Hotel-Restaurant Les Treize Assiettes
Book
en
fr

Love Tv Review

I love TV because it has never betrayed me. People leave. Plans fall apart. The world outside is chaotic, unfair, and loud. But the TV? It arrives precisely on time. It promises a beginning, a middle, and an end. It delivers catharsis in tidy forty-two-minute packages. It is the most reliable relationship I have ever known.

But when the credits roll and the screen asks, "Are you still watching?" love tv

I love the tyranny of the binge. The way a Sunday afternoon can dissolve into a Monday sunrise because "just one more episode" is the most seductive lie we tell ourselves. To watch four, five, six hours of a detective slowly crack a case, or a family slowly fall apart, or dragons burn a city—that isn't laziness. It is endurance. It is intimacy. You don't just watch those characters. You live with them. You know the cadence of their sighs. You notice when the lighting changes. You mourn the side character no one else remembered. I love TV because it has never betrayed me

And I love it. Every pixel. Every commercial break. Every reboot that ruins my childhood. The world outside is chaotic, unfair, and loud

I love the news crawl at the bottom of the screen during a hurricane. I love the weather girl pointing at a green screen, her hands tracing the path of a storm that hasn't arrived yet. I love the infomercial at 3 a.m., selling a non-stick pan with the desperation of a broken poet. I love the static between channels—that snow of a lost signal—because for one second, it reminds me of the void that the TV is always, kindly, filling.

I always am.

I love TV.

Plan your stay in the Bay