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1: a decade ago I watched a robot chicken episode with a parody of Monk called Cork the autistic detective. You can probably guess the amount of nuance and sensitivity this portrayal had, I actually called my mom over to show it to her to see if she could help me understand why it made me so sad

2: just watched Good Time, featuring one of the Safdie brothers playing a disabled adult who at the end of the movie gets put in a kind of adult daycare group therapy, the movie as a whole is pretty grim with a downer ending but that aspect especially made me depressed

Important context is that I have autism, and from the end of 6th grade to graduation I went to a school for kids on the spectrum, ranging from high functioning like me to completely nonverbal, and I fucking hated it and the resulting effects and trauma are probably a big part of why I'm Like This today, but that's a story for another time maybe.

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 years ago

Content Warning: discussion of disability and addictionI feel the same way while watching any movie/show that portrays physical disability/serious injury/disease or addiction. There's never any nuance or anything, either the character recovers fully from their injuries with no ill feelings and goes back to how they were before or dies or ends up in a wheelchair. No in between, just either of those extremes. It's the same with addiction, either the person attends a few AA meetings and kicks the addiction effortlessly or they spiral into a viscous cycle of substance abuse and lose everything they have or die. No nuance, just either of those extremes.

As someone that's been though these kind of things, the reality of recovery/disability or fighting addiction is no where near as cut and dry as it's portrayed in pretty much any popular media. Literally any portrayal of it makes me have flashbacks to my past, feel tense or straight up depressed. Maybe I need to see someone about it, but still media portrayals of these kind of things are really bad a lot of the time.