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  • #16
    Originally posted by AFPheonix View Post

    I do feel your pain, though. Horse movies can be painful for me (and probably DesignFox) to watch without noticing all the lapses in horsemanship.
    Because we all know a horse naturally will neigh when it's on camera, or has been given a command, no matter how simple. And also that no matter how long mares have been doing it on their own, a person MUST run to them during foaling and pull that sucker out. Don't get me started on the old westerns where the guys are playing tug of war with a set of reins . . .

    [/hijack][/off topic]
    A.K.A. ShinyGreenApple

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    • #17
      It IS pretty fun helping foaling though, especially when you want to see if the baby has a spot

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      • #18
        Oh, I know And sometimes we do need to step in and help our mamas, but the way movies have it, you'd think the poor horse is incapable of birthing on her own and that the world will crash down if we don't have a big dramatic pulling on the front legs scene. Of course our current mare will probably just wander off at some ungodly hour and we won't see until the fun stuff is over . . .
        A.K.A. ShinyGreenApple

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        • #19
          That's what they usually do
          Our best broodmare was probably as surprised as we were the first time she foaled out. She ate her breakfast like normal that morning, so we went ahead and turned her out with the rest of the girls. My sister left for 30 minutes to run an errand and when she got back she'd squirted out a little solid filly.
          She had a look on her face like, "what the hell just happened there?"
          She's got it down pretty well now, though.

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          • #20
            This one will be a first-timer as well, so we have no idea what to expect with her. Her own mother apparently just laid down one night right outside the stallion's corral and popped her out. My Mom found her the next morning and thought there was a baby deer in the field at first.
            A.K.A. ShinyGreenApple

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            • #21
              I LOVE CSI Las Vegas. I watch it all the time. But not for accuracy, not for the science, not for any of that stuff. It's purely entertainment. It's a TV show, not a forensics class.

              The people who take this shit too seriously ruin it for everyone else. What a pain in the ass.

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              • #22
                I'll admit to watching NCIS but that's partly out of a love for the characters. It amuses me more than anything how simple they make it out to be when it's not like that. Oh yeah and the tattooed chick helps too.

                As far as the knowledge ruining movies/shows, yeah, I can't even watch action movies anymore without at least once in it thinking to myself "that's bad trigger control!" (Finger off the trigger till you're ready to shoot)

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                • #23
                  It's funny, for my course next semester I will be doing crime scene investigation and physical evidence handling, basically if I do it well I can become a scene of crime officer before I even finish my degree, which would help me out finanically and also get me out and practising what I am doing prior to finishing my degree. I look at CSI and the ladies wear heals and lovely designer clothes and of course as mentioned no protection. But then I look at some of the young just out of high school girls who wear that to uni and wonder if they have delusions of what their future careers could be from that show. And if they have any idea that when they go to a major murder scene they could be stuck there for the next 16 hours.

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                  • #24
                    Originally posted by Forensic Waitress View Post
                    But then I look at some of the young just out of high school girls who wear that to uni and wonder if they have delusions of what their future careers could be from that show. And if they have any idea that when they go to a major murder scene they could be stuck there for the next 16 hours.
                    And how much more blood and guts and mess there is at an actual murder scene. Working in the newsroom, I've seen the aftermath of a few people with their heads blown off, and man, sorry, but that stuff gets EVERYWHERE.

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                    • #25
                      Originally posted by Forensic Waitress View Post
                      And if they have any idea that when they go to a major murder scene they could be stuck there for the next 16 hours.
                      They'd never survive it. I seem to recall (and correct me if I'm wrong) that one of the major unofficial tests for future forensic investigators is to see just how much gore they can take before fainting or vomiting. If they're that fashion oriented, then a little blood and guts and brains will probably make them run in terror. Especially if it got on their clothes.

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                      • #26
                        Eww...I read an article about crime scene clean up crews. I can't imagine being at a real murder scene... I'd be sick.
                        "Children are our future" -LaceNeilSinger
                        "And that future is fucked...with a capital F" -AmethystHunter

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                        • #27
                          Heck, I'm not into forensics and I have three categories of clothes.

                          Ultra-dirty stuff that I wear when gardening or repairing or building stuff and which gets stained and I don't care. I run that through the washing machine on its own, but all I care about is getting the sweat and the loose dirt/rubbish off. What's stuck the fibres can stay there.
                          Normal stuff which I try to remove stains from, but which naturally accumulates stains from normal living. The ones where the stains haven't come out become 'wear at home' clothes, the rest can be 'at home' or 'everyday anywhere'.
                          The few things - very few - that I keep in reserve for special occasions. These, I'll take heroic efforts to keep clean. (I don't want to have to replace them.)

                          I kind of thought everyone has similar clothing categories. And yeah, if I was into forensics, I'd probably have a lot more of the 'ultra-dirty' category.

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                          • #28
                            I watched CSI: Miami the other night.
                            I had to laugh at the tech who showed up at a crime scene dressed to the nines in pure white with sexy little sandals on her feet.

                            The flashlight thing is hilarious.
                            Hit the damn light switch, people.

                            Also, I love when I see the techs sifting through the scene of a fire only hours after the building was a full inferno.

                            Then there are the cold cases or the ones where they have to go back and prove mistakes were made in an investigation to free an innocent person, or to reprove their case when there is a danger of someone getting off. Crime scenes are still intact and they are able to collect missed evidence months later. (In reality, it would be years later.)
                            I think there was one where the guy was in prison for arson and they were able to go back to the house and investigate and found the evidence to get the guy off. No bulldozing and rebuilding? They just left a burned out building sitting there protected from the elements for all that time?

                            It's mindless entertainment.
                            It's just made up to look smart, but it's all fluff.

                            Unless you're watching a real crime drama that presents actual cases and actual police procedures, then don't expect it to be real.

                            All of Hollywood is fantasy.

                            I do agree it's sad that people have developed these ideas that it must be true if it's on TV because they hire experts as consultants, and that is affecting the outcome of jury decisions.
                            They still have to remember that it's an hour long show and there has to be condensing of time frames and fudging on procedures. There has to be some suspension of disbelief to enjoy the shows. If they showed the real stuff, people would fall asleep at the pace of it and how dry it all is.
                            Point to Ponder:

                            Is it considered irony when someone on an internet forum makes a post that can be considered to look like it was written by a 3rd grade dropout, and they are poking fun of the fact that another person couldn't spell?

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                            • #29
                              My sister's former coworker was a crime scene investigator for 22 years before she retired into part time retail. When she told Sissy what she used to do, she innocently asked, "Oh, like on CSI?"

                              "NO!"

                              Sissy immediately backtracked and asked what her job duties had been, how long it took, how emotionally draining, etc., etc. The coworker later apologized to Sissy and told her that CSI frustrated her so much just because people accept it as reality.

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