Jonson Finally finished Steve Johnson’s ‘Everything bad is good for you’ (thanks to a habit of reading about 3 books at a time it takes a while). I’ll get to his arguments in a sec, but first of all he writes like a dream. Instead of the didactic "I know more than you" style of so many books like this, he persaudes, he invites you to argue, he pulls you in. In short, it’s an entertaining read. That’s  good since the more people who are persuaded to read this the better.

You’re probably familiar with the book’s main premise by now – far from dumbing down, pop culture is making us smarter.The first, and meatiest  bit of this is the argument that the multi faceted complexity of modern TV, video games and even the internet demands quite different skillsets to what has gone before. Instead of the linear style of Pacman or Starsky and Hutch, video games like Grand Theft Auto teach us to make difficult decisions in complex environemts while Lost asks us to make sense of dense, interwoven plots, instead of spoonfeeding us.

It’s difficult to argue with this, first bit. Pop culture is more complex and more demanding than ever before, and it’s teaching people to embrace complexity. The implications for anyone in advertising are worth dwelling on for a second. If people are embracing non – linear complex entertainment, shouldn’t the communications we produce have a similar structure? If we insists on giving them simple, straight stories, won’t they reject them every bit as much as ‘I Love Lucy’? This is the main bit of learning I took from this book, since I’m not as convinced by the following argument that it makes us smarter, espescially as he openly contradicts this himself.

He argues that IQ’s have gone up, but admits that the causality is difficult to prove. Common sense suggest that it will help develop certain decisons making skills and probing and learning, but is that all that it takes to be smart?

He agrees that the beauty of books for example is the way they demand people to add their own imagination to make it real, which not only helps us to think in the abstract, but also enables us to follow long, complex narratives and arguments at a much deeper level. Books show us how real life unfolds. This enables us to question, and think for ourselves. Can pop culture ever replace this? Johnson admits not, and argues for balanced diet of traditional and modern entertainment.

So for me, this book is an argument for not dismissing modern culture out of hand, since it’s more rewarding than we previously thought. But it cannot make us smarter on it’s own, in other words, it’s an argument for moderation.

But my problem is this. Has this really made our culture any better? True, pop culture is better than we thought, but has it made people smarter about anything other than pop culture?  Continous Partial Attention shows how short attention spans are, how unwilling people are to grapple with longform information. To live with a longer, deeper argument for a while.

For sure, use of the internet means people are accessing more news and views than ever before, but do they examine in depth? I doubt they have the patience. For me culture will be going in the right direction when people are more willing to look at things in more depth, to question more and make up their own minds, to probe why things are instead of a dizzying array of things that just ‘are’.

How many people really understand what’s going on in Lebanon and the long history behind it? How many people have considered that the wars of the last century were about the re-organisation of empires, and this is ominously similar to what’s happening now with the rise of China? Has it become too easy for people to embrace the soundbites of David Cameron instead of examining the lack of real policy? At the moment, popular culture is teaching us to think about a lot of things at the same time, but not in any depth of real value.

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8 responses to “Book review”

  1. Carol Avatar

    Everything I know about modern culture got covered in some way over 7 seasons of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
    Evil exists. No amount of reasoning works. Angel without a soul is still the best written TV villian ever.

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  2. Andrew Avatar

    Ace, but I bet ‘evil Dale Cooper’ would have been even better if Twin Peaks ever had a third series.

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  3. Rob Mortimer Avatar

    In the words of satan in the south park film (in song):
    “Without evil there can be no good, so it must be good to be evil sometimes”

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  4. Terry Avatar

    Well I just finished this Mr. Johnson’s book, and
    was not at all impressed.
    In his book, he argues that both video games
    and TV are making us smarter. For the video game
    part of the argument he cites a number of scientific
    studies in support of his contention. But guess
    how many he cites for TV. None. I’m sure he’s looked,
    presumably this means he couldn’t find any.
    The only evidence he does cite is the Flynn Effect.
    Unfortunately he fails to mention that the Flynn
    Effect has been in effect (at least in the U.S.)
    since 1918. Television weren’t even invented until
    the 1940’s, and weren’t common until the 1950’s.
    Johnson conflates video games, of which there is
    evidence of them making people smarter with TV,
    of which there is none.
    Even if TV is getting more complex (which is entirely
    plausible considering the amount of time and money
    invested in TV) that doesn’t necessarily translate
    into more smarts. After all, even infants and certain
    types of monkeys happily watch TV.

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  5. Andrew Avatar

    I think you’ve got a point – but I think a lot of this depends on what you call smart. My point of view is that most of the trash TV out there doesn’t make you more intelligent but it does help you develop certain thinking skills.

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  6. Terry Avatar

    Fair enough.
    I think one reason Mr. Johnson’s theory makes sense
    for so many people is that when watching TV people feel
    engaged and interested (or at least they change the
    channel until they find something they find interesting).
    Similarly, while dreaming people feel engaged and
    interested even though their brainwaves are quite
    a bit slower (delta brainwaves) than during normal
    waking hours (beta brainwaves).
    While TV watching, ones brainwaves are slower
    (alpha brainwaves) than normal waking hours,
    but faster than actual dreaming. The difference is
    that with dreaming (and probably daydreaming too) is
    that dreaming serves the purpose of integrating
    memories from the normal waking hours. TV on the other
    hand does not serve this purpose as the images are
    someone else’s creation.
    Alpha brainwaves are not conductive to remembering.
    this is a problem for TV advertisers. On the one
    hand they have to keep the pacing fast enough to
    keep people mesmerized and thus watching, but
    with enough “cognitive engagement” so that at least
    people will remember the name of the product.
    http://www.leaonline.com/doi/abs/10.1207/s1532785xmep0603_3

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  7. Andrew Avatar

    I love being around people cleverer than me – then you get good stuff like the above.
    Thanks Terry, something meaty to chew over.

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  8. Terry Avatar
    Terry

    I just wanted to point out that Mr. Johnson
    is only describing one side of the story.
    So, thank you for letting me comment,
    and being so nice about my disagreeing with you.

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