure' challenges (i.e. accuracy in terminology) and disparate inclusivity. I support an all-war History Challenge, an all-slasher Horror and an all-foreign Criterion. But I would much, much rather be diverse myself - and (with only a tiny hint of judgement) hope others are, too.

There are monster and vampire episodes of Super Friends, you know. :) That makes them Horror-eligible......

Dimension X 09-11-16 09:07 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by ntnon (Post 12896408)
I got that, and appreciated it as an amusing - and heartfelt - rejoinder.

If I had had the time, I'd have probably done something similar (I like statistics), so I also appreciate you saving me the hassle..!

Thank you.

Originally Posted by ntnon (Post 12896419)
Though I imagine the two prevailing answers would be (in this order) "I (only) like Horror (enough to participate in a structured challenge)" and "once a year is enough (for reasons of time/ability/other)". Plus, prizes.

I believe this has been asked in the past, and those were the prevalent answers.

LJG765 09-11-16 09:16 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by ntnon (Post 12896419)
Plus, prizes.

Thanks to GoldenWheels, pretty much any challenge has prizes that wants them. In July, he was more than generous and even through in a BUNCH more than usual...nice items too.

pacaway 09-11-16 09:36 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12896297)
Yeah, it's important for any challenge to not be so niche it's of no interest, but this was an instance of one that was never really interesting because it was too inclusive. Out of all the years I was part of Historical Appreciation, I can only remember two substantial conversations. One was about Marshal Petain and the other was whether X-Men: First Class should count. We had a whole lot more debate like the latter than we ever had chatter like the former.

There we go! Your conclusion should be simple, get rid of the Historical Appreciation Challenge, which you clearly admit does not generate the "community spirit" you're looking for, and make June "Drama" month! Well deduced!

Discussion over. ;)

pacaway 09-11-16 09:43 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 
For those of you that have little interest in the currently running Criterion Challenge because you'd end up watching the same 50 movies every year, I think you're missing the point of that challenge. Travis has clearly stated that it is not about watching as many films as you can, but rather about digging deep and analysing a few films. That is what makes Criterion so great! They give you a lot of meat to dig into. Rather than fly through all your Criterion worthy films in the month, the point is to gorge on the special features of just some of them, the rest will still be around for next year.
I tend to pick up a few new ones over the year, and typically I never get around to watching them until September comes along and I can catch up on them. The last few years I've only watched a dozen or so in the month. I still have many of them on my shelf I haven't watched yet. I don't see the Criterion well running dry for me for many years. And yes, I'm even going to watch Armageddon one of these years! :)

orlmac 09-11-16 09:54 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by pacaway (Post 12896463)
For those of you that have little interest in the currently running Criterion Challenge because you'd end up watching the same 50 movies every year, I think you're missing the point of that challenge. Travis has clearly stated that it is not about watching as many films as you can, but rather about digging deep and analysing a few films. That is what makes Criterion so great! They give you a lot of meat to dig into. Rather than fly through all your Criterion worthy films in the month, the point is to gorge on the special features of just some of them, the rest will still be around for next year.

That is entirely correct. I usually only shoot for a few movies that have a lot of supplements, especially a commentary or two. It is my cooling off period before tackling the Horror Challenge. I guess I am fortunate because I have a ton to choose from at our public library system.

ntnon 09-11-16 10:02 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by LJG765 (Post 12896443)
Thanks to GoldenWheels, pretty much any challenge has prizes that wants them. In July, he was more than generous and even through in a BUNCH more than usual...nice items too.

Oh, I know. :) Goldenwheels is on a par with Chad for Epic Challenge Heroism.

The Horror prizepacks are a step beyond, though... (plus, I wonder how widespread knowledge of non-horror prizes is.. and selfishly, hope it's low. ;))

ntnon 09-11-16 10:05 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by pacaway (Post 12896458)
There we go! Your conclusion should be simple, get rid of the Historical Appreciation Challenge, which you clearly admit does not generate the "community spirit" you're looking for, and make June "Drama" month! Well deduced!

Discussion over. ;)

Booo...

I vote using the lit-crit argument "death of the author" as a reason to dismiss such anti-historical negativity from the challenge's former host...

ntnon 09-11-16 10:07 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by orlmac (Post 12896470)
That is entirely correct. I usually only shoot for a few movies that have a lot of supplements, especially a commentary or two. It is my cooling off period before tackling the Horror Challenge. I guess I am fortunate because I have a ton to choose from at our public library system.

And I'm being contrary (because I'm busy and all over the place) and using Hulu and TCM to watch things sans-disc, thereby missing most of the bonus bits. Dang it.

orlmac 09-11-16 10:17 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Trevor (Post 12896390)
I'm leaning towards thinking we don't need to change anything, and certainly shouldn't tweak any Challenge to make it less inclusive. Let's just work to make what we have better and more inclusive. Sure, you can stress just war western and docs, or stress one of the three each rotating year, but if I want to watch sports and costume dramas in my personal HA list, then leave me alone. I'd rather be inclusive of the outliers amongst us even if the main group stress something "more pure" or whatever.

