In Defense of Television

In Defense of Television

In Defense of Television

The line of reasoning is simple. Work hard at your job. Side hustle. Create. And financial independence will come. For all those naysayers who whine that there is not enough time in the day, the response is always the same. Of course there is time! The litany of time wasting activities is then spat out at the naysayer like a submachine gun. Chief among those is screens. How much time do we spend checking our devices, watching Facebook Live, or zoned out to Netflix? Possibly a lifetime? Whether true or not, I’m here to take an unpopular stand. I vote in defense of television (or however you consume tv shows).

No matter how busy life gets, there is always time to fit in the boob tube.

State of the Union

I watch television everyday. For hours. Usually somewhere between 7-10pm every night. My wife and I gather in the family room. The kids peak in and out. Sitting for thirty minutes here and there between homework and violin practice. If you were to peel back the cover of our house and look in during those hours most days, that’s where you would find us.

Usually we are smiling or laughing. Sometimes we are outraged or incredulous. Often we are enraptured in some story or another. Appalled by a documentary exposing the latest tragedy or mouth watering at the culinary gymnastics of a top chef.

We get all this for pennies (ok maybe dollars) a day. In the comfort of our own home. With the ability to turn off, turn on, or pause at our whim.

In defense of television, this is priceless

In Addition to, Not In Exchange For

In Defense of Television

You might notice that we save our TV watching time for the end of the day. There is a reason. Because we don’t substitute screen time for other activities. We turn to it at the end of the day when we are exhausted from accomplishing all the important things already.

One can only spend so many hours a day being industrious. The brain has natural ebbs and flows. For my family, we prefer to front load our day. The really brainy activities we tend to do early when we are still fresh.

There is only so much smart stuff one family can do. Sometimes we need mindless drivel.

In defense of television, we need downtime more often than you would think. Usually for a few hours a day. A time to wind down before going to bed.

Benefits?

Yes, screens can rot your brain. But they can also have some positive effects when not used compulsively. The most obvious, of course, is that they entertain. Much cheaper than the movies. Less expensive than a meal out. The perfect activity on a cold winter night. In defense of television, this is the financial independence dream. Cheap. Easy. Entertaining.

When we curl up on the couch with a tub of popcorn and all four of us scrunched up on our small family room couch, we are having family time. We are experiencing the same thing, in the same place, together. This seems to happen so little with families now a days.

And there is the educational aspect. The quality of documentaries and informative content has opened our lives up to a world of learning and experiencing new cultures and ideas.

Final Thoughts

I wouldn’t suggest zoning out to a screen all day. In fact, there certainly should be an hour limit to ones usage. But, in defense of television, we find it an entertaining way to decompress and enjoy some family time after all the important things have been accomplished.

Are we addicted? I doubt it. We often spurn the box and curl up with a book instead.

That is, of course, if there’s nothing good on.

Doc G

A doctor who discovered the FI community but still struggling with RE.

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9 Responses

  1. Key sentence: “…after all the important things have been accomplished.”

    Since you have accomplished all the important things, it’s OK to watch TV–or not. You’ve earned it.

  2. Steveark says:

    Well said. In our case my wife and I have totally separate ideas about what makes a good show or movie. She’s more Hallmark Movie and I’m more Die Hard Movie. We attempt to find a few things to watch together but it isn’t easy. I usually stream my entertainment to a large tablet and listen with earbuds, or one earbud if we are watching and talking, while she’s watching the television in the same room. Works for us, and I second the notion that if you have already done what you planned for the day, it is not bad entertainment at all! We never stream or watch things before the evening though, and absolutely never ever allowed any kind of screen use during family meal time when we had kids, and still practice that in retirement.

  3. Bill Yount says:

    So this post begs the question: What does Doc G and his pack watch? We haved loved Billions, Scandal, Marvelous Miss Maisel, Breaking Bad, Network, among others for emotional decompression and escape after long days, nights, weekends, and holidays in healthcare…

    • Doc G says:

      We have had several favorites. The adults just finished watching Entourage, while the kids were watching The Umbrella Academy.

  4. we watch plenty of tv. it keeps me off the streets and out of the bars. i pay for directtv too without apology to anyone’s sensibilities. that being said the last time i went to the movies was 2004. the frugal police are free to judge. i’m judging them silently too.

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