Mildly annoying
-
I know of you. When you end a phone conversation you don't say "goodbye" you just hang up on people after you've expressed your last thought.
Never say thanks either.
-
This post did not contain any content.
I just assume they write weird behaviors like that to save a few seconds of screen time.
-
I just assume they write weird behaviors like that to save a few seconds of screen time.
wrote last edited by [email protected]Time is one factor, but mainly to avoid unexciting and unnecessary dialogue.
In real life we have a lot of conversations which are purely transactional and not very fun. Nobody needs to listen to characters on screen going back and forth like "See you tonight" "At the bar?" "Yeah, the bar, 6PM." "I've gotta drop the kids off at 6, can we do 7...?" - It's boring, and it doesn't advance the story.
Just cut the conversation short. The audience will quicky see the when and where immediately for themselves when the scene changes to the bar and the guy walks in, "Sorry I'm late, had to drop off the kids."
-
This post did not contain any content.
Also, your job or daily duties allow you to make intercontinental flights whenever you want and for how long you need.
-
In movies people never close doors behind themselves.
-
I know of you. When you end a phone conversation you don't say "goodbye" you just hang up on people after you've expressed your last thought.
For business calls, a lot of them do end that way. Especially if I'm talking to someone down the aisle from me. 90% of my work conversations go something like this:
call coworker "Hey, it's so and so, I'm going to be delayed on site for 20 minutes."
"Alright, we've got a new thing in thirty minutes, so you're good."
"I'll call you if anything changes, but based on what's going on, I'll make the thirty minutes."
"Great, thanks."
one of you hangs up
-
This post did not contain any content.
I also leave for work as soon as my breakfast hits the table.
And I never say goodbye on the phone.
-
In movies people never close doors behind themselves.
Or say goodbye on the phone, they just hang up...
-
I also leave for work as soon as my breakfast hits the table.
And I never say goodbye on the phone.
-
Also, your job or daily duties allow you to make intercontinental flights whenever you want and for how long you need.
I get that people generally want fiction to take them out of their lives, but the protagonists always being rich or doing rich things with no explanation takes me out.
Stephen King often has an author for the protagonist. But they're always wildly successful authors that have enough money to handle whatever the plot calls for.
-
Time is one factor, but mainly to avoid unexciting and unnecessary dialogue.
In real life we have a lot of conversations which are purely transactional and not very fun. Nobody needs to listen to characters on screen going back and forth like "See you tonight" "At the bar?" "Yeah, the bar, 6PM." "I've gotta drop the kids off at 6, can we do 7...?" - It's boring, and it doesn't advance the story.
Just cut the conversation short. The audience will quicky see the when and where immediately for themselves when the scene changes to the bar and the guy walks in, "Sorry I'm late, had to drop off the kids."
I like all the bullshitting that goes on in Tarantino films, feels like real human dialog. Yeah, they're more snappy than real life, but conversations takes weird turns like real life.
-
Time is one factor, but mainly to avoid unexciting and unnecessary dialogue.
In real life we have a lot of conversations which are purely transactional and not very fun. Nobody needs to listen to characters on screen going back and forth like "See you tonight" "At the bar?" "Yeah, the bar, 6PM." "I've gotta drop the kids off at 6, can we do 7...?" - It's boring, and it doesn't advance the story.
Just cut the conversation short. The audience will quicky see the when and where immediately for themselves when the scene changes to the bar and the guy walks in, "Sorry I'm late, had to drop off the kids."
wrote last edited by [email protected]Somehow DDG understood my search terms and gave me the correct link when I didn't even remember the name of the show:
-
I know of you. When you end a phone conversation you don't say "goodbye" you just hang up on people after you've expressed your last thought.
This is my mother's husband on the phone and I find it so rude but just deal with it now.
-
I know of you. When you end a phone conversation you don't say "goodbye" you just hang up on people after you've expressed your last thought.
My wife and I do that. She's a little more abrupt than me though. I often find myself staring at the phone, "Did she hang up?"
OTOH, when she talks to her family back home it sounds like Midwesterners trying to leave the house.
"OK mom, bye bye, I love you!"
"OK bye bye don't forget to <whatever>"
"OK bye bye!"
"OK I love you!"
This is likely to go another stanza. There will also be an extra stanza for each person on the other end.
-
For business calls, a lot of them do end that way. Especially if I'm talking to someone down the aisle from me. 90% of my work conversations go something like this:
call coworker "Hey, it's so and so, I'm going to be delayed on site for 20 minutes."
"Alright, we've got a new thing in thirty minutes, so you're good."
"I'll call you if anything changes, but based on what's going on, I'll make the thirty minutes."
"Great, thanks."
one of you hangs up
"Great, thanks" is the appropriate version of "goodbye".
Besides, business calls are often harder to end than teenager romance ones.
-
This post did not contain any content.wrote last edited by [email protected]
Hi. I am introvert. I also make plans to meet up with people later and don't need a time or place because I have no interest in actually meeting up later to begin with.
Probably why I have never noticed this in anything.
-
Has this ever happened to youuuuuuuuuu~?
-
I like all the bullshitting that goes on in Tarantino films, feels like real human dialog. Yeah, they're more snappy than real life, but conversations takes weird turns like real life.
Right. It's not always especially plot relevant, but the way Tarantino does it the dialog reveals a lot about the characters and their (conflicting) personalities, so it's very interesting and worth having
-
Somehow DDG understood my search terms and gave me the correct link when I didn't even remember the name of the show:
Oh look, there was a fire.
-
I also leave for work as soon as my breakfast hits the table.
And I never say goodbye on the phone.
One of my favorite scenes in American Dad is when Stan does this, and Francine calls back and says, 'Bitch, did you just hang up on me?"