Wednesday, February 10, 2010

One of the Grammar Points I'm More Worried About

Has anyone else noticed how rarely superlatives are used in written English these days?

Maybe I'm old, but I remember a time when writers weren't afraid to use phrases like "one of the most well-known," "one of the best," "some of the most respected," and so on.

Now in many articles and posts that I read online, I see a shrinking away from the superlative in favor of the comparative, even when it doesn't make much sense. I see sentences that start, "One of the more well-respected companies in the industry, ProductCorp earned acclaim for..." Or "Some of the better albums released this year..." Aren't the phrases "one of" and "some of" already enough of a hedge against making an overreaching absolute statement?

If I call "Third" by Portishead one of the better albums released in 2008, unless I have in mind a separate list of "best albums of 2008" apart from my list of "better albums," what am I really saying? Maybe I'm just trying to avoid criticism by making (what appears to be) a weaker statement.

It's a kind of knee-jerk, slightly nonsensical aversion to making solid statements. It's one of the more annoying aspects of reading online.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Tic

For everyone asking about the projects we're doing at CDIA, here's a video I wrote, directed, and edited.

Color correction and sound are still a little bit dodgy here and there, but otherwise it's as done as it can be.