One of my favorite things about recent storytelling is in tv series is it can be acceptable for archaic stuff and anachronisms to intentionally be on screen - like Batman spinoffs like Gotham. A small time hood might be in an apartment with a 1980s neo-noir vibe, he's wearing a suit that has a bit of a 70s vibe, and he's watching breaking news about himself on a 1960s cabinet tv where the breaking news segment somehow manages to seem sort of from the present and sort of from the past.
I wonder if it was fun or more stressful for the people responsible for the look of that series to be responsible to create a vibe for a city and an era that never existed.
One of my favorite things about recent storytelling is in tv series is it can be acceptable for archaic stuff and anachronisms to intentionally be on screen - like Batman spinoffs like Gotham. A small time hood might be in an apartment with a 1980s neo-noir vibe, he's wearing a suit that has a bit of a 70s vibe, and he's watching breaking news about himself on a 1960s cabinet tv where the breaking news segment somehow manages to seem sort of from the present and sort of from the past.
I wonder if it was fun or more stressful for the people responsible for the look of that series to be responsible to create a vibe for a city and an era that never existed.