Burn wrote:You know the truth about yourself and that's all that matters, not the opinion of some idiot who believes what they see on a fictional tv show.
Wow, the last thing I would have expected to hear from Burn is something so delusionally optimistic that it could have come from a fortune cookie.
I must disagree, and say that unless we're branching into deep spiritual/enlightenment matters, how others perceive you is far more important than how you perceive yourself. Issues of sanity, morality, etc. are societally constructed and enforced concepts, so what matters is how society sees you. Usually society's appraisal of you and your own appraisal are very similar. The two typically only deviate when the individual is insane/delusional or when the society is in some way prejudiced against the individual.
So, the problem here is, many of the posters in this thread are afraid that this TV show will implant prejudicial attitudes in viewers heads, leading to discriminatory behavior against toy collectors. They are also concerned because 'idiots who believe what they see on some fictional (popular) TV show (that espouses to use realistic crime-solving methods)' actually describes a large portion of the Western population. And Cognitive Miser Theory would suggest that their fears are justified. Most people take in information and accept it with little or no critical evaluation, especially if they absorb it while watching TV.
However, one TV show episode that won't air more than a dozen times in as many months simply does not have the kind of impact they're afraid of. If this was a consistent message broadcast repeatedly in the series, or worse, in several different TV series, then we'd definately have something to worry about.
Such is not the case, fortunately.
All the logic in the world can't prevent me from feeling slightly offended though. As others have stated, the crime in question is simply not something you should joke about, at least not in American culture. It's effectively an unparalleled insult here.