I didn't quote all of the parts where you love us but I'm sure that we all love you (and happy birthday whenever it is)! I think everybody wants the same thing here so this would be the most beneficial solution. I would like to suggest an addition to some of the challenges (I think that some people are already doing this). If the hosts or participants could start collecting sources of streaming choices for the challenges it may increase participation. I know that this is dvdtalk and most people here have a ton of dvds to choose from (and that is our focus) but introducing streaming channels and tv channels to the mix does not destroy the concept, it just enlarges it and creates more opportunities for interaction. Collecting information like this at the beginning of the thread is one way to start enhancing things. Also, as LJG765 (and maybe others) are doing it is good to have some parts of the checklist to point to some suggested lists that are somewhat finite (top 50 or top 100). The list's movies do change with time, but like someone mentioned earlier in regards to the Academy Awards Challenge, having a finite (even if it is quite large) number of movies to choose from can encourage more participation. I'm sure that there are many other ideas that the hosts can come up with and ask the participants to help with so that they aren't too (more) overworked.

TheBigDave 09-12-16 03:41 AM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by LJG765 (Post 12896330)
Holiday (I love holiday sappy movies. I don't even watch that many TV shows for the challenge, but stick with movies. With Hallmark making a ton of them every year, I DVR them and binge throughout the challenge on them. The ones I don't watch, I keep on the DVR till next year and finish them up then. I'll even go through the stores during Nov and Dec and just blind buy as even when they are awful, they're so awful they're good. Totally a guilty pleasure for me.)

I totally agree. I love those schmaltzy Hallmark Christmas movies. Sometimes I'll turn on the Hallmark Channel and just let the marathon play all day long. I've still got 5-6 movies on my DVR from last year.

And that's my reason for wanting to do a mini Romance Challenge in February. Hallmark does a marathon with new movies the first two weeks of Feb. All the cable channels play cheesy Romance movies. And the streaming services add extra movies. There's tons of stuff to watch.

Dimension X 09-12-16 11:14 AM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by orlmac (Post 12896490)
I didn't quote all of the parts where you love us but I'm sure that we all love you (and happy birthday whenever it is)! I think everybody wants the same thing here so this would be the most beneficial solution. I would like to suggest an addition to some of the challenges (I think that some people are already doing this). If the hosts or participants could start collecting sources of streaming choices for the challenges it may increase participation. I know that this is dvdtalk and most people here have a ton of dvds to choose from (and that is our focus) but introducing streaming channels and tv channels to the mix does not destroy the concept, it just enlarges it and creates more opportunities for interaction. Collecting information like this at the beginning of the thread is one way to start enhancing things. Also, as LJG765 (and maybe others) are doing it is good to have some parts of the checklist to point to some suggested lists that are somewhat finite (top 50 or top 100). The list's movies do change with time, but like someone mentioned earlier in regards to the Academy Awards Challenge, having a finite (even if it is quite large) number of movies to choose from can encourage more participation. I'm sure that there are many other ideas that the hosts can come up with and ask the participants to help with so that they aren't too (more) overworked.

After watching how Chad gets people involved early for the OHMC, last year I asked people to help me pick out some of the prizes for Comedy Challenge. I thought it was a good way to get people involved before the actual start of the challenge. Several people got involved in picking and/or voting on the final choices.

orlmac 09-12-16 01:34 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Dimension X (Post 12896799)
After watching how Chad gets people involved early for the OHMC, last year I asked people to help me pick out some of the prizes for Comedy Challenge. I thought it was a good way to get people involved before the actual start of the challenge. Several people got involved in picking and/or voting on the final choices.

Getting people involved in picking and/or voting for the prizes sounds like an excellent, creative way to get people involved. I bet even more people will get involved this year as these ideas seem to grow more popular over time. It may get more people thinking about the challenge earlier who missed out on being involved in that process last year.

ntnon 09-12-16 09:11 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by TheBigDave (Post 12896586)
And that's my reason for wanting to do a mini Romance Challenge in February. Hallmark does a marathon with new movies the first two weeks of Feb. All the cable channels play cheesy Romance movies. And the streaming services add extra movies. There's tons of stuff to watch.

What about mooting something like this: "120 Hours of Musicals" (Feb 1-6), then "8 Days of Valentines" from Feb 7-14 and "Ten Days of Drama" (15th-24th)? A week of Romance and slightly more/less of Drama & musicals, within - and without - the Oscars Challenge. There'll be enough nominated (and winning) films for people to completely cross over, but a separate mini-challenge for non-nominees.

And still the option (as always) for collaborative multi-person May MYOCs.

ntnon 09-12-16 09:13 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by orlmac (Post 12896909)
Getting people involved in picking and/or voting for the prizes sounds like an excellent, creative way to get people involved. I bet even more people will get involved this year as these ideas seem to grow more popular over time. It may get more people thinking about the challenge earlier who missed out on being involved in that process last year.

Agreed. I thought it an excellent idea in November; kudos to Dimension X and Goldenwheels.

