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TV Show Revolution on NBC

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TV Show Revolution on NBC
Posted by adrianspeeder on Wednesday, October 10, 2012 12:14 PM

Not sure how many of ya'll have been following NBC's new show Revolution the last few weeks, but it so far is half good to me and interesting for sure.

Basically some unknown manmade super EMP blast has stopped all electricity everywhere around the world except for some random "algebra teachers" that have a weird pendant thumbdrive thing that can cause localized electrical bursts.  Never mind the fact that physics of the chemical reaction of a battery doesn't work, but central nervous systems still do.  Or 15 years later all the girls hair still looks silky smooth...

Anyway, episode one I was screamin' two things.  People obviously didn't stock up on primers for reloading capibilities, and WHERE ARE THE STEAM ENGINES?

Next monday night we shall see.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KA6A0LxFKP8

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Posted by vsmith on Wednesday, October 10, 2012 12:22 PM

Apparently the producers seam to think that before electricity we all just banged the rocks together. I also thought that was an enormous hole in the plotline, some parts of the world, GREAT BIG SWATHES of the world in fact, would barely NOTICE the loss of electricity, even here in THIS country. So I find the shows premise ridiculous as you cannot just 'shut off' a basic rule of physics, electrons will ALWAYS flow thru conductive material, did all lightning ALSO disappear as well? If this mysterious force blocks all electrical activity then wouldn't every living creature would have their hearts, nervous system and brains suddenly cease to function as well. Right? I would REALLY LOVE to see the writers for Big Bang Theory have the cast watching an episode and have Sheldon rip the show for every logical flaw in it. 

But yes, the human race got by on steam and coal for almost 250 years before Mr Edison brought electricity to the masses. Why hasnt someone gotten one of  them preserved steam engines back up and running after 15 years? What about water wheels to run steel mills and machining equipement via belt drives, worked before? Lots of people still know how it all works..I just find the premise that we are all doomed without our I-phones kind of insulting. 

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Posted by adrianspeeder on Wednesday, October 10, 2012 12:24 PM

For sure.  Oh well, interesting breakdown of society though.  I just got my order of 5000 pistol primers, so I think I'll be good for a long while with makin .45 acp.

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Posted by henry6 on Wednesday, October 10, 2012 1:08 PM

I can swallow and follow the show Person of Interest...but Revolution is just too much with too many juxtopositions and contradictions:  clean, modern clothes; styled hair and make up.  Little things like that that distract and cause me to be disinterested.  

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Posted by zardoz on Wednesday, October 10, 2012 2:21 PM

henry6

I can swallow and follow the show Person of Interest...but Revolution is just too much with too many juxtopositions and contradictions:  clean, modern clothes; styled hair and make up.  Little things like that that distract and cause me to be disinterested.  

Don't you know that you're supposed to turn off your critical thinking functions when you turn on the tv?  After all, if you didn't, then all those political ads would be a waste of money.

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Posted by baberuth73 on Wednesday, October 10, 2012 5:48 PM

Watch the next episode, #5, and then you can stop watching if you want to. You should see a 4-6-0 that belongs to the South Carolina Railroad Museum in that episode. Check out the Steam and Preservation section of this forum and look for Hampton and Branchville #44.

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Posted by tomikawaTT on Wednesday, October 10, 2012 10:16 PM

zardoz

Don't you know that you're supposed to turn off your critical thinking functions when you turn on the tv?  After all, if you didn't, then all those political ads would be a waste of money.

Unfortunately, I can't - and as a result, they are.

The TV writers and producers assume, possibly with some justice, that their audience is as technologically challenged as a collection of pet rocks.  They simply write off the small percentage of people with backgrounds in engineering, math and sciences - the same group that's taking potshots here.

Well-styled hair and fancy clothes aren't dependent on electricity or electronics (Madame Pompadour never had a hair drier or a Blackberry...)  IMHO, the weak and dependent would all die off in the first few years, while those savvy enough to adapt would do whatever is necessary to get the machinery turning.  Yankee ingenuity might have gone out of style as a catch phrase, but it's still out there - and would surge to the fore once all the freeloaders found out that they couldn't freeload any more.

