Postby andamanislander » June 1st, 2008 7:46 am
My favorite were the LONG intermediate series: the first set with the college grads taking their trip to Okinawa, ending up in jail, having to hire a lawyer, getting sexually harassed by that lawyer, getting another lawyer to bail them out and then having that second lawyer run away to Hokkaido with her cab driver. That was great. (It got less good later on when it went all syrupy and sappy.)
I also liked the Agnes Murakami series.
There was something of the Soap Opera quality of those series that kept me coming back for more. I wanted to learn Japanese, sure, but part of you actually gets emotionally involved with the characters and then you also kind of want to listen just to find out what happens next.
You don't seem to do many of those lately.
Also, re-listening to those early Intermediate stories, I can't help but feel like the teaching was both more ammateurish and more thorough. Obviously Piitaa-san had less practice, so lessons would often run long or get sidetracked. But grammar sections were more thorough and used more examples.
This could have something to do with Naomi sensei's increasingly prominent role. She is a *great* teacher. But she's also much more professional than Natsuko-san. That's a good and a bad thing. A lot of the slightly manic edge of the early lessons came from the sense that you were making-this-up-as-you-went-along. It was weirdly fun that way.
Recently, lessons are much more polished. Less time is wasted. The instruction is more concise and precise. But it also feels a bit more shrink-wrapped, not as fun.