An appreciation for Richard Dean Anderson *drool* I mean, check! (Wow, he looks so YOUNG!!!)
Tolerance for 80s-style kitch Yeah, I guess. I mean, I loved watching the first couple of seasons of Moonlighting (and hope they will release the rest on DVD asap!) So I should be able to handle this.
A degree in physics not quite, but close enough
A degree in chemistry check! But I think I needed another class or two in applied chemistry, especially applied organic chemistry.
Willing suspension of disbelief Sure. I mean, why wouldn't there be a pole just the right size be in that pile of rubble? And just because the building is half-destroyed, it's not like the power or water should be affected, neh?
(No spoilers past the second episode, please!)
Posts: 32919 | Registered: Mar 2003
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You should also have a roll of duct tape on hand.
I've seen a few episodes of MacGyver, and it's very weird seeing someone who looks an awful lot like Jack O'Neill doing all those smart, resourceful things.
Posts: 3546 | Registered: Jul 2002
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quote:Originally posted by quidscribis: What, you haven't watched MacGyver before? Spoilers would ruin it for you? Wow.
Huh. Maybe I watched them all because a. it's a Canadian show and b. I lived in Canada.
I had extremely limited television viewing allowed during my teens (and more so earlier).
As far as "Canadian show" goes, HAH! It was filmed in Los Angeles for its first two and last year. Actually, I think I recognized a few spots already. (Not like Moonlighting, which liked to film a block or two from the school I used to attend, but vaguely recognizable.)
Posts: 32919 | Registered: Mar 2003
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quote:Originally posted by Shigosei: You should also have a roll of duct tape on hand.
Well, but that's true IRL too.
quote:I've seen a few episodes of MacGyver, and it's very weird seeing someone who looks an awful lot like Jack O'Neill doing all those smart, resourceful things.
Was that a slam at Jack? *glare*
Actually, the fascinating thing to me is the fact that RDA's faint Texas (I think) accent as MacGyver is utterly convincing -- and quite subtle -- despite the fact that his actual Minnesota accent is quite audible when he is O'Neill. That there is great acting.
I am also impressed with myself. I recognized James Saito. Not only that, I was sure he had been on ST and . . . something else. (Well, several something elses, clearly. I suspect MASH was what my brain had in mind.)
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mph, so far I've only watched two and a half episodes. So far we've had the Law of Reflection, clever uses of water pressure (mimicking osmotic pressure in tree roots) and air pressure, and some more.
It's not surprising the believability went downhill (and as I indicated, it was stretched a bit even in the pilot). It must have been HARD to think up this stuff!
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I, too, loved MacGyver as a kid. I even tried (unsuccessfully) to do some of his stunts.
Then, a friend and I were fooling around with a video camera and decided to make "Young MacGyver" show. The episode we came up with centered on Young Mac trying to get into his locked out house in time to watch Tiny Toons.
First, there was some scheme about using current to magnetize the lock plate to the same polarity of the locking mechanism, so that it would shoot it out and the door would unlike. In the story, it failed (duh.)
Then, he got a friend's garage door opener (the ones with the dip switches on the back). He used the dip switches to set the transmitted code to the one his garage door used. If I recall correctly, this worked (as I know it did in real life. My brother and I had to do this once to get in the house and he happened to remember the code.)
Once in the house, the climax was that the show wasn't on- wrong day or pre-empted or something (this was about 16 years ago.)
MacGyver was cool. But I can't watch it anymore. Same with Dukes of Hazzard, which I couldn't stand after I turned 13.
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quote:A degree in physics not quite, but close enough A degree in chemistry check! But I think I needed another class or two in applied chemistry, especially applied organic chemistry.
I'd say that a degree in chemistry, physics or engineering is more likely to spoil watching MacGyver than anything. I think the requirement should be
A High School Physics and Chemistry class.
This will give you enough knowledge to make MacGyverisms seem plausible but not enough to understand why they actually wouldn't work.
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I never watched it as a kid, but they show it on Spike TV. If I'm feeling sick and have nothing else to do, I watch it just to watch RDA run around in those tight jeans.
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On a related note, I watched the first few episodes of the second season of 21 Jumpstreet this weekend.
It was not very good. The star of the show is the soundtrack.
Also, Johnny Depp is twenty years older and barely looks it. He has clearly been bathing in virgin's blood.
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"...enough knowledge to make MacGyverisms seem plausible but not enough to understand why they actually wouldn't work."
Which is a good thing. The last thing this country needs is accuracy in action/adventure movies and television. Already got more than enough pipe-bombing weirdos running around, thankyouverymuch.
quote:I'd say that a degree in chemistry, physics or engineering is more likely to spoil watching MacGyver than anything. I think the requirement should be
A High School Physics and Chemistry class.
This will give you enough knowledge to make MacGyverisms seem plausible but not enough to understand why they actually wouldn't work.
posted
*sad* The ones in the first couple episodes were not all that implausible (ok, so a sodium reaction would look very different than what was shown, but if I can cope with Star Trek physics . . .). And I love the concept. In fact, I put the rest of the three seasons available on DVD in my Netflix queue.
*sticks ears in fingers and sings*
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quote:Originally posted by ketchupqueen: ...and two paperclips, a rubber band, and some nail polish.
No, no. That's what you need to have with you if you are going to be a contestant on "Let's Make a Deal".
Posts: 10397 | Registered: Jun 2005
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Nope. Jack has his own type of intelligence--he's good with tactics, and he's witty. Also, he knows a lot about astronomy, which is extremly cool. But I can just imagine him in the same room with MacGyver, with the same blank look he has when Carter starts talking about wormhole physics. He's just not that much of a technical guy, it seems to me.
Most of the stuff I've seen on MacGyver seems a bit of a stretch to me, too. A lot of things are really conveniently there...once MacGyver had to get past a laser detector, and a decoration in the room just happened to have fiber optic tubes. Oh, well. I enjoy watching it now and then.
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quote:Originally posted by rivka: *sticks ears in fingers and sings*
You seem to be doing that a lot lately. It's nice that you enjoy MacGyver, though. But when you grow up, Firefly will be waiting.
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quote:Originally posted by Shigosei: Jack has his own type of intelligence--he's good with tactics, and he's witty. Also, he knows a lot about astronomy, which is extremely cool. But I can just imagine him in the same room with MacGyver, with the same blank look he has when Carter starts talking about wormhole physics. He's just not that much of a technical guy, it seems to me.
Ok. That makes sense.
Sorry if I'm overly defensive about Jack. I think I'm feeling slightly guilty about drooling over RDA's earlier incarnation. (He's just so YOUNG!)
Posts: 32919 | Registered: Mar 2003
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Nah, I like Jack as a character. Actually, I like the whole team. I think Carter's probably my favorite, but Jack's a close second. His sense of humor makes Stargate fun. Sort of like Wash and Firefly.