Talk:CYBER DIVA/@comment-82.131.217.187-20150305213818/@comment-53539-20150307180221

I luike how you use "good and evil" there. Thats kinda a extreme way of putting it. Before you can say something is "good" you would need to define what is morally "good" Ditto, the same for bad.

If someone does something as a satire, for example, the song may appear "evil" to your eyes, but its criticism and pointing a "joke" about the way something is. Example; in the Flintstones, the cavemen use dinosaurs and pre-historic animals to do stuff we today use technology for, the satire here is the idea that our "modern" way of life is no different from that of a primitive caveman.

If the vocaloid is capable of saying something, then there is by no means a reason a producer can't, or won't, use those words. And even then, sometimes the only way to convey an emotion is by showing different methods of conveying those ideas surrounding those emotions. Songs are a "personnel" experience. Example, a mother who has undergone abortion is going to relate to a song about it more then someone who doesn't and may hold such a song to heart. Another may condemn it for the ideas it portrays, because it conflicts with their own ideas.

tl:dr

Who are we to judge how a producer uses a Vocaloid?

what appeals to one will not appeal to another.