Alternative wrote:
It p*sses me off to look at how they portray the aspie. The aspie in TVland has no emotion, speaks in a monophonic voice, cannot take care of his/herself and doesnt understand anything anyone says to him. I've watched an aspie character in differetn programme and it is the same thing.
I can understand the monotone; I used to be that way myself, until I started deliberately copying inflections I heard from other people.
But not understanding what other people say... that doesn't make any sense. I can see if it had to do with figures of speech; some Aspies have trouble with those. But AS is defined partly by having no speech delay... meaning understanding and use of speech, even if it's formal and uninflected.
But then, they also portray ADHD as "incorrigible brat" and depression as "somebody who just got dumped and who'll commit suicide at the drop of a hat" (and "drop of a hat" is a figure of speech, and I'm an Aspie, and take that, TV producers!) and Down Syndrome as "adult kid who is unfailingly sweet and apparently has no negative emotions"... Not to mention that they still can't get "schizophrenia" and "multiple personality disorder" straight.
Prejudice against and stereotyping of mental illness and disability is still rampant... and socially acceptable, too!