Do Physics majors watch reality tv?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the viewing habits of individuals with scientific backgrounds, particularly physics majors, regarding reality television. Participants share their personal preferences, experiences, and opinions on the genre, exploring whether higher education influences one's enjoyment of reality TV shows.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants express disdain for reality TV, citing it as lacking substance and questioning the merit of fame without talent.
  • Others mention specific reality shows they enjoy, such as "The Amazing Race," highlighting aspects like travel and cultural insights.
  • A few participants indicate they do not own a TV or do not watch much television, suggesting a preference for other forms of entertainment.
  • Some participants argue that education does not necessarily correlate with an aversion to reality TV, noting diversity in preferences among educated individuals.
  • There are mentions of enjoying certain reality shows while disliking others, indicating a nuanced view of the genre.
  • One participant humorously contrasts their own life experiences with those depicted in reality TV, suggesting a preference for real-life events over scripted drama.
  • Several participants share that they are too busy with academic or professional commitments to engage with reality TV.
  • Some participants reflect on the social dynamics of their peers, noting that those who are more academically inclined may look down on reality TV, while others who enjoy partying may be more inclined to watch it.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on the relationship between education and the enjoyment of reality TV. Multiple competing views are presented, with some rejecting the genre entirely and others expressing enjoyment of specific shows.

Contextual Notes

Participants express varying definitions of what constitutes "reality TV," leading to differing opinions on its value and entertainment quality. Some mention the distinction between mainstream reality shows and those with educational content.

Yayfordoritos
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I know why I don't watch them cause they're crap, and I don't get the point of being famous for having no talent, but just curious if people with scientific backgrounds and higher education enjoy them?
 
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I don't know about Physics majors, but at least one engineer watches Parking Wars. It's kind of fun watching people get parking tickets, have their cars booted and towed, and try to get their car out of the impound lot. It's a little like watching people have strips of flesh ripped off their body, but without the blood and gore.
 
My wife and I both have degrees in physics. We don't have a TV, and we don't watch reality TV.
 
I was a math major and I don't watch reality TV. I therefor conclude that physics majors watch reality TV.
 
I have no interest in watching idiots who are on tv just because they're famous (typically most BIG network reality shows) but I watch a lot of reality beyond those on big networks. Human drama can be hilarious at times.
 
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I should have said all science and math majors not just physics.
 
Jimmy Snyder said:
I was a math major and I don't watch reality TV. I therefor conclude that physics majors watch reality TV.

It's not a serious topic. I was just having a hard time picturing a bunch of scientist or engineers or mathematicians hanging out and discussing Keeping up with the Kardashians, but I didn't want to generalize so I figured i'd ask.
 
reality TV shows are painful at best

not to mention I don't have any time to sit around on the couch for hours
 
I don't own a TV, and I don't miss it.
 
  • #10
lisab said:
I don't own a TV, and I don't miss it.

Just as i wrote that a car going by honked its horn (that's exceedingly rare out here). I looked up in time to see a deer jumping over the fence into my yard - it came pretty close to being road kill.

Now that's reality!
 
  • #11
My wife (who has a PhD in German) and I (physics) don't have the opportunity to watch many reality shows because we don't have cable or satellite TV, just a terrestrial antenna on our roof. From what we've read about them, it's just as well. We do watch one faithfully, "The Amazing Race." We enjoy traveling, so we like the glimpses of scenery and local life that we get between the scenes in airports and the back seats of cabs.

Some of the tasks that the contestants have to do are pretty offbeat. Until last Sunday's episode in Shanghai, we never knew that frog Fallopian tubes are a delicacy!
 
  • #12
jtbell said:
My wife (who has a PhD in German) and I (physics) don't have the opportunity to watch many reality shows because we don't have cable or satellite TV, just a terrestrial antenna on our roof. From what we've read about them, it's just as well. We do watch one faithfully, "The Amazing Race." We enjoy traveling, so we like the glimpses of scenery and local life that we get between the scenes in airports and the back seats of cabs.

