Submitted by poet3322 t3_zyd6n3 in television
I've been noticing for a while now that whenever I watch a modern show made for a streaming service, I will often not be able to hear or make out bits of dialogue. I'm reasonably confident that the issue isn't my hearing, because this doesn't happen in other situations, so I'm wondering if the issue is the sound mixing in these shows. I find myself more often than not simply turning on subtitles to make sure that I don't miss any dialogue, but of course that's hardly an ideal solution.
And I don't think this is an issue with older shows. Last night was a great example. I watched an episode of ZeroZeroZero on Amazon Prime and I had the same problem. It's a multilingual show, so the default state is that subtitles display when characters are speaking in a language other than English, and don't display when characters are speaking English. But I quickly found that I had to have the subtitles on even when English was being spoken because I regularly couldn't make out what the characters were saying even in quiet scenes.
Afterward, I watched an episode of NewsRadio, also on Amazon, and I had no problems whatsoever making out any of the dialogue in that show. It was always clear and understandable no matter how loud the scene was, and this is even in a show that has a laugh track. It was the same TV, same streaming service, same volume, same settings, and the difference between a modern streaming show and a network sitcom from the 90s was night and day in how clear the dialogue was.
Do other people have the same issue with dialogue/sound mixing in modern streaming shows? And if it is a consistent problem, does anyone know why the sound mixing has gotten so much worse in the last ten years or so?
MagicalMetaMagic t1_j26k2d3 wrote
Modern audio mixing is done by audiophiles with their heads up their ass. This is a common complaint and has been for over a decade now.
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"J-just get a surround setup!"
I have one, center channel and all. The whisper talking, the window shattering explosions, all of it is asinine and has nothing to do with your sound setup. It's increasingly a problem even in the theater.