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The Othersiders

Alareth

Philosopher
Joined
Aug 30, 2006
Messages
7,682
Location
Jacksonville, FL
I just caught a commercial for a new "reality" series that will air on Cartoon Network called The Othersiders.

It's basically The Ghost Hunters with a crew of teenagers.

I tried to dig up more info and mostly came up with a few threads on some paranormal forums. Some funny comments there, such as this one from ghostplace.com

ChrisAnna said:
As for the show itself. I do not like the premise. Children are being put at too much of a risk in that scenario. We all know dealing with the paranormal requires emotional, mental and physical tolerance, those are all things kids lack (well maybe not physical tolerance). It is not a game. I do not think they should be exposed in this way. Once again, our youth being made into little adults. Not a good idea in my opinion.

Do we really need this?
 
Let me explain:
All the people I know who watch CN do so for the animated offerings. They are livid that CN is coming up with more and more live action shows. So, I think "The Othersiders" will earn fantastically bad ratings and be short lived.

I guess reality shows are even cheaper than Korean animation.
 
Sounds like a real-life version of Scooby Doo...

That would be awesome, if they actually had someone in a ghost costume each time.

"It's really Mr. Smith in a mask! He used phosphorescent paint to make the glowing footprints, and the ghost bats were just projections on smoke!"

That would be a fun show, actually.
 
That would be awesome, if they actually had someone in a ghost costume each time.

"It's really Mr. Smith in a mask! He used phosphorescent paint to make the glowing footprints, and the ghost bats were just projections on smoke!"

That would be a fun show, actually.

That would be a really fun show! They could expose the bad guys AND all of the asinine ways "real" ghost hunters purposefully misinterpret data, adjust equipment well beyond its working range, and are more prone to paraidolia than a toddler after a nightmare.

It would never fly on CN, though. Viewers want Schadenfreude.
 
I just caught a commercial for a new "reality" series that will air on Cartoon Network called The Othersiders.

It's basically The Ghost Hunters with a crew of teenagers.

I tried to dig up more info and mostly came up with a few threads on some paranormal forums. Some funny comments there, such as this one from ghostplace.com



Do we really need this?
Kids will probably like it. Ghosts may not exist but they sure make for good light entertainment.
 
That would be a really fun show! They could expose the bad guys AND all of the asinine ways "real" ghost hunters purposefully misinterpret data, adjust equipment well beyond its working range, and are more prone to paraidolia than a toddler after a nightmare.

It would never fly on CN, though. Viewers want Schadenfreude.


Who would play the talking dog?
 
I just caught a commercial for a new "reality" series that will air on Cartoon Network called The Othersiders.

It's basically The Ghost Hunters with a crew of teenagers.

Let me get this straight. Cartoon Network is doing a live action version of Scooby Doo? Next you'll be telling me that MTV has stopped playing music or something.
 
This is something that we have been talking about in our lectures.

The psychological damage that "TV trained" "Investigators" are doing to people who believe that they are having some type of paranormal activity.

They see what they believe to be a group of real researchers on shows like this and then assume that because they say "orbs are ghosts" (just an example) that they have demons in their home. At that point they call a group that calls themselves "Ghost Hunters" to come in and they pretend to be the group that they saw on TV.

These types of teams are not trained in the equipment that they use or have any idea about the psychological damage that they can cause.

Hopefully the ghost-craze will end soon, so people will not get harmed by fans of bad reality television.
 
I had pretty much pre-judged this show as being a cross between ghost hunters and psychic kids: all the poor methodology of the former, with the unethical nature of the latter. I figured I should at least watch one episode, so I could have some substance to my opinion.

I have to say, I was pleasantly surprised by what I saw.

My initial impression is that here we had a group of reasonably intelligent, honest, and innocent teens. We didn’t (at least on camera) have a group of adults hinting and implying and trying to convince them to believe a certain way. I thought the teens assumptions, comments, conclusions, and reactions, were reasonable for a bunch of ghost-busting tv-influenced kids wandering around in a dark building. But what this highlighted was that the adults in the other shows react EXACTLY the same way, the way that you would expect children to react: the adults made assumptions like children, comments like children, and came to child-like conclusions. And all the ‘experience’ that the investigators in the other shows profess to have, make absolutely no difference in the final results.

I also liked the honesty of the show: for instance, when one kid was describing his role as the “Tech Manager”, he didn’t go into all his expertise or detail his resume, he said to the effect “I’m the tech manager because I like playing around with all the new equipment we get in here”. Besides being a refreshing answer (and likely the real reason most tech managers are in those roles), I think it may prompt others to actually question the real qualifications of the adults. And I liked the evidence review phase: Rather than a load of questionable theories, it comes down to a check box and a vote: Haunted YES or NO. Again, a wonderful contrast to the other shows that pretend to justify their baroque conclusions on some kind of expertise.

Sure, I think there were many poor conclusions, some based on probable trickery (the moving chair, the bang in the elevator), or misinterpreted data (the person who walked by the thermal video). But even the misinterpretations were educational: the EVP was first interpreted as saying one word (Sienna?) and then after they had found a similar prisoner’s name, it was reinterpreted (Serona?). I think this is a first step in showing the audience how their interpretations can be changed and influenced, and how subjective EVPs really are.

And of course, one of the most damning things to the other shows: this one did it all in 30 minutes, instead of an hour.

I don’t know if this show will last: if it does, I expect the adult shows to begin flocking around it, trying to get guest appearances, and to try to protect their adult roles and expertise that these kids are handily revealing to be nothing more than children playing in the dark.
 
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