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Culture Blind

 Culture Blind
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FeatureClass
 Culture Blind
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Culture Blind
 Culture Blind
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CultureBlind
 Culture Blind
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Where a character displays a complete lack of understanding about culture, behaviour, social norms or other things that they should, by their own backstory and the world they live in, know. They don't have a plausible Fish out of Water excuse like Time Travel into the past or future, or just arriving on a different planet, or even another country — they should know this stuff already. However, due to the Rule of Perception, if the audiences don't know about it, someone has to explain it.
What's particularly odd about these characters is that they tend to never really absorb much culture even in-show. It's almost a form of Negative Continuity to keep them stuck there.
Like Ping Pong Naïveté, except instead of back-and-forth, it's stalled completely except when the character's in front of a camera. The alternative to As You Know, since it's bizarrely "As You Don't Know." See also Genre Blind, which is similar to Culture Blind except that it extends to a character's entire reality.
May be used when Deliberate Values Dissonance would be far more plausible.
The Amnesiac Hero is one way writers get around this. After all, it's okay for him not to know if he's forgotten, right?
Of course, people like this do exist in Real Life, although probably not to the extreme degree that they do in fiction; some people, for whatever reason, just don't get out much, listen to the radio, or watch the news. In addition, autistic people may not understand socially acceptable forms of behaviour due to the very nature of their conditions and the fact that societal norms are generally based on neurotypical norms.

Examples
 Culture Blind
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 Culture Blind
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 Culture Blind
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 Culture Blind
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 Culture Blind
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 Culture Blind
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 Culture Blind
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 Culture Blind
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 Culture Blind
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 Culture Blind
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 Culture Blind
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Dropped link to TooDumbToLive: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Culture Blind
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 Culture Blind
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Dropped link to lampshadehanging: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Culture Blind
processingUnknown
TheTamuli
 Culture Blind
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Conversed
 Culture Blind
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DBTropes
 Culture Blind / int_1139fe9c
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_1139fe9c
comment
Averted in Alley Oop. The titular caveman has been time traveling between his prehistoric world and the present day for years, and by now he is completely fluent in modern culture. This gets lampshaded whenever one of his caveman friends ends up time traveling with him and sees the modern world for the first time.
 Culture Blind / int_1139fe9c
featureApplicability
-1.0
 Culture Blind / int_1139fe9c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Alley Oop (Comic Strip)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_1139fe9c
 Culture Blind / int_1beda93b
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_1beda93b
comment
Riff from Sluggy Freelance apparently didn't know that people get weekends off from work. It's somewhat justified since he had never worked a 9-to-5 job before, but even so that seems like something he should have picked up from TV or something.
 Culture Blind / int_1beda93b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_1beda93b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Sluggy Freelance (Webcomic)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_1beda93b
 Culture Blind / int_22211d68
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_22211d68
comment
Bones: Another example, although less blatant, is Brennan. Although she's focused primarily on her work, she displays a remarkable ignorance of current culture, which is odd given that she clearly wasn't always like that (she's a Wonder Woman fan, likes classic rock, but still has no idea what's in any movie or TV show released in the last 20 years).
The novels were eventually justified. Apparently Brennan is so Culture Blind that she didn't realize people were reading her books for the sections of them that Angela wrote rather than her rigorous scientific accuracy.
Culture blind? Temperance Brennan is so dedicated to science and the intellect that she is Life blind, ignorant of some of the basic niceties and courtesies of human society. In one episode she and Booth enter an interrogation room to...well, interrogate, an obese woman. Booth remarks on a peculiar smell in the room and Brennan proceeds to tell him that it is coming off the woman in the room and is created by a fungus that grows in the fat folds of the morbidly obese, while standing within three feet of her. The subject of the verbal monograph is not amused, and Brennan is taken a bit aback because she was "only telling the truth." In another episode, Bones and Booth go to see a man about a case and find him engaged in a small outdoor religious ceremony (memorial service?). They pause before approaching the group to discuss the case - and further the plot - and as they do the group begins a prayer. When the plot has been sufficiently furthered Bones steps off to approach the man they're there to see and Booth grabs her arm - "Wait a minute, Bones." *points* "Praying?" Brennan gives him a look of complete oblivious confusion and says, "But we're not members."
