Yeah, Batman just liked to mess with our heads.

And here I thought I was the only one:

For those of you who don’t know what this is about, you were apparently doing your homework or something equally unimportant when the rest of us were watching “Perchance to Dream.” That, of course, is the now-infamous episode of Batman: The Animated Series where the Caped Crusader gets stuck in a Mad Hatter-induced dream world. Ol’ Brucey didn’t realize he was dreaming, however, until a crucial point where he attempted to read a newspaper (9:35 in this clip)—and the text was jumbled beyond all recognition. In the climax of the episode, Bruce gives us this encapsulated science lesson:

“That’s because reading is the function of the right-side of the brain, while dreams come from the left-side. It’s impossible to read something in a dream.”

One of the things that sets Batman apart from a bunch of other superheroes is that he’s supposed to be a detective (one of his “official” nicknames is “World’s Greatest Detective”), so when Mr. Wayne dishes out a nugget like this, his fans assume they’re being taught something that’s… well… true. The show left us young viewers under the impression that you really couldn’t read text when you were dreaming. Which meant that when I later had dreams where I could read, I took it to mean that I was special or had some sort of above-average right/left brain connection.

And now, finally, after years of bewilderment and self-doubt, my gullibility has been immortalized in a webcomic.

3 thoughts on “Yeah, Batman just liked to mess with our heads.

  1. Ha! Classic!

    Yeah, I bought into that one too. Even got into a fight with somebody over it once, as I recall…

    So, next you’ll be telling me that a swim in toxic sludge would likely kill you outright, without making your hair green…

  2. Wow, yeah… I’m so glad I’m not the only one that bought into that hook line and sinker. I think I may have argued the point too, actually… Damn kids shows, causing so many fights!

    Wait, swimming in toxic sludge DOESN’T just turn your hair green? …I… have to go.

  3. It’s got me so jaded now! I mean, I want to like Lie To Me, but I just can’t buy any of the “science” in that show. (Case in point: if there’s these “universal indicators” that give away our emotions–and we can’t cover them up–how could actors possibly emulate such things with any degree of accuracy? Wouldn’t their own “I’m just acting” thoughts subconsciously give them away?)

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