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Post by bellboard27 on May 3, 2018 17:39:10 GMT
Does "positive attitide" mean giving 5 stars to everything that involves the use of glitter? I would need to give this more thought before rejecting this as a premise.
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Post by HereForTheatre on May 3, 2018 18:45:50 GMT
Paid "professional' reviewers are literally being paid to find fault and write the most clickable and quote worthy review. I value the the "amateur" reviews found in blogs, social media and of course by our very own members here a lot more. They aren't being paid to go a see a show and write about it, they are going because they want to and enjoy it.
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Post by Deleted on May 3, 2018 18:58:04 GMT
Dragging up an old thread, but I see Mark Shenton's take some time out of his busy schedule to be a dick again. And to someone who was agreeing with him! I was going to add to this thread. But pretty much, what Ryan said.
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Post by kathryn on May 3, 2018 19:12:52 GMT
He isn't being bitchy. He's making the point that amongst the profession (in the true sense) he's the only one with a positive take. So he is actually aligning himself with those who previously would have been denoted as amateurs or enthusiasts. You have just proved that there are non-bitchy, non-dismissive ways of making that point. Shenton didn’t use them, though, he went for a response that was, frankly, downright rude.
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Post by NeilVHughes on May 3, 2018 19:41:14 GMT
This is a continuation of what it means to be a Critic thread.
Mark Shelton was/is a ‘Fleet Street’ critic who is now predominantly freelance and trying to continue his career in the Wild West where anyone with a computer and internet access is a critic. (when people discover how many plays I see the first thing they say is why don’t you blog, my reply is always I am a consumer, in the same way nobody would ask Mark to blog about any of our careers)
This is a blunt way to differentiate and explains the continuation of his strop with Baz and his desperation to cling to his peer group still employed in ‘Fleet Street’.
I admire his drive to support new musicals, an anathema for me, and his reviews are wholly consistent.
All I can say is that I am fortunate like most of us on here to work in a profession which is not immediately challenged by amateurs on the internet.
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Post by talkstageytome on May 4, 2018 7:14:25 GMT
I'm so tired of this argument about who is and isn't allowed to respond Critically to theatre. I know so many bloggers and online reviewers who see HEAPS of plays/musicals/operas etc. and have a vast knowledge of past performances which informs their responses. In fact I think that's what makes this very forum so strong. Just because no one is paying us a pittance to write for a paper and therefore, in the eyes of some, legitimise our opinions, doesn't mean that we don't have anything of value to say.
I also find Shenton's comments odd given his involvement with My Theatre Mates which is very much-pro blogger.
This conversation has been going on and on for years now and as anyone who works in press or marketing will know, online influencers have never been more, well, influential. Thus proving that, as much as some print journalists etc. may dislike it, alternative forms of media are becoming equally valid. (Perhaps not on a 1:1 basis, but rather a 1 Guardian arts : 10 Arts Engaged Influencers).
This is a bit ranty, sorry, a huge chunk of my degree was in Theatre Criticism and so I've got a lot of useless opinions stored up. 😉 I'd love to discuss this further when I'm not rushed for time so much.
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Post by Deleted on May 4, 2018 7:30:10 GMT
I’m not going to engage with some of the frankly Shenton-Esque comments above, life is too short after all.
The point here however is that Shenton was incredibly rude “to someone’s face” (in the sense of what he said to Jonathan Baz) and that also he’s a hypocrite- happy to have his mug (literally!) all over “My Theatre Mates” whose very model is “unpaid critics” and also aligning himself with new BFF Carl Woodward.
Meanwhile, other “professionals” such as the otherwise controversial Baz, David Jays, Lyn Gardener to name 3 off the top of my head, manage to go about their business without tearing down so-called “unprofessionally” right and left.
AND it’s not just “bloggers” though why that term has to be derogatory I don’t know, it’s also people who write for publications who can’t or won’t pay.
I am sometimes paid to write reviews, sometimes not. Depends on the publication. But my writing is still the same writing (obviously tailored to publication) and mostly nobody else knows which ones I’m paid for...so how is one less “worthy” to the reader?
