A longtime member of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association was just dismissed.
Harry Potter got involved in some of the most dangerous and reckless moments ever. He should've died or been expelled quite often.
It’s weird how Draco Malfoy has scores of fangirls on his side when he was really just a big brat who kept on getting lucky due to his father’s influence or because of dumb luck. In actuality, he was a pretty terrible person, and his actions in the Harry Potter series reflect that.
There has never been a more rebellious trio than the friends we saw on Harry Potter. Each one of the three broke rules on a frequent basis, and did so on individual terms, too. They were always spared, though, because their rule-breaking helped in denying Voldemort (or some other factor).
On Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the titular heroine sacrifices a lot for her calling. For most teenage girls, high school means boys, parties, and trips to the mall. As the Slayer, Buffy doesn't have this luxury. Nor does she have a good reputation. Thrown out of her old school for arson—she was killing a horde of vampires—Buffy arrives at Sunnydale High, already labeled a juvenile delinquent.
Hermione Granger is an all-star student, the likes of which Hogwarts has never seen. She has an insatiable thirst for knowledge, always finishes her assignments early and, in her third year, took every elective offered to her. When she is first introduced to the Harry Potter world, Hermione comes across as a bit of a prim and proper know-it-all. At the beginning of the series, Hermione stated that expulsion from Hogwarts is a fate worse than death. One would think that an academic as serious as Hermione would be put into the Ravenclaw house, where book smarts are the pinnacle of importance.
In the Harry Potter series, the main character, Harry himself, is a little bit chaotic. He does everything for the greater good, of course, and always saves the day in his end but some of his methods are pretty questionable by authority standards.