likewise, releasing gas through an air vent to knock out a room full of people.
From what I understand anesthesiology is a very complex field. Dosage has to be carefully tailored to a particular individual. There is no reliable and safe knockout gas that can just be released into a space.
Releasing gas into a room might send one person to sleep, overdose another, make another one dizzy, cause another one to vomit, and not affect another at all.
I can tell you from personal experience, that if you get someone who is an inveterate insomniac, used to taking a lot of crap just to be able to sleep every night, what will knock out everyone else in the room won’t touch the insomniac, other than something that reduces the oxygen content in the room, but that is dicey if you eventually want them all awake again.
In that particular case it may have been an acceptable solution. Remember, this happened in Russia. They were unlikely to wait out the terrorists and the terrorists had enough explosives to kill everybody in the place. In much of the world this would not have been done as quickly as Russia chose to act if it was considered an alternative at all. But considering where it happened and who was involved the end result was not the worst possible outcome even though far from the best.
I don’t work in law enforcement, so I don’t know if this is something that never happens in real life or not – do real life detectives ever put up a big bulletin board with photographs of all their suspects and their associates, with notes describing possible motives and other evidence against them, and pieces of string indicating relationships between different people? This of course doesn’t only apply to police detectives, although you do see it on cop shows, but also to amateur detectives, and conspiracy theorists.
Though at least 99% of passenger cars can be made to have windows that can be locked (obvious) and doors that cannot be opened from the inside, just the divider is not common. I don’t think most people are aware that back doors can be locked, except parents of inquisitive children. There’s a switch on the inner edge of your door where the hinge is.
Also legal dramas in Los Angeles featuring “classic” courtrooms with richly coffered wood panelng, sconces and other decorative touches. IRL L.A. lost all of that either through earthquakes or through rapid population growth requiring old courthouses to be replaced by larger buildings. However, they might have some now that the old Hall Of Justice has been restored and reopened.
In television shows set in hospitals, the doctors invariably wear white coats with a pen in their top pocket. If the show is supposed to be in current times, it’s quite dated. Most all doctors I have seen lately are in office attire, often shirts and ties but no coat. And the pen? Whatever for? They now truck a laptop around with them. When’s the last time you saw a doctor write something with a pen?
Yesterday- at my cardiologist’s office . Who apparently has his assistants print out part of my electronic medical record for him to write on and I assume they then enter his comments into the medical record. He’s also the only doctor I see regularly who wears ordinary office attire including a jacket ( yesterday it was black pants and a navy jacket. Every other doctor I see (either in an office or a hospital) wears either a white coat or scrubs.
OK maybe results may vary by setting and/or hospital practice. Some of the older docs may not be computer friendly and get printouts to mark on. My experience that docs never wear white coats or use pens may be atypical.
I don’t assume my cardiologist isn’t computer friendly - I mean , that could be the issue, but it’s more likely that he has five exam rooms and having him sign in and out for each patient takes too much time.
Hero Cop/Soldier who’s nationally recognized gets blacklisted from the government because of something they saw/prevented that angered the powers that be, and they now live as an unemployed burn-out or suicidal recluse nobody believes.
I’m pretty sure at the time but especially now if you’re ANYBODY famous and then say some crazy shit, SOMEBODY will believe you. Especially if you’re like a guy who got famous for saving the President’s life prior to the incident.
The last time I was in the hospital, the doctors usually wore surgical scrubs. One day, they came in wearing slacks, dress shirts, neckties, and lab coats. One of them told me that, a couple of days a week, the hospital made them do some kind of administrative work, for which they had to dress up.