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I Like to Watch
I Like to Watch: Arguing My Way Through the TV Revolution | Emily Nussbaum
From The New Yorkers fiercely original, Pulitzer Prize-winning culture critic, a provocative collection of new and previously published essays arguing that we are what we watch. From her creation of the first Approval Matrix in New York magazine in 2004 to her Pulitzer Prizewinning columns for The New Yorker, Emily Nussbaum has known all along that what we watch is who we are. In this collection, including two never-before-published essays, Nussbaum writes about her passion for television that began with stumbling upon Buffy the Vampire Slayera show that was so much more than it appearedwhile she was a graduate student studying Victorian literature. What followed was a love affair with television, an education, and a fierce debate about whose work gets to be called great that led Nussbaum to a trailblazing career as a critic whose reviews said so much more about our culture than just whats good on television. Through these pieces, she traces the evolution of female protagonists over the last decade, the complex role of sexual violence on TV, and what to do about art when the artist is revealed to be a monster. And, she explores the links between the television antihero and the rise of Donald Trump. The book is more than a collection of essayswith each piece, Nussbaum recounts her fervent search, over fifteen years, for a new kind of criticism that resists the false hierarchy that elevates one form of culture over another. It traces her own struggle to punch through stifling notions of prestige television, searching for a wilder and freer and more varied idea of artistic ambitionone that acknowledges many types of beauty and complexity, and that opens to more varied voices. Its a book that celebrates television as television, even as each year warps the definition of just what that might mean.
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quote
monalyisha
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“Even more than most television of that era, the show sounded like a throwaway. It had that silly title [Buffy the Vampire Slayer]. It was based on a campy movie, starred a soap opera actress…And if you tried to describe the plot, it screamed “guilty pleasure”…It looked like a good way to kill time before getting back to analyzing themes of the public woman in George Eliot‘s Daniel Deronda…I‘d never finish my doctorate.”

👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻

monalyisha And I thought quitting 10 years of dance classes to watch Buffy on Tuesday nights was a big deal! 😂 (edited) 11mo
Bookbuyingaddict Omg 😱 I adored buffy in the 90s 😍😍 11mo
ChaoticMissAdventures I read an article about how Buffy saved a family! The dad stayed back during a tornado to watch it while the family and their neighbors went to the root cellar, a tree fell on the cellar door and locked them in and the dad was able to cut up and move the tree! 11mo
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thewallflower0707 I love Buffy, I own all the DVDs 📀 11mo
TheLudicReader I think I have watched Buffy more times than any other show. It never gets old. 11mo
AnneCecilie Love Buffy. I own all the DVDs and a lot of books. Both books set within the universe but also nonfiction focusing on the episodes and analysing those. Buffy got me reading books in English. 11mo
59 likes6 comments
blurb
monalyisha
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I‘ve owned this book, “I Like to Watch: Arguing My Way Through the TV Revolution”, forever. Once I learned that it contained spoilers for shows I haven‘t gotten around to watching, I decided not to read it “yet.” I may never read it.

This morning, though, I remembered that it kicks-off with an essay about Buffy the Vampire Slayer. And that? That I can read. A dozen times over. 🧛🏻‍♀️🧄⚰️

CallMeIshmael Buffy is the best 11mo
monalyisha @CallMeIshmael Agreed! I don‘t think I could ever overemphasize how formative it was for me. 11mo
CallMeIshmael @monalyisha same, episodes of that show spoke to my soul 11mo
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JamieArc I‘ve had this on my audiobook shelf forever! Perhaps time to get to it. 11mo
monalyisha @JamieArc It only floated to the top of my consciousness lately because my mother-in-law came over and noticed it on my shelves. She was like, “I like to watch”? Alyisha! You have to be careful about what you leave out!” 😂 She was being intentionally cheeky. Lovely, ridiculous woman. 11mo
JamieArc @monalyisha She sounds great 😂 11mo
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review
britt_brooke
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Pickpick

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Nussbaum, a Pulitzer Prize winning critic, takes us through the shift in entertainment media over the last 25 years. I haven‘t watched much tv in recent years, but I was spastically dedicated to some of the ones mentioned: Sopranos, SATC, Nip/Tuck. My favorite essays discussed the white male antihero phenomenon, cultural biases, product integration, and the satirical nature of mockumentary-style shows. Oh, and Ryan Murphy!

