Taste insurance isn’t free. The premium is loneliness . You must be willing to sit in the uncomfortable quiet of a Friday night without a bad-texting situationship to distract you. The premium is saying “no” to a fascinating but doomed storyline. The premium is the maturity to realize that a great kiss in a bar at 1 AM does not constitute a long-term investment.
: Most 2024 releases in this niche utilize high-definition digital cinematography with a focus on aesthetic visuals rather than complex narrative depth.
Do not say, “It just didn’t work out.” Say, “I ignored the fact that he never asked me a single question about my life for three weeks because I liked his jacket.”
In fandom slang, is the preemptive hope that a writer won’t ruin a good thing. It’s the belief that the showrunner has good taste—and that they will insure your emotional investment against the following hazards:
The writers clearly know the popular ship name. They tease the couple in trailers, on social media, and in interviews. But in the actual show? They share 4 minutes of screen time. This is fraudulent taste claims.
After a claim, your taste insurance premium goes up. You must be more selective, not less . You must spend more time alone. You must develop new hobbies so you are not tempted to date the next person who simply looks at you for six seconds.
Taste insurance isn’t free. The premium is loneliness . You must be willing to sit in the uncomfortable quiet of a Friday night without a bad-texting situationship to distract you. The premium is saying “no” to a fascinating but doomed storyline. The premium is the maturity to realize that a great kiss in a bar at 1 AM does not constitute a long-term investment.
: Most 2024 releases in this niche utilize high-definition digital cinematography with a focus on aesthetic visuals rather than complex narrative depth.
Do not say, “It just didn’t work out.” Say, “I ignored the fact that he never asked me a single question about my life for three weeks because I liked his jacket.”
In fandom slang, is the preemptive hope that a writer won’t ruin a good thing. It’s the belief that the showrunner has good taste—and that they will insure your emotional investment against the following hazards:
The writers clearly know the popular ship name. They tease the couple in trailers, on social media, and in interviews. But in the actual show? They share 4 minutes of screen time. This is fraudulent taste claims.
After a claim, your taste insurance premium goes up. You must be more selective, not less . You must spend more time alone. You must develop new hobbies so you are not tempted to date the next person who simply looks at you for six seconds.