I just think it is difficult to make a comparison across the arts and I don't really think it is necessary. It reminds me of the saying 'I'd rather read the worse book than watch the best film.' What nonsense! I'd rather read the best book (or a good book) and then later go and watch the best film and enjoy both experiences!! I don't see each medium in competition with each other, I just try to enjoy the different experiences each bring. For me it's a mood thing anyway.
In terms of me mentioning America in the last 100 years or so...well of course no person or country operates in isolation, in this sense there no greatest culture, or rather to unpack one is difficult or problematic, just that over the last 100 years or so it is difficult to complete with American media, certainly film, whose influence has spread everywhere. The British film/music industry yes has produced some good material, especially in terms of popular music, but the size and scale that the US can churn stuff out is far greater than what the UK can.
I've been waiting for the BBC's latest production of Sherlock Holmes or a new one off episode of Jonathan Creek for about the last two years. If those shows had been produced in the US there would have been dozens of them by now. The US industry would not let something quite good and very popular rest for years. They would have pumped them out, even if the motivation was to make money off the advertising of course, not to make art.



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