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Sep (lord of all I survey) ([info]sepiamagpie) wrote in [info]unfunny_fandom,
@ 2011-07-11 08:31:00


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Entry tags:have some fucking decorum!, sticks and stones may break my bones but, you used a bad word so i'm in the clear

After all that, I'm just a little curious what a european grocery store is like
Some Jim Butcher (he writes a fantasy mystery series called the Dresden Files, I think that's the name of the series, anyway) unfunny for you.



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[info]eleutheria
2011-07-12 12:45 am UTC (link)
IDK, I don't mind when people take liberties and they know it. I've read at least one book where the author put in a forward saying "hey, I know this is wrong, but I'm doing it for plot reasons. Apologies for moving the geography around a bit."

I mind a lot more when it's something that a ten-minute Google or Wikipedia would have prevented (or even just having a local look it over) and it's really clear that the author just doesn't know any better. Then it's careless and sloppy, and it bugs me a little-- at least, enough to laugh at it (X-Files, I'll never forget that Metro station in Georgetown, that was a hoot!). OTOH, sensitive things like this, where you're basically slamming people's homes because of privilege + don'tgiveashititis, that's worse.

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[info]sistercoyote
2011-07-12 01:37 am UTC (link)
For you it's the X-files, for me it's been a couple of issues of Bones; the first where they went to the "Pacific Northwest" (Season 1; I think they were supposed to be in Seattle, maybe?) and one of the segments opened up with a long-shot of FREAKING HALF-DOME (WTF NO, editor); the other was something that probably only a native Angeleno with a bad habit of visiting amusement parks would have noticed the subway Sweets found himself in when the "earthquake" happened was rather obviously the "Earthquake!" portion of the Universal Studios Tour....

Still, though...

OTOH, sensitive things like this, where you're basically slamming people's homes because of privilege + don'tgiveashititis, that's worse.

Much, much worse.

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[info]rosehiptea
2011-07-12 04:53 am UTC (link)
Speaking of things Angelenos recognize in Bones, isn't the outside of their "Smithsonian" actually the back of the Natural History Museum?

It's been a while since I've seen it though, and they may be using a different shot now.

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[info]sistercoyote
2011-07-12 05:17 pm UTC (link)
Do you know, I've never been to the Natural History Museum in L.A.? Now, if you asked me to identify the Steinhart/Natural History Museum/Cal Sciences, that I could do -- go figure.

That said, though, it wouldn't surprise me in the least. I'm pretty sure they used the Rose Garden at USC (which is absolutely gorgeous) in at least one ep.

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[info]ladyvorkosigan
2011-07-13 04:15 pm UTC (link)
Bones is hilarious in terms of DC geography too. They had a whole episode centered in "Kalorama Park" showing it with street performers and artists - my mom asked if we could go there when she visited and I was like "Uhh, it's that patch of grass right around the corner from where I used to live - we walked through it all the time."

To say nothing of the fact that they photoshop the Washington Monument into random spots.

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[info]ekaterinv
2011-07-12 07:59 am UTC (link)
The X-Files treated Michigan as if it were straight out of Deliverance. Also they made a reference to the supposed infamous "Michigan mud", which was ridiculous enough to diffuse my anger at the rest of it.

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[info]sgaana
2011-07-12 07:48 pm UTC (link)
The X-Files episode supposedly set in Atlantic City, NJ was a real thigh-slapper for anyone familiar with the area.

(I remember they had the forest of the "Pine Barrens" -- being played, of course, by the entirely-different-looking tall, straight pines of the Pacific NW -- running right up to the city limits. This is... difficult, as Atlantic City is in fact an island, and the forest stops quite a long way inland to make way for extensive salt marshes that give out into the bay that separates the mainland from Atlantic City itself. Good times.)

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[info]silrana
2011-07-12 09:19 pm UTC (link)
Living in Florida, I've gotten used to bizarre geography in the media. Tourists are frequently baffled to discover that Disney World, Daytona Beach and Miami aren't all within a ten minute drive of each other, because that's how it looks on TV and movies. People who work at the Disney hotel reservation phone line will tell you that they constantly get requests for rooms with an oceanfront view.

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[info]full_metal_ox
2011-07-13 12:35 am UTC (link)
And have you ever seen cattle ranching--an industry in which the Sunshine State is second only to Texas--used as an offhand bit of Florida local color?

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[info]silrana
2011-07-13 02:11 am UTC (link)
Of course not. We're wall to wall orange groves, everyone knows that.

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[info]full_metal_ox
2011-07-15 01:47 am UTC (link)
And where are the interminable roadside stretches of scrub forest? And the curtains of Spanish moss, a plant not exclusive to the Spooky Voodoo-Haunted Louisiana Bayou (which is an unfortunate trope package all its own, of course.)

And I would pass out from sheer delight to see big honking school-bus-yellow grasshoppers--with pink wings, yet!--as a bit of Florida local color.

(I'm not a Floridian, but I have a lot of family there.)

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[info]silrana
2011-07-15 04:35 pm UTC (link)
Burn Notice, which is set in Miami, comes to mind as one of the very few that gets it right. Outside-the-city scenes actually haves the roads with scrub pines and mangy brush that you see so often.

Of course, you usually don't see much Spanish Moss except in rural and wilder areas, because any native or longtime resident knows to cut it out of their trees. It is a parasite that eventually kills the host tree, so you don't see it much in the burbs. Well, except in the yards of the northern transplants who think it looks romantic.

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[info]evilsqueakers
2011-07-13 08:54 pm UTC (link)
Please see Matlock episodes of Atlanta.

Palm trees, oceans in the background, big concrete monolithic buildings in the 80s and 90s off of downtown Peachtree? Not reaaaaallly problem when you're 4 hours from the nearest beach. Whether it's NC or Los Angeles...not reaaaallly the same geography.

I'm rather used to the crappy research. Of course, this was pre-internet. But still. Doesn't mean that nowadays there aren't amazing resources to find. For instance, finding a writer buddy that lives in Chicago to give you some details about basic things.

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[info]duraniedrama
2011-07-15 03:53 pm UTC (link)
My friend who grew up in Savannah found the film version of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil terribly disorienting. Even though it was shot in Savannah, people kept opening the door on the outside of one building and then closing it on the interior of a completely different one.

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[info]evilsqueakers
2011-07-16 06:37 am UTC (link)
Then there's the One Tree Hill episode where a setting NC is supposed to be SCAD...and you know it's not. By any means, considering I've a friend at SCAD that completely laughed out loud at. Savannah shouldn't be that hard to map out or use. It's so teeny.

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[info]re_weird
2011-07-23 05:20 am UTC (link)
Almost everything set in San Francisco does this. They drive in four different neighborhoods in 5 minutes! and instantly get parking how

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