carebear
My Mail is Forwarded Here
- Messages
- 3,220
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- Anchorage, AK
...but what if you don't know anything?
I'm continually amazed at the writers of movies and television. They continually use as characters ostensibly the kind of people I've spent most of my life with and they continually get it wrong. Book authors have similar problems but most seem a little more willing to do actual research. TV and movie writers sometimes appear to do their research just by watching other TV shows and movies.
I'm not sure if it is because they grew up in cities, have never seen an unlandscaped tree and got their degrees in writing and only know other people like themselves, but their characters just don't seem to know the basics of anything. They may have one "Army vet" or something who actually knows how to walk and chew gum at the same time (though they usually get the details wrong) but that person is presented as an aberration. Everyone else is a babe in the woods, including the characters who grew up in the woods.
In zombie movies they write in the present day yet have their characters utterly unfamiliar with the concept of zombies. People know murders have occurred and then hear bumps in the night and instead of arming themselves or even getting a flashlight they just trot on out and wander around in the dark. Supposedly trained police officers and military panic and run at the first sign of danger and no civilian knows how to fight and win.
Why are so many writer's characters so fundamentally useless and ignorant of basic life skills? Look at just this forum. There's multitudes of us who can do all sorts of things. In the town thread, between us, we could actually build the dang thing from the ground up. Why can't the show writers grant their casts the same competence?
I'm no superman but I can build a still, repair a motor, use a compass, fashion an emergency NBC shelter, perform basic first aid, ad nauseum. I've read up on irrigation and basic animal husbandry, I've cut down trees with an axe and bucksaw. Most of my friends and acquaintances have similar skill and knowledge sets, and we live in a city. Heck, as a Cub Scout I learned more than most of the characters on TV seem to know.
Helplessness and ignorance are apparently reserved for fictional characters in movies.
I'm continually amazed at the writers of movies and television. They continually use as characters ostensibly the kind of people I've spent most of my life with and they continually get it wrong. Book authors have similar problems but most seem a little more willing to do actual research. TV and movie writers sometimes appear to do their research just by watching other TV shows and movies.
I'm not sure if it is because they grew up in cities, have never seen an unlandscaped tree and got their degrees in writing and only know other people like themselves, but their characters just don't seem to know the basics of anything. They may have one "Army vet" or something who actually knows how to walk and chew gum at the same time (though they usually get the details wrong) but that person is presented as an aberration. Everyone else is a babe in the woods, including the characters who grew up in the woods.
In zombie movies they write in the present day yet have their characters utterly unfamiliar with the concept of zombies. People know murders have occurred and then hear bumps in the night and instead of arming themselves or even getting a flashlight they just trot on out and wander around in the dark. Supposedly trained police officers and military panic and run at the first sign of danger and no civilian knows how to fight and win.
Why are so many writer's characters so fundamentally useless and ignorant of basic life skills? Look at just this forum. There's multitudes of us who can do all sorts of things. In the town thread, between us, we could actually build the dang thing from the ground up. Why can't the show writers grant their casts the same competence?
I'm no superman but I can build a still, repair a motor, use a compass, fashion an emergency NBC shelter, perform basic first aid, ad nauseum. I've read up on irrigation and basic animal husbandry, I've cut down trees with an axe and bucksaw. Most of my friends and acquaintances have similar skill and knowledge sets, and we live in a city. Heck, as a Cub Scout I learned more than most of the characters on TV seem to know.
Robert A. Heinlein said:A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.
Helplessness and ignorance are apparently reserved for fictional characters in movies.