Site icon David Boles, Blogs

Breaking the 36 Hours Ago Rule

There is a dramatic crutch that is being used by a lot of television writers over the last couple of seasons and it needs to stop.  The show begins with a scene that makes no sense.  Then you get a chyron that says something like, “36 Hours Ago…” and the next scene takes place in history 36 hours previous to the scene in which you just watched and didn’t understand.

You quickly realize that first scene you watched made no sense because it was out of context and was purposefully placed there by the dramatists to confuse you with the allure of being unique instead of just being what it was:  Hinky.

Instead of a Twilight Zone Ending, you’re stuck in a Twilight Zone Preamble.

In a single week, I saw that “36 Hours Ago…” trick used on CSI, Lie to Me — and on the horrible Human Target, which seems to like using that effect to start every show, and that makes the trick an unfortunate crutch and a dog-ear dramatic device because of its infused predictability.

This sort of faux time bending needs to stop across all dramas because it is a wretched construction element.

It’s easy to set up an expectation trap — and then twist the audience’s nose by saying, “We aren’t where you thought we were!”  The dramatic spring must be unwound slowly and tensely and tersely, and in real time, to find the most effective firing for storytelling.

“36 Hours Ago” is lazy drama where nothing has to make sense or add up because you’re jumping time and congealing space and none of it works because that’s the dramatist’s plan.

All of that is painful for an audience because they are left dazed and confused and searching for a handle of understanding on which they can grip and base their experience on in some sort of reality.

The amateur dramatist always has a ready defense for these Bad Drama Tricks and it is simply, “That’s what I intended.”

How can you argue with the successful bad intention?

Our answer to that trite and inconsiderate reply is, “But we are left unfulfilled by your successful lack of attention.”

That failure to fulfill the promise of a tense, but cogent and cohesive, drama is left to the utter shame of an inexperienced dramatist who will always take the easy, sneaky, way out of the drama of conflict because — to try harder and to become a professional storyteller craftsman — is too hard and too telling of their character in a rapidly decomposing culture where speed and confusion are often substituted for substance and the fulfillment of human meaning.

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