I don't binge watch shows like many of my friends do. At the most, I will watch two episodes of something in a row but that is usually it for me. I do not have anything against those who binge watch, it is simply not how I watch television, and I can say that is because of the television watching routine that was engrained to me in my formative years.
Appointment television was a very important part of my childhood. Watching television in the 80s and 90s required patience because it meant you had to wait a week to find out what happened next. You couldn't just click a button and watch the next episode. We often scheduled out lives around when a tv show was going to air. For kids especially, favorite tv shows were a great motivation to get chores done and get homework done. And parents used that to their advantage. I don't blame them because it worked. There was almost no greater fear than having to miss an episode of your favorite tv show and then having to hear all about it the next day at school.
Different years held different days of the week when you had to sit in front of the television and watch the latest shows. Monday nights in the 90s had Designing Women at 9 p.m. followed by Murphy Brown. In the 80s, Tuesdays gave us The A-Team at 8:00 p.m. and Unsolved Mysteries on Wednesdays. Everything stopped on Thursdays at 8:00 p.m. for The Cosby Show and several years later it was followed immediately by A Different World at 8:30 p.m. Fridays had TGIF on ABC from 8 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. with Full House and Family Matters anchoring that line up. And, of course, every Saturday night was reserved for The Golden Girls at 9:00 p.m. And if you weren't watching, you'd better have your vcr set to record!
And then there were the prime-time soaps. Dynasty was on Wednesdays. The Colbys and Knots Landing were on Thursdays. Dallas on Fridays. Falcon Crest on Saturdays. These were must sees for many people each and every week. And then there were the cliffhangers. The last episode of the season had some extraordinary event happen and you had to wait for months to find out what happened. That couldn't happen today with streaming and social media. The genius campaign of Who Shot JR? would never be able to occur in today's world. And that's sad to me.
Anyway, having to wait a week to see what happened next shaped the way I watch television. And as an adult, it makes my television viewing more special. I don't really know why it does, but it does. And I'm also not afraid to watch commercials like so many people are today but that's a topic for another day. However, you like to watch your shows is totally fine. We all do what works for us. I just enjoy bringing part of my past into my present. That is all.

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