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comment by kingmudsy
kingmudsy  ·  1710 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Lights, camera, caption! Why subtitles are no longer just for the hard of hearing

I need subtitles, and I have great hearing.

I don't know what it is about me - I can hear intonation and ambient sounds perfectly, but the actual meaning of the word gets lost. I'll be listening closely, and yet still ask my girlfriend 5 or 6 times over the course of a movie , "Wait, what did he say?"

Subtitles have helped a lot, and now she uses them even when I'm not around! I don't know why I'm so terrible at processing speech on TV, even though I'm fine at it IRL.

This article made me feel seen, something I didn't know I wanted. Thanks for sharing!





user-inactivated  ·  1710 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I'm right there with you. I first started using subtitles on movies that had super horrible sound balancing. You know, LOUD SOUND EFFECTS and mumble speech. Then I started using them all the time after Dala and I moved in together, so I could watch TV quietly when she was already asleep. Somehow, over time, they've become indispensable.

kingmudsy  ·  1710 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Horror movies are the worst about this! It feels like the entire genre hires the same asshole to make the dialogue quiet, just so you'll listen closely before they blare a LOUD SOUND and some spooky monster jumps out from behind a corner.

I love horror, but I fucking hate horror sometimes. I shouldn't need subtitles just to avoid getting honeydicked by the audio...

bhrgunatha  ·  1710 days ago  ·  link  ·  

This is all speculation on my part based on a growing number of complaints I've read and responses from people in the industry.

For TV it's due I think to higher level consumer technology - 5.1, 7.1... 22.2 ??!! surround sound are much more affordable now.

The teams responsible for both the audio and video are aiming their output to look and sound superb at the highest level of tech available so they'll pipe virtually all speech to specific channels and effects and ambient sound to the rest. Since at least one channel is dedicated to speech - with a well balanced system - dialogue and effects really ought to be clear and audible and lots of people report that.

I bet the majority of people are watching TV with stereo sound though and the audio engineers either weren't paid to make a separate stereo mix - forcing your TV/laptop/phone whatever to automatically mix down for you - or they did make a mix but don't have the time/budget to test that mix on the bottom 70% of equipment that most people use. I made that figure up from this article that projects 40% market share for home theatre systems by 2023