Anonymous wrote:My husband always asks “Doesn’t anybody potty?”. He says that during every movie or series.
Anonymous wrote:I used to get angry about all those Disney movies with the divorced parents and the kids getting shuttled between expensive homes in top of the line cars. There is a movie with Steve Carnell where he ends up in a nondescript beige apartment with no view after the divorce and it is much more realistic,
Anonymous wrote:In every fight scene where one good guy has to fight 4-5 bad guys, the bad guys always come at him one at a time. What are the other bad guys doing while the first and second ones take on the good guy?
I hate how phone conversations end abruptly, without anyone saying goodbye, yet no one is upset that the other party apparently hung up on them.
People agree to a date on Friday and then part ways without any further discussion, but somehow they know where and when they’ll meet.
Two people meet for coffee, have a conversation without drinking the coffee, then throw out their cups as they’re parting.
Anonymous wrote:Obvious, contrived or inappropriate colour blind casting. I couldn’t watch Bridgerton as there was no historic authenticity. Also couldn’t watch Wheel of Time where little villages were perfectly diverse. Made everything seem fake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People walk in from a day out and head to the kitchen to eat or cook and never wash their hands.
This has bothered me since I was a young kid. The first thing we do is wash our hands when we come home.
I don’t actually think this is unrealistic. That’s definitely not the first thing everyone does.
It's unrealistic for me. It's was the norm for me, my parents, and their parents. It's also what I have taught my children. Maybe it's culture (we are Black) or regional (parents are from the south), but all my friends and family wash their hands when they come home and before eating or cooking.
I do realize that others don't do this. Its one of the reasons I will never eat at an office potluck.
Anonymous wrote:Having gone to a private school, the way they are always portrayed, esp. the uniforms. No school makes the kids wear sweater vests or ties for girls. And, it’s always portrayed as stodgier than they really are.