People sounded differently in the past

What would you call the accent spoken by the Blue Fairy in Pinocchio?

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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-Atlantic_accent
youtube.com/watch?v=bXjU60a8dmI&t=156s&app=desktop
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Dominatrix

Mid-Atlantic
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-Atlantic_accent

spbp

charm school

Was the shot from Bladerunner 2049 meant to reflect this?

My grandfather had this accent he wasn’t educated I wouldn’t say it was wholly fake

Maybe he was just raised by the wireless, RP accents used to pop up all over the UK because of people learning it from radio and TV too.

t.soijak
Awabadubmba mug dweep blwade runnaaaaa!

I haven't seen 2049, curious about the shot because that's all I know from the film.

I’m American.

HOW DEEP THE RABBIT HOLE GOES

I figured that seeing as we were talking about an American accent

faggotnese

Bravo Villeneuve

top tier Mid-Atlantickino

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Gorgeous dont ruin it she was a tranny womxn bloke

Everyone has just gotten too used to the fake pseudo-midwestern accent Hollywood uses now. Very few people sound like that in real life but somehow we expect it in movies. The older accents that you hear in movies before 1960 exist. They just aren't common in movies and TV. The only regional accents that seem to exist now are New York, Chicago, and mish-mash Southern

Nyes, the mid-atlantic. Now, I do miss the mid-atlantic, I do indeed.

Also just generally amazing and comfy movies I still go back to all the time.

holy fucking shit mind blown

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It's an accent that literally only existed in hollywood movies and you can still hear it in stage plays

I talk to Americans daily for a job and you people sound pretty much identical to the movies, I don't know what you're on about.
It's actually somewhat surreal, because it's like I'm talking to a sitcom character sometimes.

Brave Nolan, brave

You know what I really missed is the Boston brahmin
youtube.com/watch?v=bXjU60a8dmI&t=156s&app=desktop

As a presumably non-American you can't really judge accents any better that I can tool around the UK and identify them all. The common ones in movies maybe, but the rest no. They'd all sound similar. This accent exists if you go to certain areas on the east coast

It's what people used to sound like when they had class.

Now every zoomerlennial speaks ebonics in a Tarantino character register.

no. the BF wasnt propsitiing him you fag, she was teliing him to take care of a wooden boy

Kino to my ears. I wish you people were still like this.
You have a point, but it sounds largely the same to me. It's not a good or a bad thing, it just is. Not to say I haven't heard different accents but the general one is almost the same as in the movies. The canadian I would say is the funniest one, they just pronounce certain words completely differently.

raimi etc

Non-Americans think the southern accent is the trashiest but in my opinion it's the NYC one.

I'd let the BF take care of my wooden boy

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what do you think about the cali accents?

One thing that has happened is that you have a few generations now that have been raised by TV and movies so that fake-Hollywood pretend midwestern accent fed back and taught the kids to speak that way. Probably similar to what someone mentioned earlier in the thread about RP popping up in kids in the UK.

Boston has the worst accent. There's not even a contest.

He's a thin guy

Philadelphia and South Jersey have a very distinct accent.

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Superficial and cheesy, if you're talking about the hard LA valley accent. If it's a woman it can be alluring but for all the wrong reasons. Otherwise it's not that different from the regular one.
Yeah, I've noticed that. It's basically taken from rap culture. I still think it's not such a common thing though, I rarely hear it. It's most noticeable with younger people from certain city areas.

It's only good if it has enough vocal fry to fry an elephant

For you

By rap culture I mean terms like "yall" and so on which are popular now. Twitter speak and so on.

I meant they are the only ones that exist in moves anymore. Sorry

Unfortunately Rap/hip hop culture is the new primary influence and kids all over the US are starting to speak like uneducated buffoons on purpose. It will have a lasting effect on the "average" or perceived neutral accent.

>sounded differently
Oh, they used a different method to sound? Or did you mean they sounded different, you American retard fuck? Your country is going to be a chaos of hell in a month - you're teeming with virus and you don't even know.

rent free

This really says a lot about society

I don't get it.

"Y'all" is not a "rap" word you buffoon. It's common vernacular in the south and many rural areas. While it's not proper english it's still an incredibly useful word and easy to adopt when you're hearing it a lot.

Not that user, any maybe "y'all" was a bad example, but there is absolutely a contamination of trashy urban slang happening with the wider vernacular in young people. Words and pronunciation (or lack thereof).

Damn bro

I don’t believe this.

The blue checkmark city libshits say y’all and deadass and folk and woke to sound black, this started years ago with s.m.h., salty, famalamadingdong, etc.

Was the hologram in BR not essentially doing the same thing? Telling K to take care of himself, for he is a good Joe. Is K also not a wooden boy?

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Other examples: big mood, clap back, and I’m here for it, slept on, any compound adjective ending in -ass.

really doubt it: their relationship is competely different for a start - I don't know what Villneuve would be trying to say by paying a homage to this scene.

Rare kino philly accent reporting in

Me, too. Also Life With Father and My Man Godfrey. I love William Powell.

Boston, here.

Gaynese