Jumping the shark is an idiom, first employed to describe a moment in the evolution of a television show when it begins a decline in quality that is beyond recovery. I’m using it here to describe the point where bands lose track of themselves, and their music starts going downhill. (The views and opinions expressed in this show do not reflect those of the general public. All statements made below are done for entertainment purposes only.)
Jumping the shark is an idiom, first employed to describe a moment in the evolution of a television show when it begins a decline in quality that is beyond recovery. I’m using it here to describe the point where bands lose track of themselves, and their music starts going downhill. (The views and opinions expressed in this show do not reflect those of the general public. All statements made below are done for entertainment purposes only.)
Jumping the shark is an idiom, first employed to describe a moment in the evolution of a television show when it begins a decline in quality that is beyond recovery. I’m using it here to describe the point where bands lose track of themselves, and their music starts going downhill. (The views and opinions expressed in this show do not reflect those of the general public. All statements made below are done for entertainment purposes only.)
Jumping the shark is an idiom, first employed to describe a moment in the evolution of a television show when it begins a decline in quality that is beyond recovery. I’m using it here to describe the point where bands lose track of themselves, and their music starts going downhill. (The views and opinions expressed in this show do not reflect those of the general public. All statements made below are done for entertainment purposes only.)
*Testing a new format to try to make it easier to read (without getting better at writing):
-Any reference to Jumping the Shark
-Album names or references to albums
-Song names
Jumping the shark is an idiom, first employed to describe a moment in the evolution of a television show when it begins a decline in quality that is beyond recovery. I’m using it here to describe the point where bands lose track of themselves, and their music starts going downhill. (The views and opinions expressed in this show do not reflect those of the general public. All statements made below are done for entertainment purposes only.)
Jumping the shark is an idiom, first employed to describe a moment in the evolution of a television show when it begins a decline in quality that is beyond recovery. I’m using it here to describe the point where bands lose track of themselves, and their music starts going downhill. (The views and opinions expressed in this show do not reflect those of the general public. All statements made below are done for entertainment purposes only.)
Jumping the shark is an idiom, first employed to describe a moment in the evolution of a television show when it begins a decline in quality that is beyond recovery. I’m using it here to describe the point where bands lose track of themselves, and their music starts going downhill. (The views and opinions expressed in this show do not reflect those of the general public. All statements made below are done for entertainment purposes only.)
Jumping the shark is an idiom, first employed to describe a moment in the evolution of a television show when it begins a decline in quality that is beyond recovery. I’m using it here to describe the point where bands lose track of themselves, and their music starts going downhill. (The views and opinions expressed in this show do not reflect those of the general public. All statements made below are done for entertainment purposes only.)
Jumping the shark is an idiom, first employed to describe a moment in the evolution of a television show when it begins a decline in quality that is beyond recovery. I’m using it here to describe the point where bands lose track of themselves, and their music starts going downhill. (The views and opinions expressed in this show do not reflect those of the general public. All statements made below are done for entertainment purposes only.)
This may come off as a rant rather than a suggestion; my boy Tarkenfire even touched on it early on. There's been one very noticeable thing since I started letting you into the mind of greymatter... the comments, or lack thereof.
I am very guilty of this myself, but sometimes I wish there was some way to assure bloggers their posts are being read. I know comments are allowed for a reason, but sometimes we, the public can't offer anything constructive. I enjoy the article, but to post a comment just to say +1 or "like" just seems to eat up space. As a writer, I'm not really concerned about specifically WHO read my post but the fact that my post is even being read.
