(This post was last modified: 04-06-2016, 10:59 PM by grim.)
(04-06-2016, 08:23 PM)NeoXerxes Wrote: Very few people begin trying a new product with the expressed intent of reviewing it whether it is good or bad. I suspect that if we followed that guideline, almost nobody would write negative reviews lol.
The fact that this political correctness thing was mentioned on the most recent Sharpologist Podcast jogged this subject into my brain as he talked about the attacks on the reviewers,
Maybe I haven't articulated the issue correctly. In no way am I advocating that anyone intentionally go out of their way to try a product with the express intent of writing anything negative. That would serve no purpose. Rather, what I am saying is this.
I've tried a TON of stuff. And in a month of so I might summarize it. And to be honest, some stuff was pretty bad. Maybe it stunk to ME. Maybe it dried on my face. Maybe I had a bad morning. And some stuff was wonderful. And some stuff was average. Thats how life works. Not everything is "wonderful". Not everything is "poor". And a whole lot of stuff is just "average" (lets take price out of the equation as I am not discussing "value").
I RARELY see any review (except for one blog) say something like
"hey, this stuff just dried up on my face, had zero residual slickness, and I cut myself three times and I am not an idiot" or something to that effect. You know what I mean. Or ...
"OMG, this stuff just stinks!"
Now I am guessing, but I suspect now two things:
1.) People know what to avoid (somehow) and buy stuff that they know, at a minimum, falls into the "average" category; or
2.) They have issue and just keep quiet.
The podcast seems to suggest the answer is (2), they just keep quiet.