Audience-Alienating Premise: Difference between revisions

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* ''[[Brows Held High]]''. A review show dedicated to artsy films (you know, the ones that are usually lumped into [[Le Film Artistique]] stereotype) in the vein of humoristic reviewers like [[The Nostalgia Critic]]. And created with the intention to encourage Gen Z and millenials into looking at those movies.
* [[Stuart Ashen]]'s entire shtick. So we have this highly educated British bloke and let him review things from the depth of the bargain bin, from weird toys to execrable videogames to those weird food cans from the back of the supermarket fridge. While Ashen's videos are very popular, it's less because of the premise and more on the [[Bile Fascination|fascination]] with the downright bizarre stuff he introduces to camera.
*''[[Queer Kid Stuff]]'' is a LGBTQ+ Educational series....[[What Do You Mean It's for Kids?|aimed at 3- to 7-year-olds]] (although Lindsay Amer, the creator, also said, "The short videos are a tool for parents, teachers, and LGBTQ+ adults to help them explain these words and ideas to young children in their lives, recommended for ages 3+"). Many criticised the target audience of the videos as being too young to understand these complex concepts, [[Offending the Creator's Own|including members of the LGBTQ+ community and their allies]], who felt it oversimplified their identities and sexualities even if [[Don't Shoot the Message|they felt the concept of an LGBTQ+ Educational series for younger children was]] [[They Wasted a Perfectly Good Plot|a good idea]]. However, more mainstream sources like Romper, the Webby Awards, GLAAD and Huffington Post supported the series, making it fall under [[Critical Dissonance]].
 
== Western Animation ==
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