Fictional characters we’d probably hate in real life

People seem fine onscreen. But imagine meeting a Frooti or a Geet in real life. You’d probable run? Yeah, me too. Films have their own deal. Characters in films have their own role to play. Either they own it, or they help the protagonists own it, carrying themselves to be the bystanders to the main role’s shining moment. We love those people. But then there are some who, for some reason, can be annoying. Surely, they play the leads in the films but imagining them being around us, we’d surely be annoyed. Michael Scott: Yeah, he always means well. And the character progressed really well. Yes, The Office was never the same without him. But the Michael Scott in the first few seasons was beyond annoying. Even the higher management subtly hinted on that. There, I said what I said. Bella Swan: There’s a sweet point where the vampire-obsessed new girl in school Bella Swan and her breathing through the mouth gets to you. Imagine sharing the table with a person whose utterly joylessness swoops around the entire table. Geet:Geet form Jab we Met takes home the loquacious award with her non-stop need to dispel very thought. If it sounds too hateful, it’s because that’s the way we mean it to sound. She offers sound advice, she has had her romantic ups and downs, but her cheerfulness is NOT contagious. It’s plain annoying. Ross Geller: Insecure, drab, boring, nerdy – just some of the things that describe Ross Geller. If his friends were not Chandler, Joey, his sister, his crush from high school and quirky Phoebe, who would it even be? As much celebrated as he is, he sure knows how to annoy someone by just even breathing. Chulbul Pandey: What else do you expect from a person who says stuff like “ Haramzaade se yaadaya, aajkalapkesasurjikaise hay?”. Imagine an ego maniac, obsessive person whose two facedness can ruin anyone’s day. He wakes up his brother just to ask if he is sleeping and tells him to go back to sleep. Why so annoying, bruv? Cher: Cher from Clueless is the doe-eyed elite girl clueless about love but the innocent façade slowly builds up to being annoying. Anyone else hates the way she talks? RachelFerrier: War of the Worldis not doubting a great movie. Spielberg’s visual effects in the movie? Chef’s Kiss. Rachel Burrier, a 11-year-old kid, who spends majority of the film screaming and yelling. If we’d be given an option to fight an alien tripod machines and die or run with Rachel to safety, we’d gladly take the fight.