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Post by Jan on May 4, 2018 7:36:16 GMT
I'm so tired of this argument about who is and isn't allowed to respond Critically to theatre. I know so many bloggers and online reviewers who see HEAPS of plays/musicals/operas etc. and have a vast knowledge of past performances which informs their responses. In fact I think that's what makes this very forum so strong. Just because no one is paying us a pittance to write for a paper and therefore, in the eyes of some, legitimise our opinions, doesn't mean that we don't have anything of value to say. I also find Shenton's comments odd given his involvement with My Theatre Mates which is very much-pro blogger. This conversation has been going on and on for years now and as anyone who works in press or marketing will know, online influencers have never been more, well, influential. Thus proving that, as much as some print journalists etc. may dislike it, alternative forms of media are becoming equally valid. (Perhaps not on a 1:1 basis, but rather a 1 Guardian arts : 10 Arts Engaged Influencers). This is a bit ranty, sorry, a huge chunk of my degree was in Theatre Criticism and so I've got a lot of useless opinions stored up. 😉 I'd love to discuss this further when I'm not rushed for time so much. The paid reviewers are defensive because their jobs - or at least their pay rises - are under threat due to the internet. It is a very common issue when new technology becomes available in a sector. In my area of interest - classic plays - I find the views of certain people here far more relevant than those of (say) poor old Lyn Gardner who only ever gets to see one when Mikey Billington can't be bothered to go. The fact that (improbably) she gets paid to write her opinions doesn't make any difference to me.
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Post by Jan on May 4, 2018 7:38:58 GMT
I am sometimes paid to write reviews, sometimes not. Depends on the publication. But my writing is still the same writing (obviously tailored to publication) and mostly nobody else knows which ones I’m paid for...so how is one less “worthy” to the reader? Over on the Finborough thread someone has commented that Phil Wilmott should start paying his actors, which sort of seems right. But is it the same argument to say that publications should start paying their contributors ? I'm not sure.
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Post by Phantom of London on May 4, 2018 10:13:20 GMT
I see this as kind of sad.
As obnoxious, pompous and grandiose as Mark comes across, he was a fleet street hack who was unjustly fired, that had a slight riff of homophobia about it. Since then he is carrying this false persona of how big and powerful he still is and living under a false charade of going both sides of the Atlantic to review shows, to rubber stamp his own ego of self importants. If I recall he didn't review Hamilton.
He is really the Norma Desmond of reviewing "I am big, it's the reviews that got small", as he transcends the stairs of the London palladium.
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Post by wickedgrin on May 4, 2018 13:51:06 GMT
Mark Shenton finds himself swimming against the tide on the side of "professional newspaper reviews against internet bloggers/forums etc. Everyone is entitled to their subjective opinion of a show especially if they have paid for a ticket!
I have no issue with opinions being subjective but I do have an issue with biased "fan" based reviews. Clearly you have to be passionate about theatre to attend and review it but if you are reviewing especially in a "professional" capacity a certain distance had to be maintained between artist and critic. Mark clearly enjoys meeting actors and interviewing them prior to appearing in a show when they are charming and professional. He would claim to be personal friends with them. This clearly influences the "review". With the best will in the world it is extremely difficult to meet delightful Actor A for a coffee and a chat about the show and then give Actor A less than rave review!
I have found reviews and comments from board members here far more useful. We have paid our money, don't have personal friends in the cast and regardless of how nice (or not) they may or may not be off stage, just comment on their work on stage.
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Post by kathryn on May 4, 2018 14:13:12 GMT
Well, that *is* why Baz's 'reviews' should be taken with a pinch of salt. He obviously cultivates relationships with creatives to keep getting his scoops, and so never has a bad word to say about anything!
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Post by Deleted on May 4, 2018 16:35:20 GMT
Well, that *is* why Baz's 'reviews' should be taken with a pinch of salt. He obviously cultivates relationships with creatives to keep getting his scoops, and so never has a bad word to say about anything! The comments Shenton made were to Jonathan Baz, not Baz Daily Fail just for clarity! While I'm here, I agree. And when I review I tend to not review shows I have close personal friends in. Locally, it's harder as Cardiff is a small theatre town and I do tend to know at least one person involved in productions, but I tend to make what I hope are sound judgement calls about what constitutes too close a friendship to review their things. Obviously in such an incestuous industry we can't expect reviewers (paid or not!) to have zero personal connections to shows, but obviously some seem to favour the cocktails and smoozing over the review element...
