How many Hollywood movies cast someone with a British accent as the bad guy? There's obviously a cultural perception or stereotype thing going on there.![]()
They often cast Germans as the bad guys.
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How many Hollywood movies cast someone with a British accent as the bad guy? There's obviously a cultural perception or stereotype thing going on there.![]()
Beats me. I mean....I still get confused learning years later that the bad guy in "The Fugitive" (Lt. Gerard) was a Brit!How many Hollywood movies cast someone with a British accent as the bad guy? There's obviously a cultural perception or stereotype thing going on there.![]()
Or Russians...They often cast Germans as the bad guys.
All classy villains have to be British.![]()
I have noted that the older I get, the more my defenses weaken against anxiety and depression. I'm much more liable to self-judgment and am much more physically and economically vulnerable. More prone to catastrophizing.It might be age related, not physically caused by age but simply because we socialise less as we get older and skills and tolerances diminish a bit.
My Russian teacher used to get upset with me when I would switch unaware from Russian to German in the middle of a sentence.That's actually something I noticed, nowadays when I try to speak French, my brain jumps to Italian. I really have to think about what I want to say.
Not that I ever really cared about French. Still hate it to this day.
True to an extent. Dogs can understand actual words as well. My siblings and I had endless fun confusing our dog by mis-matching words and tone. "Walk" and "bath" were our dog's favorite and most feared words, respectively. We would ask him in an excited tone "You want a bath?", or use an angry tone to ask if he wanted to go for a walk. His confusion was quite evident, and he never seemed to see through our teasing.You can use any words you want but it's the tone and body language that dogs are craving. There is a literal missing component to being able to connect to the human experience which allows us to derive the connection from the "tone."