This is especially strange since she is an anthropologist, meaning she studies cultures, both past and present. And yet she's completely ignorant of her own culture. When they go to New Jersey, she treats the locals like a backward tribe of some sort, claiming to have watched something on TV about this culture (i.e. Jersey Shore) and tries to put some of the "rituals" she saw to use. Booth is both confused and embarrassed.
In the case of the obese woman Bones is purposely being offensive, since they're trying to track down the woman's son, an escaped serial killer. They're hoping to upset him by bringing in his beloved smother, so any other offense is icing on the cake. However, most other times she's being obtusely offensive. It's like she thinks her observations are taking place on the other side of a One Way Mirror so she can't be heard or seen.
She's a PHYSICAL anthropologist, not a CULTURAL or SOCIAL anthropologist. There's a difference.
Brennan's cultural blindness could be explained by her implied disorder... which was eventually revealed to be an actual disorder, with her having Asperger's Syndrome.
 Culture Blind / int_22211d68
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_22211d68
featureConfidence
1.0
 Bones
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_22211d68
 Culture Blind / int_253d901c
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_253d901c
comment
Much like Ash, Atticus from the Pokémon fancomic Mokepon is generally clueless about how his world works. In his case, however, it's because he simply never cared about the whole "amazing, life-changing adventures and friendships" that his world revolves around.
 Culture Blind / int_253d901c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_253d901c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Mokepon (Webcomic)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_253d901c
 Culture Blind / int_30a5ebfd
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_30a5ebfd
comment
Naruto:
At least Naruto himself is a dumbass, but one wonders exactly what they've been studying for years prior to the beginning of the show since every single thing needs to be explained. Naruto didn't just skip classes, he put his ninja skills to use in order to escape in the middle of lessons. He also grew up as a social outcast. His lack of knowledge is in his case partially justified.
The other characters, though, have no excuse for their apparent lack of knowledge about the abilities of the other clans from their own village, which is most evident during the Chuunin Exam arc.
 Culture Blind / int_30a5ebfd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_30a5ebfd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Naruto (Manga)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_30a5ebfd
 Culture Blind / int_35e05f2a
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_35e05f2a
comment
In RWBY, Jaune Arc is completely ignorant of things every Huntsman should know, like Aura. It turns out that he lied about his past and has had no training at all before he arrived at Beacon Academy.
 Culture Blind / int_35e05f2a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_35e05f2a
featureConfidence
1.0
 RWBY (Web Animation)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_35e05f2a
 Culture Blind / int_4e45b093
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_4e45b093
comment
The Big Bang Theory: Sheldon Cooper. Although some of that could be because he's a) an example of Comedic Sociopathy and b) a long way along the Asperger Syndrome Diagnostic Scale.
When he refuses to buy Leonard a birthday present, Howard encourages Penny to tell Sheldon that it's a "non-optional social convention," at which point Sheldon happily capitulates.
 Culture Blind / int_4e45b093
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_4e45b093
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Big Bang Theory
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_4e45b093
 Culture Blind / int_5cec267a
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_5cec267a
comment
Datak Tarr in Defiance, a Castithan community and underworld leader in the titular town. He constantly views everything around him from his own culture's viewpoint and doesn't understand why humans don't act more like Castithans (who bathes alone?!) or treat him with more respect by virtue of his high caste. For reference, the events take place on Earth, meaning Datak should really learn the customs of the people whose homeworld he lives on.
 Culture Blind / int_5cec267a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_5cec267a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Defiance
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_5cec267a
 Culture Blind / int_6ac55ec7
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_6ac55ec7
comment
Dungeons & Dragons: Tritons are a kind of merfolk who are Lawful Good and spend most of their time battling extradimensional threats to the world's oceans. Unfortunately, since deep ocean isn't an environment well-known to other races, merfolk are unpleasantly surprised to find that no one from the surface has heard about or even cares about their (genuine) accomplishments despite it being obvious why they're unheard of.
