Lifestyle TV shows... good or bad?
Two recent events have churned up a few thoughts in my mind about lifestyle TV shows. You know the ones; They turn your swamp into the garden of Eden in about 3 1/2 minutes, or some yummy bimbo in tight shorts makes a dining table with nothing but string and an old broken pallet.
The basic question is: Should they be allowed to televise that sort of show?
Two things brought this on...
1) I was in the hardware today picking up some lengths of pine for a workbench. The bloke that served me was with someone else 5 minutes earlier (who was now gone) and he was mumbling about "bloody Sunday tradesmen... they come in here wanting to get stuff to build an extension on their house, and they expect me to tell them how to do it...", or words to that effect. He blamed it on the lifestyle shows on TV for people getting high ideas about doing things around the house and the fact that they don't show a true picture.
2) As an electrician, I get all sorts of things in at work that people want me to fix... the toaster, the drill, etc. That's ok, it goes with the job.
A lady brought in a circular saw the other day that she'd cut the cord on, and asked if I could fix it. She was trying to make (whatever it was) that she'd seen on one of those TV shows. I first thought it a bit strange that she'd cut the cord when she put the saw down on the cord, but these things sometimes happen. When I got the saw, I just shortened the cord and everything was rosey, except, I gave the saw a quick once over and found that the guard wouldn't spring back in to cover the blade. That explained a LOT!:confused:
I tried to fix it as best I could, but it would not go back in position. Then I found the reason... it was because the blade bearing was clapped out and rubbing on the guard. The blade would 'wobble' about 6mm from side to side! :eek:
I took it back to her, explained that the cord was fixed but I strongly urged her to toss the saw and get a new one and I showed her why.
She said... "Oh, that must be why it was cutting funny". :mad::confused::eek:
I'd hate to see a 9" circular saw blade flying across the backyard like a frisbee!
All this, from a lifestyle show?
Ok, granted, I don't have proprietry rights to be in the workshop.. none of us have. Just because we're not chefs, doesn't mean we can't cook.
I've certainly bled my fare share and kept the band-aid factory in overtime as I'm sure most of us have.
But what gives TV the right to stick on a show in the name of 'entertainment' where the whole object is to get into using unforgiving devices such as circular saws, chain saws, electric planes and a whole range of wizzing-whiring sharp thingies that'll take your finger off without a second thought?
Yes, yes... we all started somewhere, even me. But, when I used my first circular saw, I had direct supervision and instruction by someone with a mountain-load of experience. All tools that I've used I was shown in the correct way to do things and I apply that knowledge to all the tools I will ever use.
"It comes with experience" I hear you say, and sure, it does. But it's too late when you've chopped off your leg with a hired/borrowed chain saw because of poor information.
Maybe I'm barking up the wrong tree, but where do the TV channels get off? Where is the culpability? Is it all smoothed over legaly by a disclaimer at the end of the credits that says "Don't try this at home..."
What do you think?