About the blog and the authoress

About this blog

"TV matters and me" is a thoughtful, popular and completely grammatically correct blog run by a stunning Scandinavian woman that spends her day pondering deep thoughts, being sexy, acing every thing at University, eating healthily, loving fashion, playing sports and looking fabulous all the time.

That is all a lie

"TV matters and me" is a little corner of the world wide web that belongs to a Scandinavian woman in her twenties that does not have it all figured out. Your archetypal nerd with an obsessive interest in history, culture, chocolate and chips, literature, film and TV, music, writing and language and who couldn't care less about fashion. A 20th century girl, trying to figure out live in a 21st century world (still learning how on earth to operate an i-pad) while behaving much like someone from the 19th century. And an English student that hates spelling more than anything, notices language everywhere she goes and spends most of her day in the company of the English language.

This blog does not necessarily deep, penetrating or thoughtful insight into TV culture and the shows Castle, Crimina Minds, Parks and Recreation, NCIS and NCIS:Los Angeles. This blog takes a view on and criticizes the content of the shows and media, never the people involved. It offers a different insight on those shows and media in general covering topics such as characterization, racism, language, culture, feminism, international matters, controversial subjects, how those things are dealt with in the TV world and the opinions of the writer on the subject. And there are regular shallow posts as well and the grammar is never 100% correct.

The aim is to criticize and look at TV shows and media from a different perspective, the relationship between those who consume media and those who create it and how it both affects the world and how the consumer affects the media in turn and how it deals with reality. It also explores the English language in media and the joys and pains of dealing with the language as a non-native speaker and how it continues both to challenge and delight.

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