On Fri, May 14, 2010 at 12:06 AM, Indrajit Gupta <[email protected]>wrote:

That's why I think you were being unfair, because the general theme of these
> was information for the person planning an evening out, not a belles lettres
> piece a la NYT.
>


Yes. I think reviews are of two types, one where the reviewed
play/movie/restaurant is in the foreground, and the other....where the
reviewer is. We get to know a lot about the reviewer's knowledge and
experience and hir superiority as a reviewer....so often, this view comes
across as patronizing and condescending. I don't like  such reviews and tend
not to take their recommendations. When I feel that the Emperor isn't
wearing any clothes, and the reviewer talks about the superfine material...

I also think that reading many reviews would give one a more balanced idea
than reading  one review on its own.

Speaking of patronizing and condescending... we are having a discussion on
the difference in meaning  between those two words, that are often used
interchangeably... what do you think is the difference?

Even the definition of each word uses the other:

con·de·scend·ing  [image: condescending
pronunciation]<http://dictionary.reference.com/audio.html/lunaWAV/C07/C0733100>
 /ˌkɒndəˈsɛndɪŋ/
<http://dictionary.reference.com/help/luna/IPA_pron_key.html> Show Spelled[
kon-duh-sen-ding]
<http://dictionary.reference.com/help/luna/Spell_pron_key.html> Show IPA
 –adjective
showing or implying a usually patronizing descent from dignity or
superiority: They resented the older neighbors' condescending cordiality.


pa·tron·ize  (ptr-nz, ptr-)
*tr.v.* *pa·tron·ized*, *pa·tron·iz·ing*, *pa·tron·iz·es*
*1. * To act as a patron to; support or sponsor.
*2. * To go to as a customer, especially on a regular basis.
*3. * To treat in a condescending manner.




Deepa.

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