And if it doesn't talk it's not a parrot right? Too many pirate movies and fairy tales...

One that I really hate is how most depictions of parrots lump all species into one green universal hybrid that represents not one kind of parrot. And I will be the first to admit that up until about 2 years ago, I really had no idea about anything about parrots. I blame the education system. Little kids learn about cat and dogs throughout school and social life but there is nothing about parrots. I'm not even saying that they need an in depth education but there are all these "educational" cartoons that could teach a little more about it. Instead of having some fake hybridization of all parrots they could have a character that is a specific kind and say so.
Something people don't realize but when they are comparing an Amazon to a Cockatoo, the taxonomic spread between the two is about as distant as between a cat and a dog! The order Psittaciformes parallels the order Carnivora of which cats and dogs are both part of. I don't think people think of dogs/cats as really closely related and neither are some parrots. With some 300+ species of parrots, it's kind of ridiculous to merge them together all like that. As a kid I knew about cats, dogs, and parrots. I never knew about different kinds and I've seen pictures of Amazons vs. Macaws but never gave it much thought. The movies/cartoons probably only made me understand parrots less by confusing me with different kinds all being blanketly called "parrots." Considering that there are millions of people who keep them as pets, it's a bit ridiculous how little known they are. I wish I would have learned about them sooner.
Now I still have not gotten a straight answer from anyone whether or not a cockatoo is a parrot at all. Are parrots strictly Psittacidae or all Psittaciformes are parrots? I hear cockatoos being called parrots all the time, but technically are they or not? Anyone really know the answer?