 Culture Blind / int_6ac55ec7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_6ac55ec7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dungeons & Dragons (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_6ac55ec7
 Culture Blind / int_755e2357
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_755e2357
comment
In Noob, Omega Zell wants to become the next top player of the game, and part of his plan is to join his faction's top guild. However, he has several times shown to completely ignore the requirements to join beyond being level 100, such as actually learning high-level play strategies, having the best gear he can manage and being maxed out at the game's reputation system. There has been an occasion or two upon which his rival in all but name Gaea has shown to know more about these requirements than he does.
 Culture Blind / int_755e2357
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_755e2357
featureConfidence
1.0
 Noob (Franchise)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_755e2357
 Culture Blind / int_7e7fd1cc
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_7e7fd1cc
comment
The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas is about a nine-year-old German boy growing up in Nazi Germany who is so naive, he doesn't even know who Hitler is.
 Culture Blind / int_7e7fd1cc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_7e7fd1cc
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_7e7fd1cc
 Culture Blind / int_82439e64
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_82439e64
comment
The Office (US): Michael Scott from the American version could be this trope's poster child. His misunderstanding of other races and cultures is massive.
 Culture Blind / int_82439e64
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_82439e64
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Office (US)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_82439e64
 Culture Blind / int_86814e7d
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_86814e7d
comment
Final Fantasy X-2 encourages the player to explore the Bikanel Desert so as to learn the Al Bhed language. Ignoring the fact that, if you are a returning player, you had the chance to learn the language in the previous game, one of the main playable characters in this game is an Al Bhed and was previously established as fluent in the language!
 Culture Blind / int_86814e7d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_86814e7d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Final Fantasy X-2 (Video Game)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_86814e7d
 Culture Blind / int_877eac68
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_877eac68
comment
Similarly to Gino, Louise from The Familiar of Zero knows just as little about civilian life, as she comes from a noble family and lived either on their estate or attended a Wizarding School which is also exclusively for nobles who show little to no interest in the non-noble parts of the staff. This actually does come back to haunt her when she blows all her traveling money in a casino and has to take up a job as a waitress in a not-entirely-clean café/bar - and fails miserably at it.
 Culture Blind / int_877eac68
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_877eac68
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Familiar of Zero
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_877eac68
 Culture Blind / int_89e3395e
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_89e3395e
comment
Although alot of the characters in Deagle Nation are slightly oblivious of other cultures, Eli is so culture-blind that he barely seems to understand his own culture.
 Culture Blind / int_89e3395e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_89e3395e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Deagle Nation (Web Video)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_89e3395e
 Culture Blind / int_8fe1fe79
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_8fe1fe79
comment
Miaka from Fushigi Yūgi. Sure, she traveled into the past to ancient China... but some of her actions can't even be justified using that as an excuse. One example that stands out is in the beginning, when she was with Tamahome watching the Emperor's procession in the city. Tamahome jokes that in exchange for his help, he wants her to get him a jewel off the Emperor's hat. She then actually proceeds to run up to the Emperor's palanquin, yelling for the Emperor to give her a jewel from his hat, and proceeds to grab at the palanquin and break part of it. And she acts shocked when the soldiers grab her and attempt to execute her. Think about it for a second in equivalent terms of a modern-day society: She runs up to the prime minister's car, grabbing at the car door and breaking parts of it, while screaming demands for the PM to give her ¥50,000. Miaka must have been living under a rock all her life, because no ordinary high school student (who supposedly gets high marks) would think (when not under the influence) that that would be a good idea.
 Culture Blind / int_8fe1fe79
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_8fe1fe79
featureConfidence
1.0
 FushigiYugi
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_8fe1fe79
 Culture Blind / int_980fc865
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_980fc865
comment
In Mulan II, Mulan is shocked when she hears that three princesses have been betrothed in an arranged marriage. This shouldn't surprise her, as it is most likely one of the most normal things in the world where and when she lives, and her own marriage to Shang for love is probably a huge exception. Especially considering that the first film begins with Mulan flubbing her meeting with the Matchmaker in an attempt to get an arranged marriage herself. That's why fans don't really talk about the sequel.
 Culture Blind / int_980fc865
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_980fc865
featureConfidence
1.0
 Mulan II
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_980fc865
 Culture Blind / int_a4a6b86a
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_a4a6b86a
comment
Gino Weinberg of Code Geass knows little about civilian life being a clueless nobleman.
