I'm guessing there was quite a time lapse between when he first got to the scene and when he filmed it.Obviously happy for her, him and his family.
But it feels weird that the first reaction is to film and post it than console his daughter who is in obvious trauma.
I don't see any emergency vehicles, doubt it was that long even on a rural road.I'm guessing there was quite a time lapse between when he first got to the scene and when he filmed it.
Unless he's just the shittiest parent, I would hope he'd make sure his daughter was ok and not in hysterics before taking a video of the scene.I don't see any emergency vehicles, doubt it was that long even on a rural road.
Don't get me wrong, the last thing I'd be thinking about was filming the aftermath of it.I don't see any emergency vehicles, doubt it was that long even on a rural road.
Unless he's just the shittiest parent, I would hope he'd make sure his daughter was ok and not in hysterics before taking a video of the scene.
Many on this board grew up in a very rural area. When I messed up my pickup in high school, I called my dad. He was there within 20 minutes. Since I was ok and nobody else was involved, cops were never called.
If you look at Gibson County, it's not the most populated area, so I doubt there's a sizable police force in the area. I assume cops got involved eventually given the damage to the guard rail and clean-up involved, but they may not have been contacted until the father got there and made sure everything was ok (as could be).
Attacking the dad is a weird thing to take out of this video.
What did I miss? She is sitting in the truck that he drove to the scene in and she isn't crying when he opens the door. She starts to get emotional as he's talking, but she looks fine. Making a big production out of filming a scene he is clearly planning on posting to social media is not a choice I would make, but I would have definitely taken some pictures at that point.Saying "it feels weird" that his first thought is to film/post to social media is hardly an attack IMO. It's a valid point - that'd be the last thing on most dad's minds when their daughter is still crying sitting right behind the wreckage.
The entire post said "But it feels weird that the first reaction is to film and post it than console his daughter who is in obvious trauma." There was an implication that the dad put her in the car and immediately started filming this before caring about her safety. In reality, I don't think we have any idea of the time frame between getting out there and taking and posting this video. It wasn't like she was still in the upside down car when he recorded the video.Saying "it feels weird" that his first thought is to film/post to social media is hardly an attack IMO. It's a valid point - that'd be the last thing on most dad's minds when their daughter is still crying sitting right behind the wreckage.
But doesn’t doing the “reveal” drama make it seem like he wanted a viral video?The entire post said "But it feels weird that the first reaction is to film and post it than console his daughter who is in obvious trauma." There was an implication that the dad put her in the car and immediately started filming this before caring about her safety. In reality, I don't think we have any idea of the time frame between getting out there and taking and posting this video. It wasn't like she was still in the upside down car when he recorded the video.
That being said, I don't take any value of posting on social media (outside of CF) and would never post what this guy did. I thought how he intentionally tugged at your heartstrings before his emotional "reveal" that his daughter was ok had a reality tv/manifested drama vibe to it.
I'm ok going after his social media posting style, but the comments made it seem like he cared more about the video than his daughter, which seemed presumptuous.
100%. That's why I said what I did in my post.But doesn’t doing the “reveal” drama make it seem like he wanted a viral video?