Cordial Deconstruction

Observations from our shared single objective reality in a materialistic, naturalistic, & effectively macro-deterministic universe.

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Deconstruction Review of Fringe, Episode 8, Season 2, August

Posted by Karl Withakay on November 19, 2009

As usual, an episode synopsis can be found over at Polite Dissent.

I Tend To Notice Gun Play

The campus security guard fired 6 shots, and then his gun would not fire anymore.  He was shooting a medium frame Glock, likely either a model 19 in 9x19mm or a 23 in .40 S&W.  The smallest magazine capacity in the medium Glocks (which they term compact) is the model 38 in .45 ACP, which has a standard mag capacity of 8, and the other models mentioned have mag capacities of 15 & 13 respectively.  Either the mag was not fully loaded, or the 7th round was a dud.  Considering the slide did not lock back after the last round fired, I must conclude it was a dud.

High Speed Camera or Underpowered Bullet?  (Or Physics is Fun!)

As the Fringe team is watching the video of the guard shooting at the Watcher, they play it back one frame at a time.  We see the bullet travel about one hand length from one frame to the next.  If we assume the video was an ATSC HD recording at 60 frames/second, and assume the distance traveled in one frame was appx 7.5 inches (the average length of a male human hand, according to Wikipedia), we can calculate the speed of the bullet to be roughly 450 feet/second (225feet/second if the video was NTSC 30 frames/second).  This is entirely too slow for any bullet fired from a Glock semi auto pistol (even if the target was 100 yards away).  The slowest bullet you would likely fire from any model Glock would be a .45 cal 230 grain bullet (7000 grains to a pound) traveling at appx 850 f/s from the muzzle (788f/s @ 100yds).  If we assume the last round fired was a dud, we can speculate that it was a bad lot of ammo, and the round seen in the video was underpowered.

If we assume the round was not underpowered, we can calculate an estimated frame rate required to produce the video seen.  Depending on the caliber and load used in the Glock, the velocity of the bullet would have been between about 850 and 1350 f/s.  That works out to between 130 & 180 frames per second.  It seems unlikely the campus uses high speed video, so we’re back to a defective lot of ammo.

Bad Gag Idea

It’s my understanding that cleave gags like that aren’t very good for keeping a person quite.  They can’t vocalize well, but can still make considerable noise.  Try keeping your mouth completely closed and see how much noise you can make through your nose alone; you can make even more noise with just a cleave style gag in your mouth.  Additionally, it’s actually fairly dangerous to use a gag like that.  If the person developed sinus congestion and couldn’t breath through their nostrils, they may not be able to take enough air in through their obstructed mouth.  Chocking is a major danger if the person were to vomit, say due to a gag reflex.

Is this the FBI or the Blood Hound Gang?

Broyles:

Her name is Christine Hollis; 27 years old, in a masters program for fine arts at B.U..  As far as we can tell, she’s no one special.  Parents deceased, no siblings, no arrest record, twenty-seven of her dollars in a bank account.  Nothing unusual about her.

Olivia:

Do we have an address?

Broyles:

We’re working on it.

OK, so the FBI was able to determine the victim’s name, age, education, family history, lack of arrest record, and bank account balance, but not her fracking address.  WTF???

But it Looks and Sounds Cool.

When Astrid is running the text from the Watcher’s Observer’s  journal through the computer, not only does the display rapidly cycle through various symbols (which I’ve mentioned before that computers don’t usually do when searching through or processing data), but the computer was also making computery sounds like you’d hear on a 1960’s or 1970’s sci-fi show/movie.

What Constitution?

Peter says he’s going to get Broyles to get a list of all the local hemophiliacs form hospital records.  Even if he got a warrant, that is privileged information, and he might have a hard time forcing the hospitals to release that information.  It would also be a HIPPA violation.

Occam’s Razor

So because there are various photos and paintings of bald guys in the background of historical events, the most likely conclusion is that there are time travelers showing up at important historical moments rather than that male pattern baldness begins affecting 1 in 4 men after age 30?  I’d be surprised if there weren’t bald men present in the crowds at historical events.

