People Are Sharing Absolutely Ridiculous Inaccuracies About Their Jobs They've Noticed From Movies And TV Shows, And I'm Wondering Who Let Hollywood Get Away With This

Have you ever watched a movie or TV show where a character has the same job as you, but they've gotten the details about what the job is actually like all wrong?

Fox / Via giphy.com

I recently asked the BuzzFeed Community to share examples of the ways movies and TV shows have portrayed their careers inaccurately, and after reading through these responses, Hollywood definitely has some explaining to do.

CBS / Via giphy.com

Here are 16 details about people's jobs that movies and TV shows just can't seem to get right:

1."Any movie that involves a bakery. It’s always so romantic and has a woman with perfect hair and make up, elegantly stirring a bowl of something. In reality, it’s 4 a.m. starts, the ovens make it hot and uncomfortable, you have your hair up in a bun (sometimes a hairnet), and you’re lifting 20kg bags of flour, sugar, etc. — usually all while being yelled at by a small business owner who is under stress to make a profit. It’s a satisfying job but no way near as glamorous as people think."

Sony Music / Via giphy.com

Jstsamjake2020

2."I work in archaeology, and I’ve argued for years that Indiana Jones is an absolutely crap archeologist. You never see him measure or map anything. I’ve never seen him put in a unit. He’s not out there submitting site forms to the SHPO (State Historic Preservation Office). I’ve never even seen him photograph an artifact in situ (before it's been moved from its original location). It’s all just grab and run, which in modern archaeology makes you a looter, not an archaeologist."

Paramount / Via giphy.com

OMGitsaClaire

3."Being a lawyer for many is legit looking at paper all day. Combing through documents is a huge part of the job. The courtroom is a very tiny part of the job and many lawyers who work on cases never go to court."

20th Century Fox / Via giphy.com

Shermy1

"Legally Blonde does not accurately portray law school. There is a lot less time for fun and personal growth, and a lot more sitting in the library for all hours of the night reading hundreds of pages of material. Similarly, no movie or TV show about lawyers accurately portrays our jobs. They’re a lot more boring. No one would ever want to watch a tv show about my job as a corporate lawyer." —megz

"Every time someone is like “I want to be [a] partner by 30," I’m like me too, girl. If only." —kombuche

4."I worked in local news (I was a producer) for a number of years. [The] media, ironically enough, likes to portray journalists as slimy people who are looking for ways to deliberately take things out of context to make a story more interesting or to screw people over, when that's not the case."

NBC / Via giphy.com

"There are so many laws, not to mention ethical guidelines, in regards to journalism. To get my bachelor's degree in journalism, everyone in that major had to take a 400-level class that was just about media law and ethics. In the station I worked at, we always were sure to give equal exposure to all sides of any issue we were reporting on, especially if it was political.

Journalists are genuinely trying to give the audience/readers the most factual and unbiased information they can. Any opinions mentioned in the story must come from the people being interviewed, not the reporter. and they can't just take things out of context either. Any journalist who did that would have a bunch of legal repercussions. That's why libel rules exist." —andirants

5."I work in a lab. The lack of safety shown in TV shows is astounding. I work with toxic chemicals and I literally always wear gloves and safety glasses at a minimum."

Netflix / Via giphy.com

Shauna Braun

6."Don’t get me started on nurses. The only show that got it kinda right was Scrubs. Doctors don’t ambulate our patients. We work our butts off taking care of multiple patients, knowing everything about them, their diagnoses, meds, vitals, and assessments. We are highly skilled and trained, and no one ever shows that."

NBC / Via giphy.com

Megan

"Especially on Grey's Anatomy. Yes, the doctors do the surgery, but everything they show them doing is a lot of nursing work. Doctors don't do any of that. It's like the nurses don't exist in their world." —Fortuneandglory

7."I work in disaster relief and response. Any time a show wants to portray the aftermath of a fire, the hallways are clear of debris, and there are chunks of stuff neatly placed around. In a real home fire, there's debris, broken glass, and standing water everywhere."

Hulu / Via giphy.com

elinumber2

8."Working a job that pays just a little over minimum wage. I barely have any money to spare, or time and energy. This is directed at literally all rom-coms or movies where the main character works a low wage job and still lives a lavish lifestyle."

NBC / Via giphy.com

greenes13

"I worked two low-wage jobs while living in California. I couldn't make ends meet with two jobs. I hate movies that show characters living well on one low wage job, it is a lie that allows kids to think that is real life." —palmerd45

9."Being an early childhood educator is not the same as a babysitter. Shows like How I Met Your Mother spit in the face of how difficult and necessary our job is."

NBC / Via giphy.com

rach_g_l

"Any movie that involves child care and any kind of adventurous plotline (Mary Poppins, Nanny McPhee) or movies like Daddy Day Care where it depicts the children trashing the place. I can tell you as an Early Childhood Educator, as fun as it would be to dance around on top of roofs and whatnot, that's definitely unsafe and could get us in a lot of trouble. Also, we would never allow classrooms to get 'trashed,' as it is a safety hazard." —aries97

10."Production cars have been predominantly fuel-injected, NOT carbureted, since the early '90s. You couldn't even buy ANY carbureted consumer vehicle in America after a 1995 model year, because they literally didn't make them anymore. And yet, whenever someone is poking at a (generally late-model) misbehaving car or truck on a TV show or movie, they frequently end up saying, 'Ah, just like I thought: it's the carburetor.' Buddy, if there's a carburetor on your 2016 car, you've got bigger problems than you think."

The WB / Via giphy.com

melissan40168c557

11."Social workers, counselors, [and] therapists don’t sleep with our patients or get super intertwined in their lives. Every time this is portrayed, it’s incredibly frustrating! 99.99% of us are ethical people who know how to set boundaries and remain professional."

HBO / Via giphy.com

Thisissterling

12."I’m a high school teacher. I get that there’s a need for drama to make good TV, but I HATE that plot lines surrounding student/teacher dynamics so often portray inappropriate, predatory, or just really fucking weird behavior on the part of the fictional teacher. I do not want to sleep with my students. They are kids! I also don’t want to be their best friend or be overly involved in their lives. Again, they are kids! I have friends my own age!"

Freeform / Via giphy.com

"At the end of a long day, the very last thing I want to do is see a student in my free time. I hide from them if I spot them at the store, you know? I love my students, and that’s why healthy boundaries are absolutely nonnegotiable! I wish Hollywood wasn’t so fond of making teachers look like perverts or people whose social/personal life revolves around a bunch of teenagers." —Hannah27

13."Secretaries are not all blonde bombshells who sleep with the boss. We're also not just there so the business has someone pretty to charm the clients."

AMC / Via giphy.com

SpikeyBlue

14."I am an in-home caregiver. In the movies, they show all caregivers always caring for bed-ridden patients or patients in a vegetative or catatonic state. None of the people I care for are like that. They are pretty lively most of the time, even feisty at times."

Fox / Via giphy.com

palmerd45

15."I’m a bartender. You don’t shake a damn martini. For the love of all that is holy, stir it."

TV Land / Via giphy.com

mattywes101

Anything else that movies or TV shows just get plain wrong about your career come to mind? Let us know in the comments!