 Culture Blind / int_a4a6b86a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_a4a6b86a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Code Geass
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_a4a6b86a
 Culture Blind / int_a78cc92f
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_a78cc92f
comment
Characters in Chick Tracts never know anything about Christianity (usually even being ignorant of Jesus or the religion itself), even if they're from countries that are overwhelmingly Christian.
 Culture Blind / int_a78cc92f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_a78cc92f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Chick Tracts (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_a78cc92f
 Culture Blind / int_cae652c
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_cae652c
comment
In Hunter × Hunter, the first arc of the story has Gon and Killua understanding their world and culture just fine. And then the second arc comes... and all of a sudden, everyone except Gon and Killua know all about the techniques of Nen, Ren, Zen, etc. and have apparently known about it all along. So they end up having to start from the beginning, learning the basics and everything about it. It makes one wonder how in the world neither of them (who were actually considered strong in the first arc) were ever taught anything about it. It especially doesn't make sense in Killua's case, since he was supposed to come from a super powerful family of assassins.
Justified, Nen is a closely guarded secret, learning it exists and how to use it is part of the hunter trial secret test. Killua is also justified in not knowing about it because this is a world in which Charles Atlas Superpower are a real thing for a person's physical strength as well as their Nen.
 Culture Blind / int_cae652c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_cae652c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hunter × Hunter (Manga)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_cae652c
 Culture Blind / int_d5ddd6c1
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_d5ddd6c1
comment
Ash Ketchum from Pokémon: The Series knows surprisingly little about Pokémon during the Kanto and Unova seasons, considering that the entire world is obsessed with them, and he's more obsessed with them than anybody else. Notably, Iris calls him out on this quite a bit during his "reset" stay in Unova.
 Culture Blind / int_d5ddd6c1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_d5ddd6c1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pokémon: The Series
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_d5ddd6c1
 Culture Blind / int_d842d75c
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_d842d75c
comment
Fantasy of Utter Ridiculousness: Alice realizes this about Coop when he, not only as a visitor to her home but also to Gensokyo as a whole, gave her something to drink instead of the other way around.
 Culture Blind / int_d842d75c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_d842d75c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fantasy of Utter Ridiculousness / Fan Fic
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_d842d75c
 Culture Blind / int_e1ee8456
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_e1ee8456
comment
This is especially strange since she is an anthropologist, meaning she studies cultures, both past and present. And yet she's completely ignorant of her own culture. When they go to New Jersey, she treats the locals like a backward tribe of some sort, claiming to have watched something on TV about this culture (i.e. Jersey Shore) and tries to put some of the "rituals" she saw to use. Booth is both confused and embarrassed.
In the case of the obese woman Bones is purposely being offensive, since they're trying to track down the woman's son, an escaped serial killer. They're hoping to upset him by bringing in his beloved smother, so any other offense is icing on the cake. However, most other times she's being obtusely offensive. It's like she thinks her observations are taking place on the other side of a One Way Mirror so she can't be heard or seen.
She's a PHYSICAL anthropologist, not a CULTURAL or SOCIAL anthropologist. There's a difference.
Brennan's cultural blindness could be explained by her implied disorder... which was eventually revealed to be an actual disorder, with her having Asperger's Syndrome.
 Culture Blind / int_e1ee8456
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_e1ee8456
featureConfidence
1.0
 Jersey Shore
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_e1ee8456
 Culture Blind / int_ef6880c5
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_ef6880c5
comment
Princess Elodie of Long Live the Queen starts out with no knowledge of basically anything, despite having been away at boarding school for several years. Though her lacking royal etiquette is explained by said school having placed little emphasis on its students' social classes, that still doesn't excuse her cluelessness about her own country's history and geography.
 Culture Blind / int_ef6880c5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_ef6880c5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Long Live the Queen (Visual Novel)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_ef6880c5
 Culture Blind / int_f565604d
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_f565604d
comment
Exists in Eyeshield 21, as the anime is about American football, something relatively unknown in Japan. One big example is a news reporter who came to the Devil Bats vs. White Knights game solely to cover athlete/model Haruto Sakuraba, and kept asking questions about how things worked. And on more than occasion an outsider has mistaken the game for rugby. Additionally, NASA Aliens receiver Jeremy Watt is an Occidental Otaku whose actual knowledge of Japanese language and culture is extremely limited, and often hilariously flawed. The fact that it's set in Japan justifies a lot of the explanations given in the story. The commentators, for example, are mostly there to explain basic rules to the audience (in-story), who often mistake the game for rugby. Had the story taken place in America or been aimed at Americans, having to explain something as basic as "what is a touchdown" would seem downright insulting. Jeremy Watt, however, is just a Cloudcuckoolander.
