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  • Fact Focus: Crime Solving with the Professionals

    It is very important to be able to seperate actual fact from ‘pretend’ fact.

    To be more precise, it is very important that people learn the skill of seperating fact from CSI: Miami’s version of fact.

    Watching an episode last week, I was interested to see that it began rather dramatically with a plane crash. In the time it took for the credits to roll, Horatio was on the scene. The first order of business for Horatio, as always, was to immediately start talking so that he could creep everyone out with his convicted-stalker voice.

    With this task accomplished, he began to interview the pilot who was being stretchered onto an ambulance. Within ten seconds, Horatio had deduced that the man had been blinded by a laser, which had made him crash the plane. You may think I am exaggerating, but I’m not.

    So, he heads back to the CSI lab and gets some of his staff to render up some CGI to show where on the ground the laser may have come from. Apparently, CSI labs tend to employ as many CGI artists as actual investigators.

    They discover that one of the houses in the area is owned by a man who has been complaining about planes flying over his neighbourhood. So, off Horatio trots to the gentleman’s house.

    Within 15 seconds of getting in the door, he sees a laser pointer on a table and accuses the man of pointing it at the pilot to blind him and make him crash the plane.

    Now, I’m going to clarify this for you, because you may have, quite reasonably, assumed that the man burst into the cockpit and blinded the pilot with the pointer, or something. No, you see, this man was notin the cockpit. He wasn’t even on the plane.

    You know when CSI does the zoomy flashy visuals to illustrate a crime? They showed us one here. The man standing on the ground, holding his pen-sized laser pointer, and shining it at a plane roughly a mile above him. The view then zooms along the beam up to the plane and right into the pilot’s eye.

    Several thoughts present themselves, but I won’t go through them all, because none of them matter in light of the following:

    If someone was just standing in a field a mile away, I couldn’t get him in the eye with a laser pointer. That’s without him being in a moving aircraft, behind tinted glass that’s designed to block out sunlight. I couldn’t even aim a laser pointer into someone’s eye from across the road.

    There’s nothing wrong with a bit of artistic license, but come on! If it was at all possible to bring down aircraft with just hand-aimed laser pointers, terrorists would be buying them up by the truckload. Funnily enough, though, those crazy terrorists seem to prefer something called SURFACE TO AIR MISSILES. Now, I’m assuming there’s a pretty large price differential between one laser pointer and one SAM launcher plus ammunition. Even when you factor in spare batteries for the laser pointer. Heck, you could factor in ten years worth of batteries for the laser pointer, and still only scratch the surface of the cost of the aforementioned military hardware. With that in mind, I’m quite sure that those cost-conscious terrorists know that they’re spending their money on proven technology.

    A recurring pattern in CSI: Miami is that of Horatio solving all crimes ever. His team are merely there to do the donkey work, while he swans between labs nodding and creeping the staff out with his voice. They look all puzzled by their lab results until Horatio points out the solution effortlessly. There are two possible explanations.

    1) Horatio has simply trained himself to be amazing at solving everything, so that he doesn’t have to work late and can spend his evenings using his voice for it’s main purpose: creeping people out in dark alleyways and stalking beautiful women.

    or

    2) Horatio is an embittered ex-cop who merely fantasises that he’s far superior to everyone and fixes all problems. CSI: Miami is simply a documentary of these musings. THIS IS THE ONLY WAY THAT A PLANE BEING BROUGHT DOWN BY A LASER POINTER CAN BE EXPLAINED.

    Also, Horatio is ginger, much to my amusement.

    Tagged: CSI: Miami TV nonsense lasers

    Posted on November 28, 2005 with 3 notes

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