RHETORICAL QUESTION: Why is it that in movies and on TV, they make love and dating and relationships look so easy, but in real life it's so complicated?
The film industry doesn't portray reality as well as it should. Take the Star Wars trilogy, for example. You hear sounds coming from spaceships and lasers in every scene set in outer space, but in reality, you wouldn't hear them because sound waves require something physical to travel through, which space-time can't provide. But hey, as long as it rakes in the money...
It's the same way with relationships. People will always want something that entertains them, no matter how unrealistic it is, and the film industry knows this. If it means making true love look like it comes from a single quick glance, as opposed to the many glances and interactions two people have to make to decide they truly love each other, the film industry will make at least one true love story like that to get rich quickly off a pile of sh*t.
It is a fact. Special behavior in films of the Republic, to some exchanging roles. Initially, we brought home the first new television, we watched movies, and I liked the one actor.
Later, the popular actor has appeared in our reality, but his behavior was up beyond recognition. Then I understood what the word actor. Now I have no favorite.
1. What movies have you been watching? They always make thing complicated. Usually in ridiculous ways but still complicated.
2. Typically a rhetorical question is one that is meant to get other to think about a point and does not expect a response. I am not sure how this question would really qualify as such.
I'ts just that, for the first time, I'm friends wit a guy I like who isn't taken, gay, or fictional, and though we're more than just friends, we're not quite boyfriend/girlfriend, and I've found our "relationship" has been nothing at all like how they portray relationships in movies. And of course, movies aren't real, so no one's asking them to be like real life, which is why it's a retorical question.
It's the same way with relationships. People will always want something that entertains them, no matter how unrealistic it is, and the film industry knows this. If it means making true love look like it comes from a single quick glance, as opposed to the many glances and interactions two people have to make to decide they truly love each other, the film industry will make at least one true love story like that to get rich quickly off a pile of sh*t.
But hey... it's all about the money.
Later, the popular actor has appeared in our reality, but his behavior was up beyond recognition. Then I understood what the word actor. Now I have no favorite.
So that's my lesson for life.
2. Typically a rhetorical question is one that is meant to get other to think about a point and does not expect a response. I am not sure how this question would really qualify as such.
Stop getting into complicated relationships.