If this makes the Old Sarge (Ex USMMA Cadet, retired USAF MSgt) sound elitist, so be it.

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Posted by adrianspeeder on Thursday, October 11, 2012 7:44 AM

baberuth73

Watch the next episode, #5, and then you can stop watching if you want to. You should see a 4-6-0 that belongs to the South Carolina Railroad Museum in that episode. Check out the Steam and Preservation section of this forum and look for Hampton and Branchville #44.

Awesome, that was the info I needed, and yes, looking forward to next weeks episode.

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Posted by Firelock76 on Thursday, October 11, 2012 6:53 PM

I haven't seen "Revolution", haven't been planning to.  The only TV drama I watch is "NCIS".  OK, that's the old Marine coming out.  But somehow I wonder if the premise of "Revolution" is the producers taking a gentle jab at all the people addicted to electronics nowadays. 

If the high-tech stuff disappeared tomorrow I'd adapt to life without it, although I'd miss you folks terribly! I've had a lot of fun on this website.

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Posted by carnej1 on Friday, October 12, 2012 12:49 PM

 I enjoy the show,though it is hardly true Science Fiction..

 Most Science Fiction on television tends more towards the fantasy genre.

As far as "Revolution" goes, I was wondering when steam powered technology would show up,in an earlier episode a character made reference to the fact that all the steam powered ships and boats (presumably restored antiques as more modern steamships require electrical systems to operate,I doubt you could sail a Liberty Ship with no electricity) were either destroyed or captured by warlords..

I would also point out that most of the Forensics/crime scene type shows on TV play just as loose with scientific fact..

 

 

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Posted by zugmann on Friday, October 12, 2012 6:47 PM

Firelock76

If the high-tech stuff disappeared tomorrow I'd adapt to life without it, although I'd miss you folks terribly! I've had a lot of fun on this website.

If the high-tech stuff disappears tomorrow, we'll all meet in Union Station in Chicago. 

Although I bet my job would be a lot more fun if I had Armstrong levers and real train sheets.

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

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Posted by adrianspeeder on Friday, October 12, 2012 6:52 PM

zugmann

If the high-tech stuff disappears tomorrow, we'll all meet in Union Station in Chicago. 

Heck no, headin' fer the hills where I used to hunt with a deuce and a half, fuel, food, and ammo.

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Posted by GP-9_Man11786 on Saturday, October 13, 2012 9:05 AM

adrianspeeder

baberuth73

Watch the next episode, #5, and then you can stop watching if you want to. You should see a 4-6-0 that belongs to the South Carolina Railroad Museum in that episode. Check out the Steam and Preservation section of this forum and look for Hampton and Branchville #44.

Awesome, that was the info I needed, and yes, looking forward to next weeks episode.

Adrianspeeder

It should also be noted that this is the first time #44 has left South Carolina since she was delivered to the Hampton & Branchville back in the 1920s. She is now back at the SC Railroad museum in Winsboro, SC where she has been undergoing restoration to operating condition

Modeling the Pennsylvania Railroad in N Scale.

www.prr-nscale.blogspot.com 

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Posted by adrianspeeder on Monday, October 15, 2012 10:08 PM

Pretty still undecided on how well the show is written, but at least they are runnin' steam now.  Wonder how they found clear track all the way to Philly?

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Posted by SALfan on Tuesday, October 16, 2012 12:31 AM

zardoz

henry6

I can swallow and follow the show Person of Interest...but Revolution is just too much with too many juxtopositions and contradictions:  clean, modern clothes; styled hair and make up.  Little things like that that distract and cause me to be disinterested.  

Don't you know that you're supposed to turn off your critical thinking functions when you turn on the tv?  After all, if you didn't, then all those political ads would be a waste of money.

Zardoz, you also need to turn off the memory banks.  The new show "VEGAS" is supposedly set in 1960, but every police car I've seen so far is a 1963 Ford Galaxie.  Our mail carrier at that time drove a 1963 Galaxie, and my folks had a 1964 Galaxie, so I know whereof I speak.  One of the main characters drives a Dodge pickup that I think came along after 1960, but there weren't any Dodge pickups of that vintage in my hometown when I was growing up, so I'm not sure. 

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Posted by carnej1 on Wednesday, October 17, 2012 11:20 AM

adrianspeeder

Pretty still undecided on how well the show is written, but at least they are runnin' steam now.  Wonder how they found clear track all the way to Philly?

Adrianspeeder

At least that's one question the writer of the Episode tried to answer...

 At one point a Militia officer speaks to a RR supervisor who mentions the difficulty and amount of labor necessary to clear the line. However he only complains about clearing highway vehicles like buses from the tracks..guess the writer didn't think about all the railcars and locomotives between there and Philly..

 Anyone know the identity of the 2-8-0 used in the Episode and where it the RR scenes were filmed? I would imagine they film it in Canada.

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Posted by PigFarmer1 on Wednesday, October 17, 2012 11:28 AM

henry6

I can swallow and follow the show Person of Interest...but Revolution is just too much with too many juxtopositions and contradictions:  clean, modern clothes; styled hair and make up.  Little things like that that distract and cause me to be disinterested.  

I'm right there with you.  Do TV and movie directors not grasp that people back in the day were usually FILTHY?  Watch a TV show or a movie and people are always well groomed and clean.  No stringy hair or dirt under the fingernails.  It just drives me up the wall.  Must be why I much prefer books to television or movies.

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Posted by Joe the Photog on Tuesday, October 30, 2012 2:24 AM

The question of the steam engine identity was already answered in this thread a few times. It's ex-Hampton & Branchville 4-6-0 #44 which is now owned by the South Carolina Railroad Museum. The railroad scenes were filmed in Chadbourn, NC on the Carolina Southern. In an earlier episode, there was a sword fight in the same railyard where a few of the Carolina Southern engines played a cameo. The producers didn't have to age the yard and locomotives too much to make them look like they had been sitting for fifteen years. 

The series is filmed in eastern North Carolina, so coming over to the Carolina Southern was easy and made sense as the railroad is basically not running at tis point.

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Posted by adrianspeeder on Wednesday, October 31, 2012 8:05 AM

They having problems?

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Posted by baberuth73 on Wednesday, October 31, 2012 9:12 PM

I heard they have 2 deficient bridges. The railroad doesn't have the money to have repairs done but is attempting to secure the necessary funds. They voluntarily shut down August 2011.

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Posted by adrianspeeder on Wednesday, October 31, 2012 9:16 PM

Well if anyone cares, this weeks episode kinda sucked, but next weeks promo hints at explaining the cause of the blackout.

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Posted by Deggesty on Wednesday, October 31, 2012 10:50 PM

zugmann

Firelock76

If the high-tech stuff disappeared tomorrow I'd adapt to life without it, although I'd miss you folks terribly! I've had a lot of fun on this website.

If the high-tech stuff disappears tomorrow, we'll all meet in Union Station in Chicago. 

Although I bet my job would be a lot more fun if I had Armstrong levers and real train sheets.

zugmann

Firelock76

If the high-tech stuff disappeared tomorrow I'd adapt to life without it, although I'd miss you folks terribly! I've had a lot of fun on this website.

If the high-tech stuff disappears tomorrow, we'll all meet in Union Station in Chicago. 

Although I bet my job would be a lot more fun if I had Armstrong levers and real train sheets.

I agree with Firelock; I have really enjoyed interacting with you folks.

Zardoz, I trust all who participate in these forums know what Armstrong levers and real train sheets are.

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Posted by adrianspeeder on Thursday, November 1, 2012 8:13 AM

Deggesty

Zardoz, I trust all who participate in these forums know what Armstrong levers and real train sheets are.

Well most now have them googlie phones so they could look it up.  Or they could be as confused as when the main character heard a whistle, and went WTF is that?


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Posted by Joe the Photog on Thursday, November 1, 2012 4:32 PM

I believe it's more than two bridges and they have voluntarily shut down, but it was voluntary like when a coach and GM have a meeting after a losing season and the coach suddenly decides to resign, wink, wink, nudge, nudge. The local papers along the line are keeping track of a local group of politcians that are trying to figure out how to keep the railroad running. At some of  those meetings, they asked the owners of the railroad NOT to come.

 

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