redrosesix
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 29, 2008
- Messages
- 5,033
I keep hearing so much negativity about Kate, and an earlier post mentioned how she has no relationship with relatives and friends. Sometimes there are situations in families that are out of ones control, and while it may be ideal to have a wonderful, close relationship with family, it isn't always possible.
Jon seems to be a case study in immaturity. Really, a grown man with 8 children needs to be the grown- up and not be out at bars and chasing women. I think it is telling that she was very worried about his reaction to the placement of the Crooked Houses and that was the episode where they announced their separation. At that point in the relationship she shouldn't care if he is angry or not, but she said her stomach was in knots. She was correct in not giving in to his whim of placing the houses way back in the woods! He acts like a huge baby, actually a ninth child! She has to corral him to help her
out. He is usually off somewhere else chatting or playing when she is left to handle whatever the situation is at the time. He has always seemed unable to step up and take the initiative to help out!![]()
Ok, so you hate Jon and you think Kate is perfect -- I respectfully disagree with your spin on things. Not that I want to be put in the position of defending Jon.
There's one problem with this analogy, the TV viewing public of today isn't the same as the one before the photos of Jon and the Coeds hit. Many millions more viewers know of the couple now as opposed to back then. Before Michael Jackson kicked the bucket a large part of the national media was fixated on J&K. At work we have TVs in certain locations tuned to HLN, Fox News, CNN, and MSNBC. In the days after their announcement, whenever I passed one of these TVs they were talking about J&K what seemed about half of the time. While it wouldn't be reasonable to expect an audience for this week's show to rival the "announcement" show, you would have expected that the media attention would have resulted in some residual numbers... especially since TCL positioned the show as some sort of "post mortem" look at what happened to their marriage over ten years. It didn't happen at all. In comparison, the show averaged almost 3 million viewers in Season 4.
You make a great point. I would have thought that the number of people who had tuned out in disgust would be far less than those who tuned in out of curiosity, even people who had never watched the show before.
Yes, sounds like a backlash.