This is only true if the trend in viewer drop-off is consistent for both people who liked the reviews and people who didn't, which seems unlikely. It seems more likely that the 950,000 people who saw part 7 were the ones that actually liked it on the whole, and are the ones defending him. Also, this only accounts for youtube; the video can be found other places.Jim Raynor wrote:No wonder so many people have an inflated opinion of this guy's work. Most people never even saw the whole thing through. Most of them probably just saw the least crappy part and declared it a work of genius.
I also think it's kind of funny that part 7 got more views than part 6.
Or they just stumbled upon it randomly on youtube even though they don't really care about Star Wars in general, or internet reviews, or they just didn't feel like investing 70 minutes into watching the whole thing, or they had to go to work or school, or any number of other factors could have come up.The massive dropoff from Part 1 to Part 2 also leads me to believe that there's a silent majority of people who couldn't stand it, or the sound of Plinkett's voice. Whatever the case, most people didn't bother watching past the first part.
I've come across all kinds of videos on youtube that were inexplicably linked as relating to something else I was interested in. That's how it works.
Also, you admit that the first part is probably the best, which means it also probably gets proportionately more repeat viewings than the other parts.
Except when they get to Coruscant later despite being eyewitnesses, they make no difference in the proceedings at all, so all it would really do is speed things up for Palpatine.Jim Raynor wrote:The ship's destruction could be covered up, although I would agree that the Trade Federation's actions weren't foolproof. Still, I would say that they were better than Stoklasa's suggestion of sending the Jedi back to Coruscant to rat them out.
The Jedi are the biggest threat to their plan. Amidala is the key to their plan. You don't think it would be prudent for them to give her an appropriately formidable escort?This is actaully a better argument than Stoklasa made, which was that eight battledroids are stupid just because of the Jedi.
It does? Is arranging transport off Tattooine really uncommon or something? Is it less suspicious than a guy dressed in a sack with no useful currency showing up out of the desert with a luxury ship that's been recently shot at?Paying transportation fares after a trip, and possibly not even in money, raises suspicion.
Mos Eisley?Where would such a deal even be made?
And he does this by sponsoring a human slave-boy in a high profile pod race?Because privacy isn't guaranteed, and Qui-Gon seemed adamant about not drawing attention.