Some of the tasks that the contestants have to do are pretty offbeat. Until last Sunday's episode in Shanghai, we never knew that frog Fallopian tubes are a delicacy!
Amazing Race is one of the few shows I watch, at least it includes a lot of information about local cultures worldwide.
 
  • #13
I am a math major and I am a HUGE Jerry Springer fan. No matter how bad your life is, at least you've never been on the Jerry Springer show.
 
  • #14
Yayfordoritos said:
I know why I don't watch them cause they're crap, and I don't get the point of being famous for having no talent, but just curious if people with scientific backgrounds and higher education enjoy them?
Having higher education does not mean that people share likes or dislikes. I know many well educated people who love reality TV, I know people who hate it and I know people who like some but not others. People are diverse, very diverse!
 
  • #15
I don't see the relation between education and watching reality TV. For me, I find watching them unbearable. Having said that I like Dave Lambs sarcastic commentary on Come Dine With Me (U.K.).
 
  • #16
I've never watched one even once.

I don't have a TV. I'm happy to see by other posts that I'm not unique.
 
  • #17
I like few of them. The rest I can't stand at all.
I do watch "the Amazing race". It is pretty entertaining and makes me add some of the places they visited to my travel list.
I'm also a secret fan of survivor. It gets annoying sometimes but if for nothing else I would watch it because of the pretty locations.
 
  • #18
Yayfordoritos said:
I know why I don't watch them cause they're crap, and I don't get the point of being famous for having no talent, but just curious if people with scientific backgrounds and higher education enjoy them?
I suppose the answer depends on what one means by 'reality' TV. If it means shows about dysfunctional celebrities, or folks performing ridiculous stunts, then probably and hopefully no.

If it means programs like PBS's NOVA, or back in the day, CBS's 21st Century (sponsored by Union Carbide, renamed from The 20th Century), then perhaps some physics and science majors watch it.

In high school, I'd watch news or movies and do homework. On weekends, I spend a lot of time in either the city library or university library researching military history, pyrotechnics and high explosives, astrophysics, and plasma, nuclear and particle physics - and the occasional foray into political history, moral philosophy and religious studies - particular eastern religions.

In university, I was too busy to watch TV. In grad school, I would watch the news, and maybe programs like Dr. Who and Star Trek, otherwise, I was doing homework, research or at a full time job.

Professionally, my TV watching is spotty - mostly movies. Otherwise, I'm at PF or doing research.
 
  • #19
I'm also a physics major who doesn't have a TV. My own reality is interesting enough usually...
 
  • #20
cobalt124 said:
I don't see the relation between education and watching reality TV. For me, I find watching them unbearable. Having said that I like Dave Lambs sarcastic commentary on Come Dine With Me (U.K.).

I don't know it seems like my friends that are really into education look down on reality tv shows and stars, and most of my friends that like to party A LOT are the ones that watch it.
 
  • #21
Yayfordoritos said:
I don't know it seems like my friends that are really into education look down on reality tv shows and stars, and most of my friends that like to party A LOT are the ones that watch it.
Everyone's different. Some of the hardest workers I knew at uni were the ones that liked to party hardest and most frequently. They'd also watch endless rubbish on TV for hours at night. Usually this was because they were working so hard and really needed to blow of some steam and do something totally different.

In my experience there are three ways to spend your time as a student: work, leisure, sleep. You can only pick two.
 
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  • #22
I have an undergrad in physics and I don't watch reality tv, or much programmed tv at all. Youtube, on the other hand...
 
  • #23
My wife and I haven't paid for cable/satellite in years. We don't watch much TV, but when we do, it's something we find on Netflix (not reality shows). I'm a math major and my wife majored in women's studies.
 
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  • #24
Yayfordoritos said:
I know why I don't watch them cause they're crap, and I don't get the point of being famous for having no talent, but just curious if people with scientific backgrounds and higher education enjoy them?

Where does such curiosity come from? Why do you care about what one's interests are in his/her past time?

