A corollary to this - a friend told me that most of the time the water in sprinkler systems is not sparkling clean like it’s portrayed in the movies, but that it’s kinda dirty. So, when you see people running through indoor sprinkler water, they should be getting filthy.
I guess it depends on where you live. But in my experience, the vast majority of x-rays are now digital, and are displayed on computer monitors. If copies of an x-ray need to be send to a doctor, most often they email a digital image or send a file on a disc, rather than developing a x-ray film. So maybe some doctors office have light boxes on the wall even if they aren’t used very often - they just didn’t remove them since they might be needed now and then.
That delay between writing a book and publishing it depends on what the book is being written about. Books can be rushed out pretty quickly if the publishers desire it (a particular subject becomes a hot media topic, they can have a book out in a matter of weeks.) An “acquaintance” of mine actually makes his living by writing cheapy biographies of recently deceased celebrites. Basically, when a famous person dies, he tosses together a book-length overview of their career and it gets rushed out to bookstores. When Michael Jackson & Farrah Fawcett died, he had separate books on each one of them out in stores in less than a week.
Also, the old cliche about the studio camera running may have been ridiculously un-true many years ago. But in this youtube age, it happens quite a lot. Mel Gibson calling an interviewer an asshole, or Seth Green having a meltdown at the Robot Chicken studios are pretty well known examples.
An age-old chestnut: The bar-room fight in which someone is tossed through a plate glass window - and gets up and walks away. Back when I was in college, some kid actually did get shoved through a bar-front window. He had massive lacerations over his entire body and basically was dead before he hit the ground.
I don’t know if it’s true, but I could see this as probable.
Think about it – the water is sitting in the pipes. It doesn’t circulate – it’s not part of the building’s water system. If it corrodes the pipes, sitting there year after year, the water fills with rust.
Look at the water coming out of fire hydrants when they flush the hydrants – it’s brownish-orange, for precisely that reason.
So the water from sprinklers has a pretty good chance of being brownish-orange dirty water, at first. But as soon as the rest of the reservoir kicks in, it probably goes clear pretty fast. And a modern system, with PVC piping, probably wouldn’t be dirty at all (assuming they use PVC for fire-control water. Would they do that with pipes that might melt?)
Significant rust would clog the sprinkler heads. I suppose a small amount of rust could happen and is no big deal but ‘filthy’ water is unlikely. The one and only time I’ve seen a fire sprinkler go off the water was clean.
Yeah, a kid got pushed through a big window like that when I was in high school, and it didn’t kill him, but he did have to go to the ER and get a ton of stitches. It was not pretty.
Two characters are standing together. One sees something scary/amazing/or otherwise remarkable. He stands there, eyes wide, mouth agape, speechless.
So what does his partner do? Does he look to see the cause of this reaction? Nope. Instead, he stares at the other guy’s shocked face!!! It is only when shocked guy holds up his trembling arm and points at the monster/carnage/whatever that his buddy turns his gaze outward.
mmm
The rust needn’t be in big clumps. The rusty water that comes out of the fire hydrants (or household plumbing, for that matter, when it’s been worked on) looks merely discolored – the rust particles are pretty small, and unlikely to clog the sprinkler outlets, which are, after all, made pretty large to let lots of water out quickly.
And it wouldn’t invariably happen. One data point does not a rule make.
I don’t know, but in a house with old plumbing that I used to live in, the bathtub water would run very clearly brown/red-brown for several seconds if it hadn’t been turned on for just days.
And then another time my apartment in an older building had flooding from the bathroom of the unit above and it was also brown. At first I was so disgusted I wanted to die, but then I found out it was just rusty/dirty pipe water, not sewage.
Somebody should have explained the difference between concealment and cover. Concealment is good, but cover is better. One of the few examples of Hollywood getting this right was in Terminator: The Sarah Connors Chronicles where a upholstered chair that shielded someone from bullets was later revealed to have been lined with armor.
Covered in other threads but with rare exception (Australian films), they never get the idea of a crescent moon right. If it is evening in the northern hemisphere (locale for bif majority of films), the crescent moon should have its open end on the left, facing east, away from the sun. Only in the early mornings, and when the moon is waning should it appear with the open end on the right. I’ve seen loads of kids movies where kids are out on the porch in the evening, having a conversation and the moon appears like it does at 4 in the morning.
Even worse is if they have a star twinkle in the dark portion of the crescent moon -as if that part of the moon isn’t there.
Some minor nitpicks: In The Corbomite Maneuver, Kirk bluffs that the Enterprise has a built-in device which will not only destroy the ship but contaminate a large region of space for several years. It’s a big fib, but useful enough that it’s used again in The Deadly Years, to trick some Romulan attackers into backing off. In The Doomsday Machine, the Constellation’s badly damaged impulse engines (“Aye. In her shape, it’s hard to keep her from blowing”) are allowed to destruct. And in Let That Be Your Last Battlefield, after the Enterprise has been hijacked ?five? times in previous episodes, Starfleet evidently decided that a self-destruct capability was a good idea, but it required a lengthy procedure in which the senior officers had to agree that yes, they’re really, really, really, really, really, really sure they want to do it.
Whether the crescent moon looks like ) or like ( depends on which hemisphere (northern/southern) and which phase (waxing or waning), but not on time of day.