Anonymous wrote:A diagnosis on House always includes Lupus.
Doctors do all the procedures on House and NOT THE NURSES.
They all drank on Dallas and NOBODY ever had to pee. Ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teenagers always have tons of time to hang out with their friends and do other fun things on a school night. Granted a show where kids come home from school and do homework until bedtime would be super boring, but where do these TV kids find the time?
Also, sneaking out in the middle of the night to see their love interest, who happens to live next-door.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your biggest pet peeve?
Here’s mine: When two characters from the same foreign country speak to each other in broken, heavily accented English rather than their mother tongue. That never EVER happens in real life. It’s baffling to me why directors always do this. I mean, directors: If you can’t find two American actors who speak fluent German, then just hire a couple of German actors and use subtitles for their scenes. It will make the movie feel more authentic and the audience will appreciate that you respect their intelligence.
A ton of people won’t watch subtitled movies. It’s just a business decision.
Source: my husband, who works in film.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Do any of you regularly keep your bra on during sex? I remember first noticing that in SATC, now it's constant. I suppose it lets actresses do sex scenes without being nude, but it's odd.
That's the only way the girls will stand at attention and point in the right direction![]()
It’s also the only way they could get SJP in the show because she wouldn’t do nudity. I want to visit the alternate universe where SATC gets made with a different actress who does do nudity, because it’s completely unrealistic without it, and who doesn’t become an executive producer halfway into the run proceeding to mess up the whole premise of the show.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sex - zero foreplay. The man just jams it in and the woman is screaming in pleasure.
Usually up against a wall. Sorry but no guy is hot enough that I can't manage to get to the bedroom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“School nurse” is often in a white uniform. Hadn’t been this way in decades.
Emergency Room scenes: entire families waltz into the ER desk staffed by a white uniformed nurse and immediately get detailed updates and access to patient’s room! Mary’s been admitted! She’s doing fine after being in that terrible car crash! And, she had a baby boy! He was deleivered in the ambulance! She’s in Room 1-B talking with Dr. Smith! Yes, you may all race to her bedside with your helium balloons and gift baskets that you’ve somehow obtained en route to the hospital.
And speaking of medical dramas: when someone is brought into the ER after falling off a ladder or something, and during the x-ray it's discovered they have ... KNEE CANCER! That spill saved their life. The patient is immediately sent to surgery and when they wake up, all the ER staff is there because they care about the patient so much. And one is probably going to date the knee cancer survivor because, hotness.
this happened to a son of my friends. Broke his ankle or leg and found cancer.
Anonymous wrote:The easy ability to park on the street directly in front of any place you're going.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They seemingly never repeat outfits. Ever.
Roseanne was perhaps the first and only show where people wore outfits more than once.
And yet all the flannels on Roseanne are from ll bean. (Most of Becky’s clothing in the new series is from nordstrom—yes, nordstrom sells bedazzled rose embroidered jeans) So unrealistic!
The most realistic clothing were the suits on the office, so ill fitting, it captured the average American office worker style so well
LL Bean flannels last forever so it makes sense to have a handful for life.
Anonymous wrote:Sex - zero foreplay. The man just jams it in and the woman is screaming in pleasure.
Anonymous wrote:What’s your biggest pet peeve?
Here’s mine: When two characters from the same foreign country speak to each other in broken, heavily accented English rather than their mother tongue. That never EVER happens in real life. It’s baffling to me why directors always do this. I mean, directors: If you can’t find two American actors who speak fluent German, then just hire a couple of German actors and use subtitles for their scenes. It will make the movie feel more authentic and the audience will appreciate that you respect their intelligence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone wears shoes in the house: drives me nuts (we’re a shoes off house)
seconding the full sit down breakfast before school and work: who does that???
never repeating outfits: grrrr, at least reuse, remix items! such waste and really reinforces the desire for fast fashion
bedrooms are HUGE: The only bedroom that seemed a normal size was the Brady boys, made total sense for Greg to move to the attic
Wow, never realized how many pet peeves I have, lol!
Shoes in the house isn’t unrealistic, though…you just don’t do it at your house.
It is unrealistic that everyone wears shoes all the time. Most families I interact with are shoes off in the house houses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“School nurse” is often in a white uniform. Hadn’t been this way in decades.
Emergency Room scenes: entire families waltz into the ER desk staffed by a white uniformed nurse and immediately get detailed updates and access to patient’s room! Mary’s been admitted! She’s doing fine after being in that terrible car crash! And, she had a baby boy! He was deleivered in the ambulance! She’s in Room 1-B talking with Dr. Smith! Yes, you may all race to her bedside with your helium balloons and gift baskets that you’ve somehow obtained en route to the hospital.
And speaking of medical dramas: when someone is brought into the ER after falling off a ladder or something, and during the x-ray it's discovered they have ... KNEE CANCER! That spill saved their life. The patient is immediately sent to surgery and when they wake up, all the ER staff is there because they care about the patient so much. And one is probably going to date the knee cancer survivor because, hotness.