And of course there could not have been bluebirds over the White Cliffs of Dover because they are not native to Britain!
What are you reading at the moment?
Is there a toiletry you can no longer buy and miss?
Sign up to Gransnet Daily
Our free daily newsletter full of hot threads, competitions and discounts
Subscribe
I was watching Emmerdale and found myself shouting at the TV set when Eric suggested that Portugal was on the Mediterranean!
And of course there could not have been bluebirds over the White Cliffs of Dover because they are not native to Britain!
When we were in the 6th form, we were taken to see a strange Russian film of King Lear in which electricity pylons were clearly visible on the horizon.
Can't remember the titles but I've noticed quite a few children's films, set in England but filmed in the USA which have all sorts of strange birds and animals wandering the countryside. Raccoons always seem to be a favourite. It just seems such laziness on the part of the film companies when a couple of hours research would tell them what really lives here.
Not to mention the fact that the only species of frog in the world that go "ribit, ribit" is native to California and not found in Tarzan's jungle or Bogey's river as he hauled the African Queen or, indeed, anywhere not near Hollywood.
What was the one where a centurion was wearing a wrist watch?
I laughed when Tony Curtis was The Black Knight and he said 'You gorra listen to me, Sire' in his Brooklyn accent.
If the programme is really good, does it matter? It is the need to modernise every period drama so that it is 'accessible' to modern viewers, that sets me on edge. the first of these was Pride and Predjudice with Colin Firth. OK some people found him sexy and attractive but the production was as silly and as dumbed down as the film starring Lawrence Olivier back in the 1930s and it has continued.
I saw trailers for the White Queen and it was so 21st century schamlzy attitudes to romance in a period wrapper. I am avoiding it.
The merry-go-round or roundabout in films that are supposed to be set in England should go round clockwise. American producers don't seem to be aware of this, or don't care. Theirs go round anti-clockwise, and I believe this is true in most if not all other countries.
My husband is a gun fanatic and my son in law is an aircraft engineer who used to be in the US Navy. Can you imagine what it's like trying to watch a programme that involves guns, planes or ships with them around? Nothing is ever correct and it all has to be explained to the rest of us in minute detail!
Sounds like bliss deeda 
The hospital drama about the neurosurgeon takes the biscuit. Whatsisface from N Ireland, you know the one. That empty hospital in which there is a senior member of staff whose job seems to be "being nice to people".
Hats and makeup:
everyone wore hats outdoors, all the time, before 1950. Rarely appear on costume dramas.
Watched an episode of Father Brown yesterday, which was full of heavily made-up nuns. 
And have you ever noticed that on the TV the remote control turn-your-car on thing makes a bloop-blooping noise. A decade or two since they did that in the real world.
Have to keep remembering : Drama takes place in a PARALLEL UNIVERSE 
Remember: 'the willing suspension of disbelief' (Coleridge, I think).
Poetic license
Whenever a pharmacist is portrayed it is usually a middle-aged man,wearing a white coat and often portrayed as a bit creepy and nondescript.
Having worked in community pharmacy over 50 yrs I know that more than 50% of pharmacists are women age range 25 -75 very varied in appearance and character. White coats are rarely worn now- last time I wore one was in 1991.
It is like all the period drama where the towns and villages are always immaculately clean and everybody has nice clean, fresh from the dressmaker clothes, no poverty, dirt or rags. When we see coaches travelling along it is always in beautiful parkland scenery. We are never shown rutted muddy tracks, which is why gentlemen so often rode horses rather than travelling by coach and remember in the book (P&P) when Elizabeth Bennett walked from Longbourn to Netherfield Hall to see her sick sister, Jane she arrived with the bottom foot of her skirt and petticoat covered in mud - and she was probably trying to keep it above the dirt. Don't get that detail in television either.
Most pharmacists round here are youngish British Asians - and yes, lots of women. Ditto opticians. Immigrants-putting-their-kids-into-professions syndrome. Like all those jewish lawyers and doctors in the US.
White coats must have been needed way back in the day when they actually mixed things up in glassware.
The white middle aged man in a white coat is a very lazy way for advertisers to represent doctors, pharmacists and dentists, but still very common.
What about the equally lazy way that doctors are very often made to be Scottish? I know we have some good doctors, but really...! DH and I used to listen regularly to Saturday night plays on Radio 4, and doctors were almost always given a Scottish accent, even if it was quite obvious that the actor was not very good at it! 
Sorry, Maniac, our pharmacist is a white middle-aged man in a white coat!
Don't get me started on Waterloo Road! Total garbage in accuracy erms but I guess a lot of people must enjoy it!!
Terms...not erms!!
I don`t watch Waterloo Road, but how did they explain the difference in scenery between Rochdale and Loch Lomond, where it`s now filmed? Having lived in Rochdale, I can assure you that there is quite a lot of difference!!
anno That's rare nowadays -a pharmacist in a white coat!.haven't seen one in this area for years .
Last time I visited a shop where I used to work in Bristol the pharmacist was a young woman wearing a burka -without the face covering !
DD was rushed to hospital after a road accident, red telephone call ahead of her arrival etc and she said it is not remotely like ER or any other hospital programme, far from people rushing around , she said the first thing she noticed was how calm and quiet everything was. A team was ready when she arrived she was taken at a reasonable pace into an emergency bay and carefully and calmly assessed, received the necessary stabilising treatment and then transferred to a specialist unit at another hospital. She said it was all quite disappointing, she had rather fancied being a star in her own hospital drama!!
My son, aged eleven, was carted off to hospital after banging his head at school. I went rushing to bring him home thinking how scared he must have been. He assured me he was fine "and when I started being sick they put a tube down my throat - just like Casualty!" Apparently it was all really cool!
Registering is free, easy, and means you can join the discussion, watch threads and lots more.
Register now »Already registered? Log in with:
Gransnet »Get our top conversations, latest advice, fantastic competitions, and more, straight to your inbox. Sign up to our daily newsletter here.