I was watching a TV show last night—an episode of FBI.
In the episode the FBI team has to rescue a young woman being held hostage at commune. It was a Waco/Branch Davidian Compound based episode.
The woman was chained to an upright post on a bunk bed. They had to free her from that post, so one of the agents went looking for a bolt cutter.
That would have been fine before Hi-Def TV. But the bunk bed was made up of two twin beds made from tubular steel. The beds could be used individually or could be stacked.
The bottom of the tube had a reduced diameter allowing a slip in fit. On high def equipment you could clearly see the seam between the upper and lower bunk posts.
So the agent goes looking for a bolt cutter and I’m yelling at the TV, “There are two of you. Just lift the upper bed off and have her stand on the mattress and you can go.”
So for the rest of the show I had to keep saying to myself, “Just imagine that the bunks could not decouple.” For me the show failed on that single detail.
This image is not of high enough resolution to see the seam. It looks to be the same as the one on the TV show. It can de-couple to make two beds.
In the episode the FBI team has to rescue a young woman being held hostage at commune. It was a Waco/Branch Davidian Compound based episode.
The woman was chained to an upright post on a bunk bed. They had to free her from that post, so one of the agents went looking for a bolt cutter.
That would have been fine before Hi-Def TV. But the bunk bed was made up of two twin beds made from tubular steel. The beds could be used individually or could be stacked.
The bottom of the tube had a reduced diameter allowing a slip in fit. On high def equipment you could clearly see the seam between the upper and lower bunk posts.
So the agent goes looking for a bolt cutter and I’m yelling at the TV, “There are two of you. Just lift the upper bed off and have her stand on the mattress and you can go.”
So for the rest of the show I had to keep saying to myself, “Just imagine that the bunks could not decouple.” For me the show failed on that single detail.
This image is not of high enough resolution to see the seam. It looks to be the same as the one on the TV show. It can de-couple to make two beds.
