Study Reveals That Spoilers Do NOT Ruin The Experience And Actually Make Us Happy!

Study Reveals That Spoilers Do NOT Ruin The Experience And Actually Make Us Happy!

A fascinating study reveals that spoilers don't actually "spoil" stories for us, as we do in fact apparently prefer to know all the juicy details before reading a book or watching a movie...

By JoshWilding - Aug 10, 2011 05:08 PM EST
Filed Under: Other
Source: Geek Tyrant

Geek Tyrant point out the following study conducted at UC San Diego by psychology researchers Nicholas Christenfeld and Jonathan Leavitt. The aim of it was to find out the effects of spoilers on people, and whether or not they do in fact end up ruining the enjoyment of a story, which in this case was in the form of a series of novels. Testing thirty people with three different stories, here are the results of the experiment.

Christenfeld and Leavitt ran three experiments with a total of 12 short stories. Three types of stories were studied: ironic-twist, mystery and literary. Each story – classics by the likes of John Updike, Roald Dahl, Anton Chekhov, Agatha Christie and Raymond Carver – was presented as-is (without a spoiler), with a prefatory spoiler paragraph or with that same paragraph incorporated into the story as though it were a part of it. Each version of each story was read by at least 30 subjects. Data from subjects who had read the stories previously were excluded.

Subjects significantly preferred the spoiled versions of ironic-twist stories, where, for example, it was revealed before reading that a condemned man's daring escape is all a fantasy before the noose snaps tight around his neck. Subjects read stories as-is and with introductory paragraphs that gave away the endings, or spoilers. In almost all cases, they preferred the "spoiled" stories. The same held true for mysteries. Knowing ahead of time that Poirot will discover that the apparent target of attempted murder is, in fact, the perpetrator not only didn't hurt enjoyment of the story but actually improved it. Subjects liked the literary, evocative stories least overall, but still preferred the spoiled versions over the unspoiled ones.

Why? The answers go beyond the scope of the study, but one possibility is perhaps the simplest one: that plot is overrated.

"Plots are just excuses for great writing. What the plot is is (almost) irrelevant. The pleasure is in the writing," said Christenfeld . . . It's also possible that it's "easier" to read a spoiled story. Other psychological studies have shown that people have an aesthetic preference for objects that are perceptually easy to process.



Basically, this shows that spoilers don't actually spoil anything! Well, they do, but we just don't seem to mind all that much deep down. Despite the belief that finding out details about a movie before seeing it thereby "spoils" it, these results seemingly prove otherwise. Here's a recent example for you. Were you not more excited to see X-Men: First Class after finding out about Wolverine's cameo? Or did knowing about it beforehand completely screw up the scene for you? Share your thoughts on this in the usual place.






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GrandRapidsHero
GrandRapidsHero - 8/10/2011, 5:28 PM
I was actually just thinking about writing an editorial about this. So many people get so upset when "spoliers" are posted, but even though it is (almost) always labeled with a "spoiler alert", people still look at the post, and proceed to bad mouth whoever posted it, because they feel like it's ruining whatever geek joy they were going to get from seeing whatever CBM spoiler free. It is kind of funny that there is a study about it, haha.
Hannibal_King
Hannibal_King - 8/10/2011, 5:46 PM
Much like sex with my wife I like some teasing, but only if it leads to a big pay-off at the end.
GrandRapidsHero
GrandRapidsHero - 8/10/2011, 5:47 PM
exactly! And people think that studios have nothing to do with "leaked" photos and videos? c'mon now!
BrotherQStark
BrotherQStark - 8/10/2011, 5:48 PM
When somebody spoils a movie for me, I want to rip out their tongue and shove it..............................Just don't spoil movies for me, thats why I am not going to be spoiled for The Avengers
secretasianboy
secretasianboy - 8/10/2011, 5:48 PM
well we like some spoilers but not HUGE ones
secretasianboy
secretasianboy - 8/10/2011, 5:48 PM
well we like some spoilers but not HUGE ones
TheGambitFreak
TheGambitFreak - 8/10/2011, 5:50 PM
If there were no spoilers, there would be nothing to read on Comicbookmovie.com, if yo hate spoilers, you hate this site, it's what the website is, everthing and anything COMIC BOOK MOVIES!
Supes17
Supes17 - 8/10/2011, 5:51 PM
I like MINOR spoilers, if they give away the plot, I get PISSED
WellDrawn
WellDrawn - 8/10/2011, 5:56 PM
I force myself to read them. I wish I didn't have to, but you'll hear them mentioned on these forums too often to ignore them anyway..... better to hear find out what the deal is on your own terms....
Solomon
Solomon - 8/10/2011, 6:02 PM
I like some surprises in movies and it is a amazing feeling to get surprised on screen, like Jean using her Phoenix-powers in X2 or the Joker card at the end of Begins...this site spoiled the Wolverine cameo and so I was just waiting when and how they would put him in the movie...