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Post by kathryn on May 4, 2018 22:07:18 GMT
Yes, for clarity, it was Daily Fail Baz I was referring to there.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on May 5, 2018 8:59:31 GMT
He’s qualified his statement and suggested that people stop making “value judgements” about it 🙂.
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Post by jaqs on May 5, 2018 9:09:37 GMT
The better blog reviewers are being paid through advertising, which is the same as newspaper reviewers these days, since so few buy papers.
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Post by Snciole on May 5, 2018 11:50:19 GMT
I see this as kind of sad. As obnoxious, pompous and grandiose as Mark comes across, he was a fleet street hack who was unjustly fired, that had a slight riff of homophobia about it. Since then he is carrying this false persona of how big and powerful he still is and living under a false charade of going both sides of the Atlantic to review shows, to rubber stamp his own ego of self importants. If I recall he didn't review Hamilton. He is really the Norma Desmond of reviewing "I am big, it's the reviews that got small", as he transcends the stairs of the London palladium. This is exactly it. He is one or two jobs away from having to do a Libby Purvis and start paying for it out of his own pocket. His connection to Fleet Street is what keeps him on The Stage and other small publications he writes/reviews for. The issue is Mark has decided who he needs to keep on side (the established and some up and comers that fawn over his past connections) and those he doesn't (the bloggers that barely remember his Fleet Street days and may not value his criticism over their peers) I blog because free tickets and it has genuinely opened up doors to me in terms of seeing shows that wouldn't have been on my radar and meeting new people (as has this board) Shenton's going against the grain of professionals suggests he has more in common with bloggers than he likes to think I recently found out how little one publication pays for reviews and it made me question (along with the clear commercials interests some sites/publication) whether that is something I even bother aiming for. I value my freedom and dare I say it control. I very much view my experience as someone who has paid and give a fair opinion in response. I may not be a professional but I have a professional relationship with PRs, creatives to ensure their show is covered fairly.
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Post by Phantom of London on May 10, 2018 14:33:08 GMT
The Times and The Guardian are at the top of the cultural hierarchy when it comes to reporting, so it is very sad that Libby has gone from one extreme to the other, another journalist dumped by Fleet Street. Also I feel for Libby for her personal circumstances, losing her son in the most desperate way, my heart goes out to her.
For all of Mark’s smugness and entitlements, which comes in buckets and really not needed and given his position is false, as pointed out in my last post. However I give Mark credit where it’s due, he has spoken very well on issues of equality, where others have been silent, also his review and Michael Billington’s I would say are the most earnest and both do no tappear to be swayed by marketing revenue, as do the micro reviewers’.
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Post by shady23 on May 10, 2018 18:26:47 GMT
Now complaining that a venue he didn't have a ticket for didn't let him in...
Ridiculous!
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Post by n1david on May 10, 2018 18:46:32 GMT
An odd complaint... most West End theatres won't let you in the front door without a ticket either!
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Post by BurlyBeaR on May 10, 2018 19:42:38 GMT
Professional (i.e. paid) reviewer slums it with the rest of the proletariat. Shock.
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Post by theatremadness on May 10, 2018 19:48:27 GMT
I just really dislike how, when he's on one, he's full of so much hyperbole that it's so, so hard to take him seriously (it was hard to begin with). I mean "Is this Britain's lest welcoming theatre??!". What a ridiculous statement to make about staff doing their jobs...does he think he's *that* deserving of such special treatment?! Is he the only person to ever need a pee after a long drive? Blimey he really needs to get over himself.
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Post by zak97 on May 10, 2018 20:30:55 GMT
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Post by lynette on May 10, 2018 20:55:11 GMT
He didn’t have a ticket. What woz he gonna do? Sit in the aisle? On someone's lap? The man is crazy person, no?
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Post by kathryn on May 10, 2018 21:42:05 GMT
To be fair, he did have a ticket to the show, it’s just his friends had it with them (and presumably did not arrive until later).
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