One Piece Film: Red - Dir: Gorō Taniguchi - Aug 6, 2022
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Be respectful when filming or taking pictures in public.
It's one thing if you're filming or taking a picture of a busy tourist attraction where it's unavoidable that some of the crowd is going to be in your picture or video. But it's another thing to intentionally take a picture or video with the intent of capturing someone doing something you find funny or embarrassing, without their consent, with the purpose of mocking them or having "funny" content.
First of all, most people are going to rightfully feel like it's a violation of their boundaries to be intentionally filmed or photographed without their consent. It's also just bullying behavior to take a picture or video of someone with the intention of mocking or ridiculing them.
Some people might think it's harmless if the other person never finds out they're being filmed or photographed, but it's still heavily disrespectful regardless of whether or not they find out. And you can't ever be certain it won't get back around to them.
And some people think "it's all in good fun" or "we're laughing with them, not at them" but if it's someone you barely know, or don't know at all, you can't know how it's actually going to make them feel.
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The nicest thing I read today was an article about the “supporting cast of dogs” in Jacques Tati’s film Mon Oncle, who just “hurry on their doggy business” in various scenes (“They don't have an important role in the plot; they're just there, checking things out.”) They weren’t trained, they were stray dogs the production took from the pound and their job in the film was to be stray dogs, and at the end of the filming the production was going to send them back to the pound but Tati put an ad in the paper like “who wants to adopt these cool movie star dogs?” and they were flooded with requests and all the dogs found homes.
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