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Wine-drinking on TV

(127 Posts)
LaCrepescule Thu 26-Sept-24 16:16:09

Just finished rewatching Game of Thrones. Struck by the lakes and lakes of wine (Cersei and Tyrion definitely alcoholics.) Now watching Apples Never Fall. More wine, at every opportunity.
It seems as if every time a TV character gets home from work, she (usually a she,) pours herself a bucket of sauv blanc.
I’ve been sober for over a year and maybe this is why I’m noticing it more.
Is this normalising alcohol abuse or am I overreacting?

1summer Thu 24-Oct-24 11:31:06

My Mum suffered terribly from gout, and she read that cherries were good for preventing gout.
She went to see her GP for some gout treatment and she mentioned to help prevent it she had at least 6 cherries a day.
Her GP thought she said 6 sherries and starting shouting at her that she was irresponsible and that was probably the cause of the gout.
My Mum was very puzzled until she realised he had misunderstood her.
After she died the GP told me that this story was one he told often at talks and dinner parties.

NotSpaghetti Thu 24-Oct-24 11:21:48

Probably not as annoying as it is for real police officers in "real life" Skydancer

Skydancer Thu 24-Oct-24 11:12:39

This is off topic but in a similar vein. In every crime programme, the main police character is always eating. Usually some kind of takeaway or fat sandwich. I think the implication is that police have no time to eat proper meals. Once you notice it, it gets very annoying.

Granmarderby10 Thu 24-Oct-24 08:17:24

Dogs aren’t daft🙂

Gwyllt Thu 24-Oct-24 07:40:51

My husband uses drinking on the tv as a reason why he is not drinking too much. They are always at it he says
Interestingly when he has had too much the dog won’t have anything to do with him

nanna8 Thu 24-Oct-24 03:21:28

I used to have a port before giving babies their last feed for the night. Worked fine and none of them are alcoholics now.

Ava25 Thu 24-Oct-24 02:58:02

My daughter and I play a little game of guessing when the red wine will get opened by the female lead in dramas, usually as soon as she gets home, Harlan Coben ones are especially predictable in their million pound house kitchen lol

Grantanow Mon 21-Oct-24 09:59:39

MPs and Lords have subsidized bars in Parliament. That's very unfair on the rest of us.

WelshPoppy Sat 12-Oct-24 18:59:01

I've said this for years, almost all programmes have people drinking, wine, beer, spirits for no apparent reason other than it's there. Smoking used to be a similar scenario.

Mt61 Mon 07-Oct-24 22:57:43

grumppa

Just as well the GP was only a locum, Allira. One definition of an alcoholic is somebody who drinks more than their GP. Our practice had a teetotal doctor once, but his partners more than made up for him.

I worked for an Asian gp many, many years ago, he was the only gp I knew who had a cocktail cupboard in his surgery room, ashtray always full. He died of a heart attack in his 50s 😞

M0nica Mon 07-Oct-24 19:41:22

I gave DS, when a baby, a teaspoon of sherry once when he was having a non-sleeping night. It had no effect.

DiamondLily Mon 07-Oct-24 17:44:59

If a medic asks me I just tell them I’m a social wine drinker.

And how many depends on how sociable I’m feeling lol 🥂🥂

Ali08 Sun 06-Oct-24 10:51:39

Yes, and they ARE buckets these days, too!
They might as well just swig it out of the bottles!
And have you noticed, its usually red wine?!

Allira Sat 05-Oct-24 18:01:35

Gripe water contained alcohol!
Highly recommended by my sister-in-law.

Granmarderby10 Sat 05-Oct-24 16:43:00

Yes Allira and Mollygo and my dad would do that with brandy in an egg-cup sized glass if we were really suffering. Would be frowned on nowdays. I wasn’t complaining though- it worked, and everyone got a good nights 😴

Mollygo Sat 05-Oct-24 16:29:59

We got a little bit of rum for an upset stomach when we were younger. Mum used to say it would kill it or cure it, ie make us feel better or make us throw up and get rid of the tummyache that way.

Granmarderby10 Sat 05-Oct-24 16:22:33

Now that’s one way of putting someone off wine for life!😝

Allira Sat 05-Oct-24 16:20:36

Maggiemaybe

V3ra

I was a GP receptionist in my early 20s. Apparently the senior partner used to advise a teaspoon of brandy in the baby's last bottle at night 😴

We’ve just been to Puglia. Our guide, who’s only in his sixties, told us how when he was young all school boys (not the girls) would be given a raw egg and Marsala wine for breakfast every day for the good of their health. When they were particularly silly at school their teacher would excuse them because they’d been “on the egg”.

I used to ask for a drop of brandy for my poorly tummy when I was a very young child; it was put in a tiny glass with sugar and hot water.

I rarely touch brandy now.

Maggiemaybe Sat 05-Oct-24 16:17:25

V3ra

I was a GP receptionist in my early 20s. Apparently the senior partner used to advise a teaspoon of brandy in the baby's last bottle at night 😴

We’ve just been to Puglia. Our guide, who’s only in his sixties, told us how when he was young all school boys (not the girls) would be given a raw egg and Marsala wine for breakfast every day for the good of their health. When they were particularly silly at school their teacher would excuse them because they’d been “on the egg”.

Allsorts Mon 30-Sept-24 07:03:16

No programme complete with out a bottle being opened. I prefer a cuppa.

M0nica Sun 29-Sept-24 16:44:35

hilz

Too much being normalised subliminally on TV and films and the Internet. . Alcohol. Drugs. Promiscuity, Swearing, Violence to name but a few. I know for some none of that is a problem to them but I don't doubt it can influences those behaviours in people's lives. We need more promotion of healthier lifestyles and safer ways of behaving. There is a lot of work to do.

Younger people are drinking less and less. University of Bradford had a teetotal bar at this year's fresher week.

So, as far as drinking is concerned, they can have as much of it as they like on tv or online young people aren't watching tv and are not drinking either.

hilz Sun 29-Sept-24 14:21:33

Too much being normalised subliminally on TV and films and the Internet. . Alcohol. Drugs. Promiscuity, Swearing, Violence to name but a few. I know for some none of that is a problem to them but I don't doubt it can influences those behaviours in people's lives. We need more promotion of healthier lifestyles and safer ways of behaving. There is a lot of work to do.

V3ra Sat 28-Sept-24 13:55:35

I was a GP receptionist in my early 20s. Apparently the senior partner used to advise a teaspoon of brandy in the baby's last bottle at night 😴

M0nica Sat 28-Sept-24 12:15:25

My mother's GP recommended a tot of whisky on the nights she couldn't sleep. She was very abstemious and would not take it if she was still awake at 2.00am. But the bottle and glass were stashed in the wrdrobe, so that they were easy to access, but no one would see them!

Kate1949 Sat 28-Sept-24 12:14:11

A daily drink isn't necessarily a problem. It depends what you drink and how much.