I watch survivor if that counts. It is no where near "crap".
 
  • #25
There are different flavors of reality TV. I like and watch, American Pickers, Pawn Stars, and American Restoration as well as Counting Cars (not sure of the name) . Should make it clear that I watch them when the wife let's me turn it off of Ru Paul. I really do not know what time or day the shows are on, but if I am looking through the 50 or so channels of garbage for something, ANYTHING they are where I will stop.
 
  • #26
Astronuc said:
I suppose the answer depends on what one means by 'reality' TV. If it means shows about dysfunctional celebrities, or folks performing ridiculous stunts, then probably and hopefully no.

If it means programs like PBS's NOVA, or back in the day, CBS's 21st Century (sponsored by Union Carbide, renamed from The 20th Century), then perhaps some physics and science majors watch it.

In high school, I'd watch news or movies and do homework. On weekends, I spend a lot of time in either the city library or university library researching military history, pyrotechnics and high explosives, astrophysics, and plasma, nuclear and particle physics - and the occasional foray into political history, moral philosophy and religious studies - particular eastern religions.

In university, I was too busy to watch TV. In grad school, I would watch the news, and maybe programs like Dr. Who and Star Trek, otherwise, I was doing homework, research or at a full time job.

Professionally, my TV watching is spotty - mostly movies. Otherwise, I'm at PF or doing research.

Hm, I didn't do quite what you did but my early life was a bit similar (middle-High School).

I just wanted to address the first statement though, why? Why would you hope not?

I don't know it seems like my friends that are really into education look down on reality tv shows and stars

I find those looking down on others over trivial matters unwise. But then again, I am also foolish. Hopefully I will be wiser as I get older. Surely, I've undergone a LOT of growth emotionally over the years, but I can still be a bit of a pain in the *** as I am still a bit confrontational/aggressive.

But my main remark here has a lot to do with if you cannot justify, reasonably, why you "look down on others" for certain actions, it is child-like. It comes off as, "they don't do what I do, so I don't like them", or, "they don't like what I like, I don't like it", and, "why don't they think in terms of what I think like?" It's just silly to think in such manners which is why I find it unwise.
 
  • #27
Mentalist said:
Hm, I didn't do quite what you did but my early life was a bit similar (middle-High School).

I just wanted to address the first statement though, why? Why would you hope not?



I find those looking down on others over trivial matters unwise. But then again, I am also foolish. Hopefully I will be wiser as I get older. Surely, I've undergone a LOT of growth emotionally over the years, but I can still be a bit of a pain in the *** as I am still a bit confrontational/aggressive.

But my main remark here has a lot to do with if you cannot justify, reasonably, why you "look down on others" for certain actions, it is child-like. It comes off as, "they don't do what I do, so I don't like them", or, "they don't like what I like, I don't like it", and, "why don't they think in terms of what I think like?" It's just silly to think in such manners which is why I find it unwise.

spending hours each day watching the ridiculous and most of the time scripted antics of people on TV is not really something trivial. It's a humungo waste of time that could be spent doing things that are actually enriching.
 
  • #28
provided 1, you know their habits, 2, you are there noting how long they watch TV, 3, know what days they work, 4, know what work they should be doing instead of watching those shows, etc...

In other words, where's your case study?

Enrichment? Instead of posting on PF, how about you meditate?
 
  • #29
Mentalist said:
provided 1, you know their habits, 2, you are there noting how long they watch TV, 3, know what days they work, 4, know what work they should be doing instead of watching those shows, etc...

In other words, where's your case study?

Enrichment? Instead of posting on PF, how about you meditate?

so you're suggesting that it's possible that watching hours of reality TV can be *not* an absolute waste of time
 
  • #30
Like I said before, where is your case study saying that those who watch reality TV watch it for hours.

To my 2nd point, you're talking about "enrichment", you don't need to be here when your life can be enriched by meditating. If people ought to be "enriched" in life and not waste their idle time doing mundane things, you should put your words to action by signing off of PF and begin meditating.
 

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