Dimension X 09-12-16 09:26 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by orlmac (Post 12896909)
Getting people involved in picking and/or voting for the prizes sounds like an excellent, creative way to get people involved. I bet even more people will get involved this year as these ideas seem to grow more popular over time. It may get more people thinking about the challenge earlier who missed out on being involved in that process last year.


Originally Posted by ntnon (Post 12897357)
Agreed. I thought it an excellent idea in November; kudos to Dimension X and Goldenwheels.

Thanks. I won't have the time to host it this year. Maybe Trevor will mention it to the new host he picked.

Originally Posted by ntnon (Post 12897355)
And still the option (as always) for collaborative multi-person May MYOCs.

I'll try and remember to mention this idea in the initial post next May, and maybe start the discussion thread a little earlier so people can have more time to plan (assuming there's interest in it).

orlmac 09-13-16 03:52 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 
I have to say, I am pretty disappointed that the idea of working together to make the challenges better has been overshadowed by an attempt to add another challenge. It will have no impact on me personally but it definitely doesn't feel like an attempt to encourage improvements in our challenges, which I had high hopes for earlier. I know that I only have 400 posts here so I am definitely a newbie here in comparison to others but I have been active here since 2009, I just don't say a lot. I appreciate the last couple of posters that have encouraged new things being done and hope that their trend will continue.

Trevor 09-13-16 04:22 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by orlmac (Post 12898131)
I have to say, I am pretty disappointed that the idea of working together to make the challenges better has been overshadowed by an attempt to add another challenge. It will have no impact on me personally but it definitely doesn't feel like an attempt to encourage improvements in our challenges, which I had high hopes for earlier. I know that I only have 400 posts here so I am definitely a newbie here in comparison to others but I have been active here since 2009, I just don't say a lot. I appreciate the last couple of posters that have encouraged new things being done and hope that their trend will continue.

I think you're reading too much negativity into the posts. No one is that insistent on adding a new Challenge, and all of us are focusing on trying to improve what we have already. Given the current vote results, the fact that the initial proponent voted no, the fact that at least one person voted yes just to continue the discussion, and that I've changed my vote to no; I think it's pretty much a done deal that we overall don't want a new challenge.

People are passionate about various aspects of the Challenges, some conversations got misconstrued as attacks, and unfortunate responses were made. But overall I think this has all been quite civil for an Internet exchange.

In a discussion involving possible big changes, it's important to be honest and get everything out there. Once we get everyone's thoughts and preferences out, we'll be better equipped to make some positive changes.

I'm glad you spoke up. You're a core Challenge regular and I hope all the rest of us speak up too.

LJG765 09-13-16 04:28 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Dimension X (Post 12896799)
After watching how Chad gets people involved early for the OHMC, last year I asked people to help me pick out some of the prizes for Comedy Challenge. I thought it was a good way to get people involved before the actual start of the challenge. Several people got involved in picking and/or voting on the final choices.

I am definitely going to try this for at least one of the challenges I host next year. I was thinking about it for Animation, but just decided to skip it as I was already running too close into the start of the challenge. Hopefully I'll be a little less hectic next year and plan ahead!

orlmac 09-13-16 04:48 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Trevor (Post 12898170)
I think you're reading too much negativity into the posts. No one is that insistent on adding a new Challenge, and all of us are focusing on trying to improve what we have already. Given the current vote results, the fact that the initial proponent voted no, the fact that at least one person voted yes just to continue the discussion, and that I've changed my vote to no; I think it's pretty much a done deal that we overall don't want a new challenge.

People are passionate about various aspects of the Challenges, some conversations got misconstrued as attacks, and unfortunate responses were made. But overall I think this has all been quite civil for an Internet exchange.

In a discussion involving possible big changes, it's important to be honest and get everything out there. Once we get everyone's thoughts and preferences out, we'll be better equipped to make some positive changes.

I'm glad you spoke up. You're a core Challenge regular and I hope all the rest of us speak up too.

Thanks for the comments and the work that you have been doing here. I think you were right when you said that we had to take things slow. As we work on improving things that might mean adding a challenge. A lot can change in a month, a number of people who voted no might see things differently as we explore different ideas here.

ntnon 09-13-16 05:22 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by orlmac (Post 12898190)
...as we explore different ideas here.

I had a very different (probably radical, likely terrible) idea - would there be any support for a merger between "Drive-In" and "Action/Adventure"...? The scope of each seems to overlap quite a bit (moreso using the fuzzy logic of "genre exploitation" to consider most big budget action that isn't automatically B-movie and cheaper grindhouse affair to still fall under the same umbrella), so I'll throw it out to the few and see what other thoughts there are.

ntnon 09-13-16 05:24 PM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by LJG765 (Post 12898178)
Hopefully I'll be a little less hectic next year and plan ahead!

Planning? I wish I had time for planning..!

Darkgod 09-14-16 08:19 AM

Re: "Official" DVDTalk Challenges Compendium
 

Originally Posted by Travis McClain (Post 12895557)
I came because of Speedy's ad posts and got into the forum proper because of the Horror Challenge!


Speedy's ad posts... now thats a throwback


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:21 AM.


Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.