I remember that I got spoiled long before the season final of Dexter where [SPOILER]
.
.
.
Rita get killed...In the show it was a total surprise and totally unexpected, but because I knew it before, I was only waiting when and how it will happen...It still bothers me so much, because I will never know how I would have felt if I didn't knew this before. It would have been a big shock, but instead I had so much time get used to the facts that she'll die.
headlopper
headlopper - 8/10/2011, 6:03 PM
Where was the spoiler alert for this spoiler alert article. Now that I've read it , the suspense is ruined! C'mon man.
GrandRapidsHero
GrandRapidsHero - 8/10/2011, 6:26 PM
@gambitfreak - I couldn't agree more! This site thrives on spoilers! If you don't like it, go troll somewhere else! haha, just kidding, y'all

I will only complain about the spoiler posts that are not clearly marked as spoilers, as for the others, you have to read at your own risk, that's how it goes.
siddhant1138
siddhant1138 - 8/10/2011, 6:28 PM
I think the study has "spoilers" confused with "general information"

If you had told me before Batman Begins that we see how the Bat-Signal comes to be, I'd have been okay with it. If you had told me Ducard was Ra's al along, I'd have been pissed.

So no, "researches", not all of us are happy with spoilers....

... CBM, continue to post spoilers all you want, as long as you have a spoiler tag.

Much love.
Moakynubs
Moakynubs - 8/10/2011, 6:32 PM
This is just idiotic, honestly. Sure, spoilers make us good because we want to know, but as they say, patience is a virtue. Respect for good storytelling is something I try to share with people.
Reo5150
Reo5150 - 8/10/2011, 6:45 PM
Most of the time spoilers come out long before the movie. By the time the movie rolls around, I already forgot I read it. Spoilers don't bother me a bit. Makes me excited...even if I can't remember why months later.
tyson101
tyson101 - 8/10/2011, 6:46 PM
God bless u ELgUaSoN :')
headlopper
headlopper - 8/10/2011, 6:56 PM
@elguason- Those images embody the reason why I celebrate heterosexuality. Celebrate.. like a dog!(Falconi quote)
Rodimus9
Rodimus9 - 8/10/2011, 7:03 PM
IMO, if you read a spoiler and complain, you're gay. I only read spoilers for movies that I won't see in the theater.
Rodimus9
Rodimus9 - 8/10/2011, 7:03 PM
IMO, if you read a spoiler and complain, you're gay. I only read spoilers for movies that I won't see in the theater.
NeoBaggins
NeoBaggins - 8/10/2011, 7:27 PM
Just make sure you label your spoilers PROPERLY so that people can choose. Apparently posters don't understand that labeling a thread with spoilers is pointless if they have a picture of the spoiler in the description.
WarnerBrother
WarnerBrother - 8/10/2011, 9:10 PM
I was 12 years old back in May 1980 when The Empire Strikes Back came out.
Back then, a big tent pole film might be showing in only a handful of locations in any given city.I lived in Minneapolis but the only theater showing the film was in the suburbs.The film opened on a Wednesday but my mother wouldn't take me out there on a school night so I had to wait till Saturday to see it.Next day at school my 6th grade buddy came up to me and told me he had seen the movie last night and it was cool.Then out of nowhere, he dropped this on me."Darth Vader is Luke Skywalker's dad" I couldn't believe it and told my friend "no way" but he swore it was true.Saturday came and I went to see Empire.About 3/4th of the way through the movie, I was beginning to feel my friend had been full of shit until the big battle on Bespin took place and Vader dropped the bomb.I remember the crowd actually gasped at that moment.Here was what would turn out to be,one of the greatest kick in the balls moments in genre film history and I totally missed that rare moment in life where every thing you thought you knew was all wrong. If we had spoiler sites back in the day, think of all the great geek moments that would have been ruined.The alien getting on Ripley's shuttle at the end of Alien. Ripley's battle with the queen alien in Aliens.Darth Vader coming back to the good side in Return of the Jedi.Spock's death from Star Trek 2.The Nazis getting melted in Raiders of the Lost Ark.The Terminator turning out to be a good guy in T-2,and so on.In this age, it's all about "I want it now." I have no problem if people want to be spoon fed every detail about an upcoming film but I think they are missing out on some of the magic.
siddhant1138
siddhant1138 - 8/10/2011, 9:14 PM
@blkyank

Im so sorry that happened to you. No sarcasm, I really am. And I completely agree with your post....
WarnerBrother
WarnerBrother - 8/10/2011, 9:42 PM
@siddhant1138

Thanks for the kind words.Funny how time flies,but I still remember that so strongly after over 30 years.Seeing those great genre films of the 70's and 80's put a life long love of "geek" films in my heart and I enjoy reading about the passion so many
younger fans have on this website because it reminds me of how I felt back in the day when I had a subscription to STARLOG magazine for all my SCI-FI and CBM news.I use what happened to me as motivation to try to preserve the wonder of films when it comes to my two sons, who I take to every major genre movie I can on the opening weekend.(much to my wife's amusement)as well as every San Diego Comic -Con of the last 5 years. Btw, starting in 1981 with Superman 2, I made damn
sure to see the big films on the first day.In 1983, when Return of the Jedi came out
on a Wednesday,I ran down and saw it after high school to make sure I wouldn't get "Empired"
HavocT
HavocT - 8/10/2011, 10:29 PM
...I don't think that's right...
NeoBaggins
NeoBaggins - 8/10/2011, 10:34 PM
blkyank I was doing it to myself. The STAR WARS comicbooks would come out before the movie and I didn't realize that they were basically word for word, scene for scene. I remember seeing Return of the Jedi, and because I read the comic before hand, I knew all the damn dialog. The pictures are drawn straight from the movie so it was so familiar, like I saw it before. But not the whole film. Luckily, it was the first parts of the movie. The books were in issues.
xenomorph929
xenomorph929 - 8/11/2011, 2:37 AM
The people who say they dont like spoilers are the minority of the study, so no, it isnt wrong.
ScionStorm
ScionStorm - 8/11/2011, 4:26 AM
^Harry Potter is adapted from a book series. I read all the books. And I got to see the shame on all the movie-only fans faces when they saw the final film after hating on Snape so adamantly. That was fun.

Loki's heritage is straight out of Norse mythology. It's been old news since forever. To me, the interesting part was seeing first hand how Loki reacts to the news.
comicb00kguy
comicb00kguy - 8/11/2011, 8:24 AM
This is a poorly constructed poll, because it only has two possible answers. There should be more, to allow for those of us who fall in between those two absolutes. I personally don't mind spoilers if proper warnings are in place and the spoiler isn't given away on the main page, for the benefit of those who do not want to see them. A choice on the poll should reflect that. A couple of additional variants should be able to include almost everyone's position on this issue a lot closer than an absolute "spoil away with no warnings!" or "no spoilers ever" will.

Just trying to help get a clearer view of where people here actually stand on this issue.
Stormbreaker
Stormbreaker - 8/11/2011, 8:32 AM
I made the second comment in this section last night, and now it's gone. I don't understand how this place works. Whomever runs it/acts as administrator doesn't seem to have their act together very well.


Stormbreaker
Stormbreaker - 8/11/2011, 8:32 AM
I made the second comment in this section last night, and now it's gone. I don't understand how this place works. Whomever runs it/acts as administrator doesn't seem to have their act together very well.


comicb00kguy
comicb00kguy - 8/11/2011, 8:33 AM
blkyank: You make some excellent points! I also don't like to know too much about a film before I go to see it. I want to let the film tell its story and surprise me with its twists that I didn't see coming. You're absolutely right that knowing too much can ruin the impact of a scene. Your Empire Strikes Back moment is a perfect example. That must have really sucked! I remember those long lines to go see the original Star Wars trilogy. It was worth every minute of the wait to see those films the first time! We'll never see anything like that again, with today's theaters showing big movies on multiple screens.

To be fair, some people do like knowing every little detail about a film before seeing it, and I have no problem with that, as long as proper spoiler warnings are in place for those of us who don't want to know.
Stormbreaker
Stormbreaker - 8/11/2011, 8:44 AM
I wish that my post that I made last night was still here. Strange that it was around for an hour or so (I checked after I made it), but now it's gone. It was very well thought out and not controversial/inappropriate in the least.

In a nutshell, I wrote something like the following:

I'm probably in the minority around here with regard to my thoughts on the matter (due to my ripe old age of 44). Seeing that this is the age of immediate satisfaction and entitlement, it's no surprise that lots of folks don't object to spoilers. However, can you imagine if...


SPOILERS

Some dolt ruined the iconic moment in The Empire Strikes Back when Vader utters his immortal line "No Luke. I am your father."?

Someone told you what "Rosebud" was before you saw Citizen Kane?

It was revealed that Bruce Willis was dead in The Sixth Sense?

END OF SPOILERS

I would have loved to have been surprised by the Wolverine cameo in X-Men: First Class, but this very website had an article on that very subject, with the headline "Wolverine Cameo in X-Men: First Class Revealed!" right on the front page.

That's not the way to go about it. At the most, an ambiguous headline such as "Surprise Cameo in X-Men: First Class Revealed" should have been used. That way, it doesn't give anything away, yet still allows those interested in finding it out a means of doing so without spoiling it for everyone else.
WarnerBrother
WarnerBrother - 8/11/2011, 10:11 AM
There seems to be a consensus here regarding the spoiler situation. comicb00kguy
and Stormbreaker(fellow 40 something)have made good suggestions about how a compromise could be reached that allowed those who want all the details to get them now while protecting the rest of us who would rather wait for the actual movie.
I just hope comicbookmovie.com is reading what you guys wrote.
WarnerBrother
WarnerBrother - 8/11/2011, 10:22 AM
@CaptainProg,ELgUaSoN,Suspensesmith,I would agree that somethings are hard to look away from but what are you guys trying to do first,give me a heart attack or get me put in the dog house by my wife? LOL
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