Did I Mention that I Know a Little Something About Guns?

That gun the assassin was using was a Desert Eagle.  The lightest caliber for which the Desert Eagle is .357 magnum, and .44 magnum is more common.  To be most effective, a suppressed (silenced) weapon needs to fire a subsonic bullet, otherwise you will still hear the crack of the bullet breaking the sound barrier even if you do not hear the report of the gun itself.  It’s very questionable whether any subsonic load for the .357 could cycle the action of the Desert Eagle.  A different gun in .45ACP would have been a better choice, as most .45 loads are already subsonic.  Also, the suppressor on that gun was a little too short to be very effective.

When Do Product Placements Become Sellouts?

The scene when Olivia tried to call her niece seemed contrived and not particularly relevant to the flow of the story.  It seemed to exist solely for the purpose of product placement for Ford and their Sync technology, powered by Microsoft, as was prominently displayed on the screen for our benefit.

Peter With a Death Wish?

Making a move on a man with a loaded and cocked gun pressed against the back of your head is absolute stupidity unless you believe he’s going to pull the trigger immediately anyway.  The fact that the assassin hadn’t already pulled the trigger would tend to indicate there was at least a slim chance he might not shoot at all.

More Gun Stuff

Olivia fired only 4 rounds from her medium frame Glock before she ran out of ammo and the slide locked back.  Considering she likely had a 13 or 15 round mag, does she intentionally only load 4 rounds to keep the weight down, or did she forget to reload after the last time she fired her gun?

Third Rank Amateur or Cocky top Professional?

Broyles mentions to Olivia near the end of the episode that the ballistics tied the assassin’s gun to six unsolved homicides up and down the east coast.  Why would a pro use the same gun for six different murders?  If he gets caught with the gun, that’s six murder counts he could face charges for.  You could say he was so good at what he did that he’d never get caught so it didn’t matter, but he could got stopped for a routine traffic stop and searched for probable cause, or he could be in a an accident and knocked unconscious while in possession of a gun tied to six murders. I think a pro would always ditch the gun after the target was eliminated.

Yea Continuity Again!

The writers do seem to making a conscious effort to maintain continuity of details.  Broyles’ arm was in a sling in this week’s episode after having been shot by Peter in last week’s episode.  Good job writers!  You’d never have gotten a job on Star Trek The Next Generation.

Posted in Fringe, Product Placement, Science, Television | 6 Comments »

Minor Review of Fringe, Episode 7, Season 2, Of Human Action

Posted by Karl Withakay on November 12, 2009

As usual, an episode synopsis can be found over at Polite Dissent, assuming Scott had the intestinal fortitude to actually write one after this week’s steaming pile of fetid dingo’s kidneys

This week’s episode was bad.  It was so bad that I am anticipating Scott moving his Fringe Doomsday Clock ahead at least two minutes closer to midnight.

Call Randi; I want My Million Dollars

I take notes as I watch the show to make blogging about the episode easier.  This is an exact quote of one of the first notes I made while watching, “Prediction-  is the kid in control?”  I imagine most everyone else saw it coming from a million miles away also.

Bad Wiring?

I double checked with my day who, in addition to being an electronic engineer, was also a pretty handy home electrician, and that was the wrong slot of the outlet to stick a key in to electrocute yourself, unless the outlet was wired improperly.  Even if the clerk was grounded, that was the neutral connection that he stuck his key into, and not the hot connection and he was therefore not completing a circuit and thus could not be electrocuted, assuming the outlet was not wired backwards.

By the way, DO NOT TEST THIS OUT!!!  It was the wrong slot for the clerk to get electrocuted, but if you try it you’ll probably get electrocuted, die, and get nominated for a Darwin Award under the heading, “Some guy on the interwebz told me it was safe!”

Every house I’ve ever tested had at least one improperly wired outlet. DON’T BE STUPID

Is Randi There, I Still Want My Million Dollars

Later note from when Olivia is watching the video of the kid from the convenience store and says, “He looks so scared”, my note: “Not to me; he looks in control to me.”  Were there any viewers left yet that hadn’t figured it out yet?

Bad Science On the Brain 1 & 2 or Prop Convenience Theater?

While still on the hypnosis/ subliminal suggestion hypothesis, Walter says, “Given the extreme nature of the suggestions in the police woman’s case, I suspect there may be lesions on the brain, physical damage”  I call BS on this and suggest it is just an excuse to give Walter a reason to open the skull up and remove the brain.  No hypnotic suggestion outside of a comic book is going to cause lesions on the brain.

“Hematomas on the brain matter”, “the result of conflicting neural impulses; a conflict of mind and body”  I’m sure Scott will cover this one as well as the lesions, but I don’t think conflicting neural impulses can cause hematomas.  See BS comment above.  I won’t even start on the whole mind/brain thing the writers are implying.

It’s as Good a Guess as Anything Else Walter Might Pull Out of His Hindquarters

The whole auditory trance red herring was such blatant speculation on Walter’s part that Olivia should have approached it from a “There’s a good chance we’re wrong.” perspective instead of a “We can stake our lives on it.” angle like Olivia did, but were are talking about Olivia Dunham here, we’ve already established she’s not the brightest peg on the Lite-Brite.

Why the Womb Tunes?

Even assuming the auditory trance speculation was correct (which it turned out to not be anyway), why did they need the white noise rather than just using the hearing protection to isolate the agents from any outside noise at all, and why link back to the bear for the sound feed rather than hardwiring it into the electronic hearing protection the agents were wearing?

Somebody Call Adam Savage

Mythbusters has covered both parts of the exploding car myth presented here, both from gunshots and from crashes.  By the way, I’m pretty sure that when they show the exploded car on fire resting on its roof, you can see the flip jack used to flip the car over.

The Brain is Not Really a Computer as We Understand Computers

“The brain is a computer is a computer, doctor.  It’s an organic computer; it can be hijacked like any other.”  Sure, other than is doesn’t utilize binary logic or storage, doesn’t run off a discrete signal clock, lacks such discrete functional differentiation and lacks any input bus for direct programming or memory access, etc….so, not so much, no.  I’ll grant you that the brain is an organic thinking machine, but it’s not really what we would call a computer.

Maybe It’s True; It Nearly Crashed My Brain

“We’re going to crash his brain”  We call that a seizure, and they’re generally not good for you.

“This device will wipe his brain of all thoughts for a short amount of time.  He won’t be able to think.  He will become very disorientated; he may even vomit.”   So hopefully it only affects higher level functions so that his autonomic nervous system isn’t shut down as well, otherwise it could kill him.  I am surprised Walter didn’t say, “he might even pee himself.”.  It seems like a Walter kind of thing to say.

As Long as He Doesn’t Have Super Powers Now, What’s the Big Deal?

In answer to Walter’s question as to whether Tyler lost the mind control ability after the drugs wore off, Peter replied,

“You were right, which is a god thing, I guess.  It means he won’t do any time.  The kid goes on a killing spree and all they’re gonna do is make him talk it out with  a bunch of shrinks.”

Why, exactly does it mean he won’t do any time?  Unless one of the side effects or interactions of his medication was psychotic episodes, the kid is still a murderer, and may also be a psychopath.   The fact that he doesn’t have the power to do the same thing again is irrelevant.  That kid clearly needs to be warehoused somewhere for a long time.

It Could Have Been Worse, I Guess

At least they didn’t use the, “We only use 10% of our brains” myth the announcer did in the preview teaser for this episode.

Newspaper Headline Trivia

The headlines from the stories in the newspaper seen in this week’s episode were, “Local Resident Leads Protest Against Highway Expansion” by Tim White, Staff Writer and “Talks Stalled as Strike Looms”

Is That Light I See at the End of the Tunnel?

Next week’s episode looks more promising as I recognized Peter Woodward, son of The Equalizer, from the preview as the/one of the Observers.  He’s a damn fine actor; I just hope they give him something good to work with.  Scott’s Doomsday clock won’t have much time left on it after this week.

Posted in Fringe, Prop Convenience Theater, Science, Television | 2 Comments »

Minor Review of Fringe Episode 6, Season 2: Earthling

Posted by Karl Withakay on November 5, 2009

A plot synopsis can be found at Polite Dissent, as usual.

Ashes to Ashes

Interesting that the outside surface of the body retains all pigment and appearances, but internally the body is just ash.

Self Storage

Broyles keeping evidence in self storage implies one of the following: he doesn’t trust the FBI with some Fringe evidence, the FBI wasn’t going to keep the evidence, or the FBI is outsourcing their long term evidence storage needs to Dino’s storage.

Anti-Radiation?

Not only are the ash remains depleted of radioactive isotopes, but they apparently shield Geiger counters from background radiation as well.

Prop Convenience Theater #1

It was nice to see the computer screen during the FBI’s search of the hospital’s servers display a series of progress bars rather than the usual flashing or scrolling series of data you normally see for such searches on TV & in the movies.  (Computers generally don’t display every piece of data on screen during a search, as anyone who’s used the search for files/ folders function in Windows knows)

Hello, Am I Deaf or Just Dumb?

Why do people on TV & in the movies always repeatedly say “Hello…Hello!” when the voice of person talking on the other end is replaced with a dial tone?  Are they expecting the dial tone to reply?

Prop Convenience Theater #2

Just in case you couldn’t figure out that it was a lead acid battery the man was retrieving from his van, the prop master was kind enough put a giant label on the face of that battery that said “LEAD ACID BATTERY” in huge letters that were visible from the International Space Station in low Earth orbit.  I always buy LEAD ACID BATTERY brand batteries for my cars and boats, and so apparently did the man in the show because every single one of the numerous batteries he had was an identical LEAD ACID BATTERY brand battery.

Bad Radiation Science #1

Radioactivity is more of a phenomenon that it is a “thing”.  Nuclear radioactivity is the result of the decay of radioactive isotopes.  You can’t drain the radiation from something or collect it.  You would have to remove/ collect all radioactive materials from it to do so.

Bad Radiation Science #2

If a life form somehow needed to feed off of ionizing radiation, it could find far better sources to feed off of than human bodies.  Depending on what form of radiation it needed, (Alpha, Beta, Gamma/ X-Ray, or neutron, etc), there’s plenty of better sources likely located right in the hospitals themselves.  Heck, your average home basement is probably a better source of radioactivity than the human body.

Bad Radiation Science #3

Direct ionizing radiation (ionizing radiation other than neutron radiation) does not induce radioactivity or cause things to become radioactive*.  Things become radioactive when they are contaminated with radioactive materials.  Getting an X-ray does not make you radioactive or increase your radioactivity and would not make you more attractive to a radiation eating monster.

*  Extremely high energy particles, the kind produced in supernovas and particle accelerators, can be absorbed by an atom’s nucleus and render it unstable or break it apart into unstable daughter particles, but these particles are far more energetic than anything you normally find on Earth.

Couldn’t they have just traced the call when he checked his voice mail?

I mean, they suspected he was going to check it; why not just trace that call, especially considering he wouldn’t know they were trying to trace him.

Just For Fashion Fun

Why did Walter need to wear a bullet proof vest when Peter didn’t and they were right next to each other?  I’ll just chalk that up to Walter’s eccentricity and assume he just wanted to wear a vest for fun.

From Russia With Love?

Why did the casket/box they hauled the body away in have Russian writing on it?    Does the FBI, the NRC or the NEST contract out production of radiation caskets to Russia as some part of a non-proliferation agreement?  The Russians weren’t collecting the body, so the box shouldn’t have had Russian Writing; we have our own radiation caskets in the good old U.S.A.

Separated at Birth?

I wonder if that creature was related to the Smoke Monster from Lost.

Chemical Trivia

The chemical Walter mentions early in the show when attempting to analyze the formula is Titanium Tetrachloride.

Posted in Fringe, Prop Convenience Theater, Science, Television | 3 Comments »

Minor Comments on Fringe Episode 5, Season 2: Dream Logic

Posted by Karl Withakay on October 16, 2009

As always, a synopsis can be found over at Polite Dissent.

“Shock Induced Achromotricia”

Shock can not change hair color.  In fact, short of a color job, nothing changes the color of EXISTING hair.  Hair is not alive, and does not change color. (I suppose it could fade from exposure to strong sunlight.)  When you “go gray”, new hair growth is gray, not existing hair.  Once hair is produced, that part stays the same.

Massive Dynamic

Not a comment about this episode in particular, but this company’s name seems more appropriate for a company in a comic book rather than a prime time drama.

Remote Backup

The doctor told Olivia, “The patients’ files are backed up on a remote server; I’ll give you the password.”  Gee, how about the username and maybe even the address of the site or remote server to log into?  Those might be useful too.

MK Ultra

I’m not too surprised Walter was involved in MK Ultra.  Apparently Walter had no ethics whatsoever; the Canadian experiments were especially reprehensible.

Felony Assault

Drugging a person against their will constitutes felony assault, and assaulting a federal agent is a very serious federal crime, and this is not even considering the civil liability he faces should the agent decide to sue.

Low Quality Dream Sniffer

All the network sniffing tools I’ve ever used work in passive mode, such that they can eavesdrop on data traffic without anyone noticing rather than intercepting and redirecting the traffic away from the intended destination.  You’d think that would be the better way to design a dream sniffer as well.

Addiction does not lead to Dissociative Identity Disorder

Olivia seems to be confusing manic mood swings with DID, which is commonly referred to as multiple personality disorder.

Olivia Dunham: Handwriting Expert?

I’ll grant you that the g’s were very similar and fairly unique, but the F’s were about as generic looking as you can make an F.  I’d tell Olivia to stick to what she’s good at, but we haven’t figured out what that is yet because it isn’t being an FBI investigator.

Prop Convenience Theater

Other than our benefit so we know whose brain he is jacking into, is there any good reason why the doctor’s computer displays a full screen image of his victim?

Full Service Airways

That was an awfully small sea plane to need two pilots AND a stewardess.

Parallel Universe Hint and Space Trivia

The poster on the wall in Peter’s dream features an image of the Space Shuttle Challenger (OV-099) in space with the words, “Challenger Mission 11” and “June 28, 1984” on it.  There was no mission 11 for Challenger; it was destroyed 73 seconds after liftoff during mission 10, STS-51-L on January 28, 1986.  This is further evidence that this Peter Bishop is originally from the parallel universe and was kidnapped and brought to our universe by our Walter bishop after the death of his son in this universe.  It is also interesting to note the difference in the time lines between the two universes.  By my estimate, our  Challenger’s 11th mission should have been around mid 1986, about two years after the parallel universe’s Challenger mission 11.

TRIVIA: According to Wikipedia, Challenger’s next mission, mission 11, would have been the deployment of the Ulysses probe with the Centaur to study the polar regions of the Sun.  Ulysses is only one of 8 man made objects to travel as far as Jupiter or beyond.  The others are Pioneer 10, Pioneer 11, Voyagers 1 & 2, Galileo, Cassini-Huygens, and New Horizons.

Missed Deconstruction

I forgot to comment that the lack of DDOS attacks does not support the idea that the computer was not hacked, but Scott took care of that on his post.

About This Post:

You’ll have to forgive me if this post is not properly proof-read.  Somehow my WordPress session timed out while I was composing this, and I lost half my post when I clinked the publish button.  Only what was auto-saved as a draft before the session timed out survived.  I had to type a good portion over again, and I don’t feel like doing a quality proof read before going to bed for the night.  I still haven’t watched The Office, 30 Rock, or The Mentalist; one or more will have to probably have to wait since it’s 11:20PM now.  There’s too many shows on Thursday this season.  😦

Posted in Fringe, Prop Convenience Theater, Science, Television | 4 Comments »

Minor Comments on Fringe Episode 4, Season 2: Momentum Deferred

Posted by Karl Withakay on October 9, 2009

Check out Scott’s site if you want a synopsis of this weeks episode.

It’s nice to see they did address my question regarding conservation of momentum, sort of.

Walter didn’t say whether the doppelganger’s blood was 47% mercury by mass, volume, or by mole.

Logically, it is likely to be by mass (as in 47% of the doppelganger’s blood weight was mercury), otherwise with the density of mercury being 13.5X that of blood, and blood normally consisting of 7% of human body weight, my math works out that if a doppelganger’s blood were 47% mercury by volume, they would weight about 40% more than the human they are mimicking; that shouldn’t be too hard to detect, even for Olivia.

Has anyone thought to assign Astrid to spend a few days watching all of Walter’s old video tapes and logging a summary of each one rather than waiting for Walter to remember when they seem to be relevant? Oh wait, Olivia’s in field command of the Fringe division- never mind, she probably hasn’t thought of it.

Was that maybe a little too much mercury to be produced form a bunch of health thermometers? (I’m not sure on this one.) Regardless, If I needed a bunch of Hg, I would have gotten a bunch of mercury switches from an electrical/appliance supply store instead.

Theressa Russell has held up pretty well, and is still a very attractive woman.

The writers of Fringe don’t seem to understand the Pauli Exclusion Principle at all. It does not state that two objects cannot occupy the same space at the same time. It states that no two identical fermions can occupy the same quantum state at the same time, and does not even apply to all matter/particles, such as bosons.

Olivia Dunham must be the dumbest and most gullible agent in the entire FBI to have at least not been a little suspicious of Charlie’s text message.

You have just found out there is a dangerous doppelganger still alive out there that can look like anyone.  You have a means of determining if someone is a doppelganger with a simple close visual inspection.

Do you:

A.  Recall your entire team to headquarters and immediately perform the inspections and institute daily inspections of the team going forward?

B.  Have the person last known to be in the presence of a doppelganger immediately inspected?

C.  Take the word of the person last in the presence of the doppelganger that the person helping you (that you were told to trust by the only person who has any clue what is going on) is the doppelganger and then eagerly reveal to the person last in the presence of the doppelganger a vital piece of intelligence without hesitation?

Guess which choice Olivia made?

That is all for now.

Posted in Fringe, Science, Television | Leave a Comment »

Minor Comments on Fringe Episode 3, Season 2: “Fracture”

Posted by Karl Withakay on October 2, 2009

I assume by the time anyone reads this, Scott should have his synopsis up over at Polite Dissent. Since I am writing this before Scott posts his review for a change, some of this may already be covered by Scott.

The trans-formative serum sounds like some form or variation of  Ice Nine in its ability to solidify water.

Cyanogen Chloride is a blood agent, not a neurotoxin/ nerve agent.

331.6 Mhz is in the UHF range, not VHF.   (Do the writers not have internet access?)

Apparently, both your arms can almost completely crystallize due to the effects of  the trans-formative serum, but the effect goes away if the frequency is discontinued before the full 30 seconds, leaving no damage or significant after effects.

I am always skeptical of scenes where a person draws a gun on someone they obviously have no intention of possibly shooting for the purpose of compelling them to cooperate.  It’s a gun, not a magic lasso.  (Comic Book reference just for Scott)

Trivia:

The newspaper being read by the police office at the start of the episode contained stories with the following headlines:

High Court Hints at Caution on Sentencing

Death Spurs Debate of Surveillance Cameras

——————————————————————-

That’s all for now; I may revise this or add more comments after reading Scott’s post.

Posted in Fringe, Science, Television | Leave a Comment »

Minor comments on Fringe, “Night of Desirable Objects”

Posted by Karl Withakay on September 25, 2009

OK, for a synopsis of this episode, head over to Scott’s review at Polite Dissent.

