@Mainebot People watch board games, pencil&paper RPGs, crafting, and all sorts of other things. Yours seems like an unexplored niche. (Also see https://geekandsundry.com/.)
@cwood I'll have to really consider it, then.
I've been looking for something more engaging than marketing, and a theorist-of-the-week tied to a game would be fun to prep for.
Or I could just fall back on Marx, but Mannnn Marx is easy.
@Mainebot As it happens, I heard (second hand) that some of the Geek&Sundry people have worked less at their purported day jobs because G&S work has turned out unexpectedly lucrative.
Also there is a vast population dedicated to deconstructing game backgrounds and plots already, so a set of people who want to talk about games already exists. Haven't heard of anybody taking the literary angle though.
@cwood I am a little surprised to be honest. Every game is a fiction with a constructed text, and avails itself to a literary interpretation. they demand it! I think people should be critical and ask questions of the media they're consuming.
@Mainebot People are already arguing about game plots online. The space in the conversation for the literary and critical questions is right there to be filled with a (monetized!) sort of broadcast. Try it and see?
@cwood I'll def consider it over the holidays. I'm off work until Jan 2nd, in ten minutes :)
@Mainebot The household watcher of these shows says she thinks she can totally see people watching the literary analysis.