@cheesecakegardener The Pfp You Asked For

@cheesecakegardener The Pfp You Asked For

@cheesecakegardener the pfp you asked for

More Posts from Arcsonara and Others

4 months ago

I was hit by this experience a bit ago and it nearly made me cry tbh.

I Had A Nice Thought Today !!!
I Had A Nice Thought Today !!!
I Had A Nice Thought Today !!!

i had a nice thought today !!!


Tags
1 year ago
Had To Make A Sacrifice, I Just Can't Figure Out How To Draw The Feet I Envisioned Them Having, So They

Had to make a sacrifice, I just can't figure out how to draw the feet I envisioned them having, so they have nubs now. ;-;


Tags
1 year ago
Wifi My Beloved, How I Missed You

Wifi my beloved, how I missed you

I'm alive! Vacation was nice but I'm glad to be back.


Tags
5 months ago

Decided to render my last drawing. Also attempted a profile sketch, but I'm not quite sure about the face shape yet.

Decided To Render My Last Drawing. Also Attempted A Profile Sketch, But I'm Not Quite Sure About The

Tags
4 months ago

I feel like we need a refresher on Watsonian vs Doylist perspectives in media analysis. When you have a question about a piece of media - about a potential plot hole or error, about a dubious costuming decision, about a character suddenly acting out of character -

A Watsonian answer is one that positions itself within the fictional world.

A Doylist answer is one that positions itself within the real world.

Meaning: if Watson says something that isn't true, one explanation is that Watson made a mistake. Another explanation is that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle made a mistake.

Watsonian explanations are implicitly charitable. You are implicitly buying into the notion that there is a good in-world reason for what you're seeing on screen or on the page. ("The bunny girls in Final Fantasy wear lingerie all the time because they're from a desert culture!")

Doylist explanations are pragmatic. You are acknowledging that the fiction is shaped by real-world forces, like the creators' personal taste, their biases, the pressures they might be under from managers or editors, or the limits of their expertise. ("The bunny girls in Final Fantasy wear lingerie because somebody thought they'd sell more units that way.")

Watsonian explanations tend to be imaginative but naive. Seeking a Watsonian explanation for a problem within a narrative is inherently pleasure-seeking: you don't want your suspension of disbelief to be broken, and you're willing to put in the leg work to prevent it. Looking for a Watsonian answer can make for a fun game! But it can quickly stray into making excuses for lazy or biased storytelling, or cynical and greedy executives.

Doylist explanations are very often accurate, but they're not much fun. They should supersede efforts to provide a Watsonian explanation where actual harm is being done: "This character is being depicted in a racist way because the creators have a racist bias.'" Or: "The lore changed because management fired all of the writers from last season because they didn't want to pay then residuals."

Doylism also runs the risk of becoming trite, when applied to lower stakes discrepancies. Yes, it's possible that this character acted strangely in this episode because this episode had a different writer, but that isn't interesting, and it terminates conversation.

I think a lot of conversations about media would go a lot more smoothly, and everyone would have a lot more fun, if people were just clearer about whether they are looking to engage in Watsonian or Doylist analysis. How many arguments could be prevented by just saying, "No, Doylist you're probably right, but it's more fun to imagine there's a Watsonian reason for this, so that's what I'm doing." Or, "From a Watsonian POV that explanation makes sense, but I'm going with the Doylist view here because the creator's intentions leave a bad taste in my mouth that I can't ignore."

Idk, just keep those terms in your pocket? And if you start to get mad at somebody for their analysis, take a second to see if what they're saying makes more sense from the other side of the Watsonian/Doylist divide.

11 months ago

New wip!

New Wip!

Used a different brush for the sketch this time, hopefully it turns out well.


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • cidiper
    cidiper liked this · 11 months ago
  • zany455
    zany455 liked this · 11 months ago
  • cheesecakegardener
    cheesecakegardener reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • arcsonara
    arcsonara reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • cheesecakegardener
    cheesecakegardener reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • cheesecakegardener
    cheesecakegardener liked this · 11 months ago
  • cheesecakegardener
    cheesecakegardener reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • arcsonara
    arcsonara reblogged this · 11 months ago
arcsonara - Just another tired artist
Just another tired artist

YouTube, Bluesky & Cara - @Arcsonara

84 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags