This wouldn’t happen to be a school for kids who were having trouble in the ordinary State School system, would it? Because I used to (briefly) work in a place like that…
And everyone can easily open their eyes underwater to see where they’re going. IDK, maybe I’m the weird one here, but I would sure have a lot of trouble with that.
Not as such. The kids with acquired brain injury would get angry when they tried to think, but some of the others were just playing. A lot of them would be ‘mainstreamed’ in the present system.
And underwater movie heroes can swim deeply into the wreck, search about, unscrew something or pull down a lever, wrench lose and finally recover whatever they desperately needed and finally come up gasping for air but clutching whatever critical thing they dove down for. And if they do manage to get hooked on something and trapped in the murky deep someone else will just swim on down and rescue them. That second person, however, may tragically die.
Plate glass is regular glass. When it breaks it breaks into razor-sharp shards.
There is also tempered glass, which costs more but is not only harder to break, but when it does break it fragments into sort of cube-shaped not-sharp chunks. These are far less likely to kill you.
On the other side, the British TV show “Bless Me Father” had a scene where the young curate is examined by a doctor who asks “Is that a new shirt you’re wearing?” (Answer - Yes) “Well, don’t worry, you’ll live to wear it out.”
On the plate glass issue: invariably, whenever workers are either carrying a sheet of glass, or installing it, there is a car or foot chase that directly results in the aforementioned sheet’s destruction.
Tripler
. . . and glass always accompanies chickens in crates, for “full-feathered effect.”
Yeah, I’ve heard of Paltrow’s vagina candle but…was the “exploding vagina candle” a reference to something entirely different? I’m a little afraid to google “exploding vagina candle”.
Related: the inevitable crash into a fruit stand during a car chase, resulting in a colorful explosion of fruits and vegetables flying everywhere, but no injury to the owner of the stand or any other bystanders.
It is jarringly unrealistic, every single time, or roughly several times per every film or at least once per every TV episode watched. We’re not talking about seconds after heat-of-the-moment quickies in the backseat of a car, but couples lying in the privacy of their own beds after extensive lovemaking.
It is also obvious and very understandable why this is. The vast majority of actresses don’t want to appear topless on screen.
That’s assuming it is a bell curve, which it may well not be.
I am reminded of the case of Stephen Jay Gould, who in 1982 was diagnosed with a form of cancer “with a median mortality of only eight months after discovery,” and who went on to die in 2002 of an unrelated form of cancer.
On the ‘doctors giving people x time to live’ hijack, my Grandpa’s best friend was told he had about 6 months left, and actually died 6 days later. He had lung cancer- I don’t know any more details.
I was thinking of that too, and almost said something about the “wall.” Let’s say, physicians give the average. Roughly half of the patients will live longer than average. Actually, probably somewhat more will live less than average, and fewer, longer than average, just because of the possibility of an outlier who lives a very long time, but no possibility of an outlier who goes back in time to die before diagnosis.