Anonymous wrote:Families that have elaborate breakfasts on school days in sun lit kitchens, discussing their days as though they have all the time in the world. Is anyone’s morning with school aged kids like this? Try: still dark out, everyone eating cereal and some fruit at different times, rushing out the door.
People with kids who spend a lot of time hanging out with friends. Especially if they have babies, very young kids. Most parents of infants are not hanging out at bars and coffee shops with friends regularly, and if they go, they’re like “omg this is amazing I never do this, also I have to leave by 9pm sharp to feed/pump/relieve sitter.” It’s just not a carefree time of life with lots of easy socializing.
When everyone in a family’s life knows each other. Neighbors, friends, extended family, coworkers. They all get together and are friends. Whose life is like this? I’ve never met like 90% of my DH’s coworkers. My friends don’t know my family well at all. My neighbors only know a couple of my friends. And so on. When we host big parties a lot of the guests must be introduced to each other.
People with lifestyles that don’t match their careers at all. In a lot of shows everyone lives like a BigLaw partner even if they are, like, teachers and therapists and journalists.
Anonymous wrote: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.
I grew up in a house where we not only wore shoes inside but if we dared take them off my dad yelled at us for undressing and said if we were tired we should go to bed.
Anonymous wrote:My #1 thought was the breakfasts in the sunny kitchens every morning. I’m at work before the sun even rises.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband always asks “Doesn’t anybody potty?”. He says that during every movie or series.
I just don’t understand. A movie is like 2 hours long and you want them to stop the action so someone can take a piss? A lot of the things people are complaining about are just boring. No one wants to watch people take off shoes, use the toilet, or say goodbye.
Anonymous wrote:In movies, people underwater can see with their open eyes. I swam for years and can only see underwater with googles.
They also hold their breath for an unreasonable length of time.
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:Gilmore Girls.
Everything about it.
They aren’t underweight
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.