via http://ift.tt/1XZVT3u:
elodieunderglass:
deputychairman:
hamsilton:
blxxdfae:
i dont think american filmmakers realise how huge london is, because sure you have the london eye and houses of parliament but when you say ‘london has fallen’ what??? so the nandos in catford is in flames? the tesco in peckham has descended into chaos? wtf??
@deputychairman
And even if Peckham Tesco goes down you’ve still got the Lewisham one open 24 hours, yeah you’re in trouble on a Sunday evening but even in a survival situation you can probably hold out till Monday because all the local takeaways would still deliver, no one can stop those guys and no one should try
yeah and making it a little serious for a second, the city has such a historical/cultural expectation of being (or at least appearing) resilient in response to destruction that these portrayals are not realistic at all.
If you talk to people who were in London on 7/7 I feel that they use very different language about their experience, vs. people who were in New York City for 9/11. The brush with destruction is not portrayed as a life-changing experience, if that makes sense. The expectation is that the city has to keep moving. That obnoxious “Keep Calm and Carry On” poster (now a meme) was actually designed and printed in readiness to be posted everywhere if London actually fell to Nazi occupation. the expectation was that “descent into chaos” would let everyone down.
Like, in the London Blitz people made “not giving a shit as the city is gutted around you” into an art form.
this lady would make a great reaction image for drinking truth tea in the wake of drama:
like look at these guys here
“oh ffs that was my BUS”
I mean this guy is just delivering the milk like
TREVOR I DON’T THINK YOUR CUSTOMERS ARE GONNA CARE IF YOU’RE A LITTLE LATE
or this extremely safe community policing
“remember girls you need TWO policemen to go past the unexploded bomb”
or this
“hey Bridezilla your window fell off”“fuck off Helen this is my SPECIAL DAY”
or
“guys you’re supposed to be - guys pay attention”
or“Hey what should we do we are literally being bombed right now”“idk go hide in the tube??”“but it’s the kids’ bedtime”“yeah, but like… bombs”
“wait I’ve got a plan, we go to the tube and then…”
“ok so … so we’ve literally just tied the children to the train tracks”“shh…. they’re sleeping…. they’re safe now”
or this cheeky lil shit
apparently he’s reading a history of London
rude
Anyway it’s not like Londoners are super brave or anything, it’s just that on the one hand there might be giant alien sea dragon robot tsunamis smashing the recognizable landmarks, but on the other hand they gotta make rent
And like not to detract from London’s badassery but there’s a really good geographic reason that NYC gets shut down by disasters and that’s because it’s on a series of islands? Do people not realize that? Manhattan is an island, Brooklyn and Queens are on Long Island, and then there’s Staten Island, and they’re not just cute names. It’s not that New Yorkers are inherently panicky. It’s that NYC is a hub radiating outward from an island over a series of bridges and tunnels, so it’s super easy for everything to get shut down. even once you get up to the mainland (the Bronx is on the mainland), the terrain is pretty unforgiving, all carved in vertical lines by the Hudson River, so it’s actually a pretty major chokepoint there too. There are only so many roads that go through.So like. Blitz spirit and all, yeah, but New Yorkers can only Soldier On In The Face Of Adversity as long as the bridges are still open.

elodieunderglass:
deputychairman:
hamsilton:
blxxdfae:
i dont think american filmmakers realise how huge london is, because sure you have the london eye and houses of parliament but when you say ‘london has fallen’ what??? so the nandos in catford is in flames? the tesco in peckham has descended into chaos? wtf??
@deputychairman
And even if Peckham Tesco goes down you’ve still got the Lewisham one open 24 hours, yeah you’re in trouble on a Sunday evening but even in a survival situation you can probably hold out till Monday because all the local takeaways would still deliver, no one can stop those guys and no one should try
yeah and making it a little serious for a second, the city has such a historical/cultural expectation of being (or at least appearing) resilient in response to destruction that these portrayals are not realistic at all.
If you talk to people who were in London on 7/7 I feel that they use very different language about their experience, vs. people who were in New York City for 9/11. The brush with destruction is not portrayed as a life-changing experience, if that makes sense. The expectation is that the city has to keep moving. That obnoxious “Keep Calm and Carry On” poster (now a meme) was actually designed and printed in readiness to be posted everywhere if London actually fell to Nazi occupation. the expectation was that “descent into chaos” would let everyone down.
Like, in the London Blitz people made “not giving a shit as the city is gutted around you” into an art form.
this lady would make a great reaction image for drinking truth tea in the wake of drama:
like look at these guys here
“oh ffs that was my BUS”
I mean this guy is just delivering the milk like
TREVOR I DON’T THINK YOUR CUSTOMERS ARE GONNA CARE IF YOU’RE A LITTLE LATE
or this extremely safe community policing
“remember girls you need TWO policemen to go past the unexploded bomb”
or this
“hey Bridezilla your window fell off”“fuck off Helen this is my SPECIAL DAY”
or
“guys you’re supposed to be - guys pay attention”
or“Hey what should we do we are literally being bombed right now”“idk go hide in the tube??”“but it’s the kids’ bedtime”“yeah, but like… bombs”
“wait I’ve got a plan, we go to the tube and then…”
“ok so … so we’ve literally just tied the children to the train tracks”“shh…. they’re sleeping…. they’re safe now”
or this cheeky lil shit
apparently he’s reading a history of London
rude
Anyway it’s not like Londoners are super brave or anything, it’s just that on the one hand there might be giant alien sea dragon robot tsunamis smashing the recognizable landmarks, but on the other hand they gotta make rent
And like not to detract from London’s badassery but there’s a really good geographic reason that NYC gets shut down by disasters and that’s because it’s on a series of islands? Do people not realize that? Manhattan is an island, Brooklyn and Queens are on Long Island, and then there’s Staten Island, and they’re not just cute names. It’s not that New Yorkers are inherently panicky. It’s that NYC is a hub radiating outward from an island over a series of bridges and tunnels, so it’s super easy for everything to get shut down. even once you get up to the mainland (the Bronx is on the mainland), the terrain is pretty unforgiving, all carved in vertical lines by the Hudson River, so it’s actually a pretty major chokepoint there too. There are only so many roads that go through.So like. Blitz spirit and all, yeah, but New Yorkers can only Soldier On In The Face Of Adversity as long as the bridges are still open.