 Culture Blind / int_f565604d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_f565604d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Eyeshield 21 (Manga)
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_f565604d
 Culture Blind / int_f6c05e8e
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_f6c05e8e
comment
Friends: Probably a case of Flanderization as he became dumber as the series went on, but Joey seems to display a shocking ignorance of how anything actually works in the entertainment industry, despite being a professional actor with many different roles over the course of the series.
 Culture Blind / int_f6c05e8e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_f6c05e8e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Friends
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_f6c05e8e
 Culture Blind / int_fd289bb0
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_fd289bb0
comment
Revolution: Granted, Charlie Matheson has been purposefully kept sheltered for most of her life and their settlement is supposedly out of the way...but how does someone spend 15 years growing up in a post-Blackout world and still not fully grasp how things work there? Fortunately, she has come a long way since then.
 Culture Blind / int_fd289bb0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_fd289bb0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Revolution
hasFeature
Culture Blind / int_fd289bb0
 Culture Blind / int_ff9ab17f
type
Culture Blind
 Culture Blind / int_ff9ab17f
comment
Star Trek: The Next Generation: Classic example is Data. Although his backstory has him serving in Starfleet for almost two decades after he was discovered and before he's assigned to the ship, apparently no one bothered to talk to him for all that time because it's only when he arrives on the Enterprise that he starts learning about things like aphorisms, clichés, common sayings, human social behaviour and the like.
Data, at least, was somewhat justified in the Expanded Universe; in the prequel novel The Buried Age, Picard discovers him working as a records clerk in a backwater spacestation, where he's largely treated as a machine, not a person, so no-one does talk to him, except to make specific requests. (That still doesn't explain how he got through the Academy without ever hearing the phrase "wild goose chase", of course.)
Worf, as well, should act as human as Riker. He's raised among humans, knows human values and ethics, but acts as if he's fresh off the boat from Qo'noS most of the time. While it doesn't excuse outright ignorance, a lot of his failing to fit in is implied to be overcompensation for just that. He is described as having spent much of his time growing up embracing his heritage and trying to be as Klingon as possible in Human society. That combined with his formative years being among Klingons, makes it pretty reasonable. Guinan hangs a lampshade on this in one episode, telling him outright that most Klingons do not act as stiff and stoic as he does.
His stiff nature is itself lampshaded and explained in a later episode of Deep Space Nine, when he explains that as a youth living among humans, he accidentally killed another boy with a head-butt during a soccer match. It was accepted as an accident by everyone involved, but he realized how frail humans were compared to him and decided that to live among them, he had to always stay in control of himself.
Alternatively, his attitude is fairly standard for a stereotypical Russian, and his adoptive parents are indeed Russian. Although the particular Russians that adopted him, are still nothing like him.
 Culture Blind / int_ff9ab17f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Culture Blind / int_ff9ab17f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Star Trek: The Next Generation
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Culture Blind / int_ff9ab17f

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Culture Blind
processingCategory2
Contrived Stupidity Tropes
 Culture Blind
processingCategory2
Stupidity Tropes
 Chick Tracts (Comic Book) / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 Fantasy of Utter Ridiculousness / Fan Fic / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 SHIT (Fanfic) / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 Seven Days in Sunny June (Fanfic) / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 Beyond Paradise / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 God's Not Dead / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 Left Behind (2014) / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 The Funhouse Massacre / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 Time Changer / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 BoersAndBernstein
seeAlso
Culture Blind
 Bottom / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 Defiance / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 Esperanza Mía / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 Falling Skies / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 Long Live the Queen (Visual Novel) / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 Minotaur Hotel (Visual Novel) / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 Hardly Working (Web Video) / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 Erfworld (Webcomic) / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 Friendship is Dragons (Webcomic) / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind
 China, IL / int_709fe8ac
type
Culture Blind