What a lot of repetitive narration/images when you watch TV!
We are forced to listen to the same lines over and over again on just one topic and see the same pictures over and over again.
Enough is enough! Do they think the viewers are stupid?

But, for example, if you love professional baseball, you will never get tired of watching the video of Otani hitting a home run over and over again.
They watch the game from beginning to end on TV broadcasts, and then again on sports news that night.

That is a special case where a person's tastes match the broadcast.
But on TV, this repetitive and repetitive narration and images are used equally in both news programs and variety shows.

Sometimes the same lines or words are repeated intentionally.
This is the refrain effect often used in poetry and lyrics.
In election speeches, the same phrases are also sprechced with exclamations.
And it is said that ridiculously simple content is more effective.

But I wonder if the main reason for the high level of repetition in narration and images is simply the negligence of the program producers.
If a single line or image is repeated over and over again, it takes a considerable amount of time.
You don't have to think about this and that to make a program, and then you can fill in the rest with commercials.

If the story is more than three minutes long, it becomes very difficult to concentrate on the complexities and details.
Even if the program is supposed to be easy to understand, the repetition of the same lines and images is tiresome.
I also get angry at the ease with which TV programs are produced.

Most things can be fully explained and narrated in three minutes.
Anything longer than that is difficult to understand and grasp.
Music, too, becomes boring after more than three minutes, unless you really like it.
Even with cup ramen noodles, if you add hot water and wait longer than three minutes, the noodles will become bland.

Three minutes is the key.
Keep all your explanations to three minutes or less.
Newspaper articles should be no longer than three sheets of manuscript paper.
On the contrary, I often only look at the headlines.