Megabooks Great review! It was 4🌟 for me too. 3y
britt_brooke @Megabooks Thanks! It was interesting and super smart. 3y
Cinfhen I NEED to pick this up as I was a TV junkie back in the day too!!! 3y
britt_brooke @Cinfhen It‘s super interesting. I think you‘ll like it! 3y
90 likes4 stack adds4 comments
blurb
britt_brooke
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🎧🧩🥃 Enjoying the last moments of the holiday weekend. Happy Labor Day, US Littens! 🇺🇸

#audiopuzzling #galisonpuzzles #booksandbooze

she.hearts.horror I love Emily‘s words and perspective she brings to tv 3y
britt_brooke @she.epeolatry Yes; she‘s very insightful. This was an interesting read! 3y
84 likes2 comments
review
Megabooks
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Pickpick

I passed on this book several times but I‘m glad I got around to it. While I‘m not a big watcher of current scripted television, Emily makes wish I were. She writes beautifully about past favs like SATC and 30 Rock. She mixes reviews with longer pieces profiling people like Ryan Murphy (AHS, Glee, etc.) and Kenya Barris (Blackish). My favorite piece was written just for this book about whether we throw the art out when the artist fails e.g. Cosby.

Megabooks #pop21 #advanced reminds me of running the arts and entertainment magazine in college @BarbaraBB @Cinfhen @Kalalalatja @KarenUK @4thhouseontheleft #audiobook 3y
Megabooks Still listening to audiobooks with basketball on...in case anyone was wondering! #MarchMadness! 3y
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blurb
Augustdana
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Just in!! Didn‘t quite finish my last book so I went back on the waitlist. Seven day limit is still difficult for me. 🤷🏻‍♀️

BronwynMahon I just got this the other day and can‘t wait to dive in! She is one of my fave TV writers!! 4y
Augustdana @BronwynMahon she‘s so engaging! I haven‘t watched some of these shows, and it doesn‘t even matter. 4y
BronwynMahon @Augustdana That‘s exactly how I feel! 4y
9 likes3 comments
review
Lindy
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Pickpick

Emily Nussbaum is clearly the bomb because she kept me riveted while listening to this #audiobook about tv shows I have never watched. As she dissected some of them I found myself thinking “I would like to read that show as a novel.” Her insights on popular culture are thought-provoking & well-argued. My favourite piece is a long one in light of #MeToo on the question of whether art can or should be separated from a bad creator.

TrishB I‘m stacking and hoping for a bargain to appear! 4y
Come-read-with-me Sounds amazing! Definitely going on my TBR list! 4y
Lindy @TrishB @Come-read-with-me 👍👍 4y
56 likes3 stack adds3 comments
blurb
Lindy
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Of the tv shows Nussbaum writes about in this collection, many I had never even heard of. Out of the three that I‘ve seen at least one episode, All in the Family was the only one I was fully familiar with. Nausbaum describes All in the Family‘s audience as split between those who enjoyed it as satire & (the larger part) those who felt Archie Bunker validated their own prejudices. Her analysis helped me see why I felt queasy watching it.

Suet624 I definitely saw it as satire. 4y
Lindy @Suet624 👯 4y
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review
AlizaApp
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Pickpick

I loved this book of essays, profiles, and criticism. Some of the reviews I had read already in the New Yorker, but the centerpiece essay reckoning with #MeToo and loving art by problematic men really resonated. Also I trust Emily completely because I know how much she loves Buffy, so I really just found myself agreeing with her a lot and also adding more things to my watch list.

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review
Hooked_on_books
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Pickpick

I don‘t watch tv anymore, but used to watch a lot of it, including Buffy, Nussbaum‘s inspiration for becoming a tv critic. Here she‘s collected some of her pieces from over the years. I enjoyed the listen and appreciate her thoughtful approach to these shows, which becomes societal commentary.

cathipink I really liked this one, too. I especially enjoyed the showrunner profiles - so interesting to get that glimpse into their minds. 4y
51 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
Hooked_on_books
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I originally was not planning to read this book because I stopped watching tv a few years ago, but then I heard the author on a podcast. She was funny and I wanted to hear more from her. Most importantly, she talked about how her tv reviewing career started because of one of the best shows of all time, Buffy. I‘ve had some heavy reads recently, so I‘ve started this one to lighten things and am enjoying it so far.