It was a better episode than the previous one, but again there was nothing major to Deconstruct like an electron microscope record player that reads embedded sound waves off of a glass pane, so it’s another post of minor comments.

Comments:

Sheriff Golytely, are you serious with that name?  How did Scott miss that one?

I miss the “Fringe will return in xx seconds” messages, it took all the guesswork out of skipping commercials.

The giant periodic table on the wall tells us that room was a lab, because most labs have giant periodic tables on the wall, right?

It is nice to see a TV show or movie where scars and bruises actually persist from one episode to another.

Where did all the dirt go?  If you did a hole/tunnel as big as the ones the creature dug in this episode, you have to do something with all the dirt.  For example: there was a large hold dug through the bottom of the coffin through which the creature escaped, but there was no dirt in the coffin.  Dig a tunnel much bigger than a mole hole, and you won’t be able to just compress the dirt around the hole; you’ve got to excavate it and dispose of the dirt somewhere.

Watch the following films for examples of dirt disposal from tunneling:

The Great Escape

The McKenzie Break

Best line,  “We’re all victims of our own gene pool, someone must have peed in yours.”  -Walter Bishop to Sherriff Golytely

Which universe is the show set in where an FBI agent can negligently discharge her firearm in a civilian’s house and not at least face an automatic review process?

I need to write a post on my thoughts on parallel universes and how similar or different I think they could be to our own.  (Put simply, I think they’d either be identical or completely dissimilar, bearing no resemblance to ours to the level of different starts and galaxies forming or even totally different sets of physical laws and universal constants.

Momentum does not appear to be conserved between the universes.  That is to say, if Olivia’s body is imparted with momentum from a car crashing in to her vehicle in this universe,that momentum does not carry over when she is transported to the parallel universe (she didn’t fly into the parallel universe), but is contained in this universe, waiting for her return.  This creates some very interesting implications and conundrums for conservation of mass-energy between universes:  Momentum can not be exchanged between the universes, but mass-energy can…There’s an entire post there as well.


Posted in Fringe, Quotes, Science, Television | Leave a Comment »

Minor Comments on a Ho-hum Episode of Fringe

Posted by Karl Withakay on September 18, 2009

A rather lackluster episode to start the season that was mostly exposition for the rest of the season rather than an attention grabber to reel you in.  It would have been ho-hum for regular episode;  it was disappointing for a season premier that’s supposed to set the pace for the season to follow.

Since my friend Scott already does the heavy lifting in writing a synopsis of the episode, why duplicate quality work?   Link to Scott’s Review of Fringe: A New Day In an Old Town

It didn’t contain much worth Deconstructing, and so I was doubly disappointed.

Comments:

Did Walter undo the seat belt when he was examining the car, and if so, is he responsible for Olivia flying out of the car?  Would she have materialized inside the fastened seat belt and not crashed through the window?

I might need to re-watch the season finale from last season in order to make a possible comment about conservation of momentum between the multiverses and the car accident, but I don’t have it anymore.

Do FBI agents need search warrants anymore?  It sure looks like they just busted into that guy’s home without even announcing themselves.  What judge would grant a warrant on the evidence Jessup had anyway?

Is Astrid in some kind of disciplinary program in the FBI that she is relegated to coffee girl duty in the Fringe division?  How come the FBI forgot to reassign her when they shut down the Fringe division?  (I can forgive the continued occupation of Walter’s lab with the excuse that the rent is payed through the end of the month.)  This is a pathetically underused character in the show;  I’d be interested in seeing the writers make more use of her in at least one episode.

Why doesn’t anyone have any common sense anytime a doppelganger is involved, especially ones so easily detected by close physical examination?  ANYTIME AND EVERY TIME a doppleganger has been involved, and someone has been by themselves or away from the rest of the group, CHECK THEM OUT, NO EXCEPTIONS !!!

It’s interesting to note that the Fringe division of the FBI has direct congressional oversight.  I wonder how many other subdivisions of the FBI have such status?

Posted in Fringe, Science, Television | 1 Comment »