Americans have been rubbing their faces all over the rest of the world calling themselves superior in movies and tv for over 50 years now and then they get mad when people poke fun at them on the internet
calling themselves superior in movies and tv for over 50 years now
What movies do that?
I mean…it’s not exactly our fault if foreign media isn’t nearly as popular as Hollywood. Anime is slowly catching up, though.
Reread their post, they didn’t say it was Hollywood’s fault for being successful. It’s Hollywood’s fault for the “AMERICA NUMBER 1” sentiment shown in every movie, aka propaganda.
Is it not okay for Bollywood movies to celebrate Mumbai, or for Japanese movies to celebrate unique Japanese culture / condemn Western influences?
I know extremist nationalism is bad, but it’s still okay for artists to love their country. Heck, on its own there’s nothing wrong with the US Army sponsoring movies. Ideally, the world would have enough critical thinkers that any completely braindead national propaganda would be ignored.
I don’t care, I was just explaining their comment to you because you didn’t understand.
We don’t rub anyone’s faces in anything. We express a love for our country through art like every other country does, the difference is that the whole world watches when we do it. If you want less pro-america movies and TV, maybe watch movies and TV that aren’t from america.
I think this is highlighting the American need to crowbar America into every conversation.
Labour MPs taking £250k bribes from Israel lobby?
“But genocide Joe!?!??!”
Someone gets shot outside America
“Oh yeah how’s that gun control workin out for ya, bud?”
“Extremely fucking well thanks, you inbred window-licker”
Any time anything outside of America is mentioned, you can almost count on a comment starting with “American here.” It’s really prevalent in UK-centric communities, and it’s really funny.
Speaking as a Briton, I’ve been almost brought up to hate American culture, I suppose out of some sense of rivalry or something, and I do my best to treat them fairly, but I still have vestiges of antiseptic attitudes. They remind me of friends I’ve had who’d brag about everything, so you end up resenting letting them have anything no matter how genuine an achievement it is. I still can’t stand the accents if I’m tired or in a bad mood or whatever either. Just rubs me the wrong way.
It feels silly to “admit” as it were, but I remember once matching with someone on a dating app, so I went like, “what’s your story”, and he said “I’m a trans man and I’m American”, and I felt bad unmatching in case he thought I was transphobic, but come on, haha.
Weird, we don’t hate British culture, but we don’t really think about it much either.
It’s not weird when you consider how much American cultural artefacts do their best to elbow their way into your field of attention.
I think it’s also important to recognize that a lot of the forums and that gain traction on the internet are us-centric, actually with the fediverse one thing I’ve noticed is that while still definitely us centric I’m noticing a lot more international focused posts
But it isn’t US centric. The majority of the sites are not US centric.
But somehow, because the community is English, Americans think it is US centric and post like it is. Using fantasy metrics and dollars, thinking the small minority of outsiders just got to adapt. And then when they tell someone where they live, they only mention the state for some reason.
Lemmy is worldwide and still get soo many dumb Trump vs Biden posts. Not to mention Elmo shit.
I don’t think its really that crazy to use your country’s currency and units of measurement in a space that is not explicitly for citizens of your country. Nor is it that crazy to make posts about things that are happening in your country. And if your country is large, it does make some sense to mention the specific area you’re from instead of just the country.
Its annoying when an American barges into a conversation and forces it to be about america somehow, but none of the things you’ve mentioned are really that bad. Just ignore posts you don’t care about, get an idea of what a US dollar is worth, and move on.
And if your country is large, it does make some sense to mention the specific area you’re from instead of just the country.
Especially if your country is essentially 50 different sub-cultures that have more differences than some European countries do from each other. But I think their point was that someone from another country might not know that Nebraska is in the United States, so we should identify that it’s Nebraska, USA for clarity.
Just because the USA isn’t completely homogenous to those who live there doesn’t mean that it’s remotely comparable to Europe. Yes the EU and the eurozone exist, but the USA still has a common language, a common currency, a common government, and a comparatively tiny history.
The Kremlin has been wildly successful in undermining the US’ reputation on social media.
But not as good as the USA
Man, I wish I had that Kremlin gig, all you gotta do is sit and watch 80 years of US foreign policy do your job for you.
Sure thing boss, I’ll make sure that Latin american country hates their guts by friday. I’ll just make them think the US executed a coup in their country l, supported and funded the dictatorship that came after and trained their torturers. I’ll do it by very sneakly making no changes to their history books whatsoever.
Note: No points for guessing which country cause you can guess any of them and probably be right.
The US has done many terrible and many good things. From hundreds of years of history of being a powerful country, it’s not hard to find shitty things to focus on, and that’s what propaganda does.
Bitch please, America has been wildly successful in undermining US reputation on social media.
Jist listening to one of your politicians talk in their own speech is enough.
Bitch please, America has been wildly successful in undermining US reputation on social media.
I mean that is true in that America has very popular self-loathing sentiments that most other countries don’t have.
Sounds like you’ve never hung out with the French.