Anonymous wrote:Gilmore Girls.
Everything about it.
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:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Always a parking spot out front even in Manhattan
This and also when people carry luggage. You can tell it’s empty.
I was just watching a show with a delivery man carrying a stack of boxes. A woman says “you can drop them here,” and he says “they’re really heavy, I’ll put them where you need them.” And when they get to the right spot and he sets them down, they are obviously completely empty. He lets them go a few inches early, and they drift to the ground like feathers.
I recently learned that people sweeping in movies (or similar jobs) don’t put the broom against the ground because the sound would cause problems on the microphones. Now it’s really fun to spot people sweeping in the background with a broom an inch or two above the ground.
Off topic, but -- the bold above is a fun fact. It stood out to me because I recently learned (on a podcast for a show I watch) that when you see someone in a show and they're carrying brown paper grocery bags, those bags are made from a type of brown burlap, because actual brown paper bags make far too much noise and mics pick it up!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Always a parking spot out front even in Manhattan
This and also when people carry luggage. You can tell it’s empty.
I was just watching a show with a delivery man carrying a stack of boxes. A woman says “you can drop them here,” and he says “they’re really heavy, I’ll put them where you need them.” And when they get to the right spot and he sets them down, they are obviously completely empty. He lets them go a few inches early, and they drift to the ground like feathers.
I recently learned that people sweeping in movies (or similar jobs) don’t put the broom against the ground because the sound would cause problems on the microphones. Now it’s really fun to spot people sweeping in the background with a broom an inch or two above the ground.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Always a parking spot out front even in Manhattan
This and also when people carry luggage. You can tell it’s empty.
I was just watching a show with a delivery man carrying a stack of boxes. A woman says “you can drop them here,” and he says “they’re really heavy, I’ll put them where you need them.” And when they get to the right spot and he sets them down, they are obviously completely empty. He lets them go a few inches early, and they drift to the ground like feathers.
I recently learned that people sweeping in movies (or similar jobs) don’t put the broom against the ground because the sound would cause problems on the microphones. Now it’s really fun to spot people sweeping in the background with a broom an inch or two above the ground.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Always a parking spot out front even in Manhattan
This and also when people carry luggage. You can tell it’s empty.
Anonymous wrote:Zombies able with move without circulation and rotting muscles, poppycock!
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.
Do you really think most people that watch movies/TV want to read subtitles for significant periods of time? No, they don’t. Know your audience.
I think the Hunt for Red October handled this pretty well. Sean Connery's accent was clearly out-of-place, but you were already supposed to be imagining that they were speaking Russian.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband always asks “Doesn’t anybody potty?”. He says that during every movie or series.
Is your husband 3 years old? What a turnoff.
Anonymous wrote:My husband always asks “Doesn’t anybody potty?”. He says that during every movie or series.