vivastory This sounds intriguing. My "TV" consumption is via streaming services & is actually extremely limited, frequently weeks or months pass without watching anything beyond clips of Colbert & Trevor Noah on YouTube. There are shows I'd like to watch, but the TBR is always calling to me. 4y
Hooked_on_books @vivastory TV has definitely changed a lot over the years, particularly lately regarding the platforms in which it‘s available. I used to watch a lot of tv, but my husband and I don‘t like the same stuff and we both think it‘s a waste of time to watch something just for someone else, so I read instead. I know there‘s great tv out there, but I don‘t miss it. 4y
ravenlee My husband and I got fed up with commercials and “reality tv” and the price we were paying for it all about five years ago. Since then we watch our favorites on DVD and make use of the library. We‘ve considered a streaming service but honestly we‘re pretty non-technological and can‘t be bothered to figure them out. 😆 4y
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RaimeyGallant Fun fact. In my early twenties, people used to yell Sarah! around me to see if I'd turn around. I mean, maybe I looked a little like her, but not that much 4y
Hooked_on_books @RaimeyGallant That‘s funny! Sounds like you have a great go-to Halloween costume! 4y
RaimeyGallant I never thought of it that way. How many Halloweens have I wasted lol?!?! 4y
Cinfhen I‘ve heard this is really fun! I‘m thinking audio might be a good way to go 4y
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review
sophierayton
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Pickpick

Smart analysis of some of my favourite shows and some I am now going to check out.

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cariashley
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Pickpick

I always say I don‘t watch much TV, but am realizing that‘s not really true. I was surprised to find I‘d watched more than half of the shows Nussbaum writes about in this collection. I‘ve been following her on twitter for a while but somehow never read her articles and this was truly enjoyable listening - her critical writing is just so expansive and on point. It made me excited about all that‘s out there to watch.

mdemanatee I listened to this one and realized I still don‘t know a lot of popular shows but man do I love cultural criticism about pop culture 5y
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review
BibliovoreSarah
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Pickpick

Gotta love a book that starts out with a Buffy reference. Like the show, “I Like to Watch” by Emily Nussbaum is deeper than it first appears.

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SW-T
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Mehso-so

Interesting enough, but while it was well done, I‘ll admit to a) not watching a lot of the shows she talks about, b) not caring about a lot of the shows she talked about, and c) not changing my mind about the shows or people she discusses after reading the book. That said, for people who are bigger tv fans than me, this would be a good pick. Thoughtful, passionate, and well written, it just wasn‘t for me.

IamIamIam Thank you so much for literally handing me a gift idea for my sister in law!!! 😁 5y
SW-T @IamIamIam Welcome 😂😂 5y
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review
kbuggle
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Pickpick

It‘s been a busy August and this is the first book I‘ve finished all month 😩
Thankfully, it was a good one!

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Mitch
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I love books - I grew up reading, always! Mr K grew up on TV and is equally passionate about it!

I‘m slowly finding more enjoyment on the small screen and look forward to ‘arguing‘ with Emily 🤣

#bookmail

78 likes6 stack adds
review
Christine
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Pickpick

I love TV, and because I like loving TV, I‘m sometimes tired of TV criticism. But I don‘t tire of Emily Nussbaum. I mostly know her from her smart and entertaining tweets, so these pieces were new to me, and I enjoyed every one. Her critiques are well-grounded in cultural context and never feel nitpicky. And her love of TV, and her firm belief that it should be respected as an artistic medium, always shine through.

cathipink I listened to her on Fresh Air and I'm intrigued. Glad you enjoyed it 🙂 5y
Christine @cathipink I enjoyed that Fresh Air interview, too! 5y
54 likes1 stack add2 comments
review
ontheBL
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Pickpick

I Like to Watch by Emily Nussbaum from is the best book I've read this summer. As the work-from-home, freelancer, hermit, stay-at-home dog mom, I mean, writer I am, I watch a lot more TV than I own up to. I have a lot of opinions, and I'm yet to find one of Nussbaum's I disagree with. Here's my review; you should read it, then read the book.

https://onthebl.org/2019/08/01/i-like-to-watch

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tholmz
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Pickpick

I really admire Emily Nussbaum and thought this was a great collection of her thoughts on specific television shows (some that I love, some I‘ll never watch, some I will start immediately) and the medium as a whole.

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bookandcat
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Pickpick

Emily Nussbaum's upcoming collected essays about tv shows are fascinating, smart, and entertaining. I've been binging The Sopranos again after reading her great commentary about the finale and show overall. She is the tv critic for the New Yorker so this book contains cultural criticism, profiles of tv makers, commentary and more. The book will be released in June!
4.5 🌟 from me.
#arc #netgalley #essays #nonfiction #television #tv #newyorker

40 likes2 stack adds
review
andytbarnes
Pickpick

I Like to Watch is a culmination of 20+ years of revelatory television writing from Emily Nussbaum. The essays elevate the shows I‘ve watched and love to greater heights. It makes me feel like an idiot for having missed others. Even when panning shows a love, I came away with a richer view of the show. Beautiful ruminations on why we watch and why television is enriching art and not the brain draining waste some dullards try and make it out to be.