One of the Corpsman when I was in the military once remarked how unlike in training films (and later “Baywatch”) the person in real life needing CPR is never a pretty woman. Usually a middle age alcoholic man who vomits in your mouth.Baywatch was great for guessing “will it be two breaths or three” for the Hof to revive her? Will she cough? Once she even died but it turned out she was dead already so even the Hof couldn’t save her.
Electronic Technicians in movies always giving time estimates to fix problems. Wrong. Fixing is usually easy. Diagnosis is the hard part and can vary…there may be more than one problem once things arc and spark
Also if they are in need of CPR and not already in a hospital most likely they will be staying dead. Multiple things have to line up just right for CPR to save a life without even taking into account that there was a damn good reason why they needed CPR in the first place.
As for the cops using their guns topic. The town I work in has existed for well over 300 years. There have been four police involved shootings in which there was one wounded and one killed. All 100% justified. The vast number of people who held the job over the years never used their weapon.
There are a ton of them about weapons and cops that are ridiculous and lead to the public having very unrealistic views on how things should be.
If one cop dies in the line of duty everyone is devastated. There is a giant solemn funeral with bagpipes. The hero uses it to fuel his sense of revenge. On TV it may be a plot point for a season or two. That is if it’s one of the stars. 20 cops can be gunned down and no one notices as long as they didn’t have speaking roles.
In the first Lethal Weapon movie Mr Joshua is going after the Murtagh family for revenge at the end. He doesn’t know it’s a set up. They knew he was coming and left a note on the Christmas tree which leads to the final fight. So why didn’t they let the two officers who were guarding the house outside know what was happening? Was letting them get murdered part of the plan to lull Joshua into a false sense of security? They were just extras after all so I guess their murders don’t count.
This was lampshaded in the Jim Carey Grinch movie. When he ran a tiny Whomobile into a hydrant it exploded, generating a fireball at least ten stories high.
He did the don’t look back at the explosion thing as well, but he was running, not walking.
this happens a lot in movies and especially video games…the American street gang/mafia etc has more members than the army natl guard and police force …the lone hero mows through them all…even the biggest mafia family had what 50 members at the most?
Now in Mexico and South America, this might not apply,
Amnesia in soap operas: In the book “Tune In Tomorrow”, radio actor Mary Jane Higby wrote that it was introduced as a plot device in the 1930’s when it “struck Joe in the radio show ‘Mary Marlon’”… Ratings shot up for that show, so writers used the same device. Then it was discovered that there was an error in the rating calculation and there had been no effect – but by then it had become a common plot device.
In the first Lethal Weapon movie Mr Joshua is going after the Murtagh family for revenge at the end. He doesn’t know it’s a set up. They knew he was coming and left a note on the Christmas tree which leads to the final fight. So why didn’t they let the two officers who were guarding the house outside know what was happening? Was letting them get murdered part of the plan to lull Joshua into a false sense of security? They were just extras after all so I guess their murders don’t count. (Bolding by Tripler)
This reminds me of something, that may be a subtle hijack: James T. Kirk has a never-ending supply of “redshirts” to go through while on away missions. But that’s not the point I wanted to make:
Hollywood typically has the CO and high-level commanders on away missions. To my knowledge, this never happens. Now, I can’t speak for the Navy or Coast Guard, but I’m going to put dollars to donuts, that the Captain is a little too busy overseeing the strategic/operational mission and running the ship, to be meddling in a tactical field trip. You’d have experienced NCOs, and maybe a junior CGO on an away team or patrol. But not the full Command Staff.
Tripler
Yeah, yeah, I know that everyone in Starfleet is apparently an Officer. There’s a thread about it I’ll link to later on. . .
Mine was the opposite. The midwife kept telling me to push harder. The baby was only small, too. She also said ‘one more push’ after I got the head out, which turned out not to be necessary.
Why do so many childbirth stories include the medical staff ignoring what the mother says and her previous experiences, and insisting they know better?
When I worked in a pub we had a range of beers of various types and prices, but the ‘standard’ beer was the cheapest generic lager. So if someone just asked for a beer, they’d get a pint of Carling. Similarly if you asked for vodka you’d get Smirnoff, unless we had been told to try and upsell.
I’d just like to point out to the teeming millions here that my original post was clever, entertaining and made sense. It was DemonTree who changed some of it into a garbled mess.
Though come to think of it, a b jnħnħ nbbbbb in a tall cold pint glass might be just what we need about now…