The situation at Fukushima I is still in the red part of the suckometer, and keeping track of what's going on via TV anchors who have less hard science knowledge than your average Jack Russell terrier is supremely frustrating. Every time they hear a new term, like "meltdown" or "core breach", they repeat it endlessly, usually in various combinations with "disaster" or "catastrophe".
I'm waiting for one of these tired and frazzled-looking nuke types to tell them that the reactor's dilithium crystals have cracked and, yes, that's a very bad thing.
i wish i was a science expert they invited on to talk to. i'd seriously just start throwing dilithium crystal and warp core around just to F with them. like they'd know any better. they heard the word "neutron beam" the other day and they were all like "ooooo.... fancy word...."
ReplyDeleteI've heard that the Flux Capacitor may be going bad, and if they don't get a new Quantum Transducer in there soon, the plant's Infinite Improbability Drive is going to slag big time!
ReplyDeleteMy arms are so tired from all the flailing I've had to do while running around in circles, panicking.
ReplyDeleteand if i was one of the techs inside? i'd probably mess with everyone by everytime i went outside where cameras could see me i'd be at a full sprint.
ReplyDeleteJimmy +1.
ReplyDeleteWe've got to reverse the polarity or the holodeck will explode!
ReplyDeleteor we could do something more complex. like having a guy walk out to a van parked nearby acting all woozy... then have him get in... then have a midget in a rad suit like his come out. or..... have the guy go in the van but come out being chased by someone in a godzilla costume.
ReplyDelete"Well, Ann, if things get much worse, we'll have to try crossing the streams, which, as you may know, could lead to total protonic reversal."
ReplyDeleteI pretty much stay away from the news. The bullshit-to-useful information ratio seems to get lower with every year.
Jimmy is on to something here: "How to f*ck with the media" contest.
ReplyDeleteConnected if not completely on topic: anyone familiar with the case of Ramsar, Iran, and some of the other natural high background radiation areas? I have been looking at the theory of radiation hormesis lately - remembered reading about it several years ago and this current hysteria sort of reminded me. There seem to be interesting bits like that the survivors of Nagasaki perhaps have lower incidence of cancer than unexposed people. If anyone is familiar with believable research disproving that theory links would be highly appreciated (been looking, not much luck so far, but my google fu is a bit feeble).
ReplyDeleteMessing with the media doesn't seem quite fair; it would be sort of like bullying a not-very-bright small child.
ReplyDeleteBut Remember, When messing with them it important to work your way up to the silliness.
ReplyDeleteStart it straight. Ease on up over the line into lunacy.
If you start too blatantly even those brainless media poodles will eventually realize they are being had, or, their producers/broadcast techies will.
RE: Riling up the panic mongers.
ReplyDeleteHow about a bald guy running out with handfuls of hair and a mouthful of split pea soup?
BobG: Fair no. Funny, yes.
ReplyDeleteWV: "ovals" -- "You see, Ann, what's happened is that the normally round nuclei have gotten squished into ovals by the tsunami. And the nuclei hate being squished into ovals."
If I was a tech or reporter, I would break open a chem light, dump it on my lab coat, and run out of the building waving my arms.
ReplyDeleteToday's proof:
ReplyDeleteJRT = (ADHD + OCD) = TeeWee Anchor
Thank you, Prof. Tam!
wv=iread
Yup, every day
Where is Profesor Irwin Corey when you need him?
ReplyDeleteGerry
I know, tell 'em it's been stolen by terrorists!
ReplyDelete"It weighs about a thousand tons and is forty feet high. So they'll be quite strong terrorists. Perhaps you'd like to ring them up, sir, and ask them questions in that supercilious, accusatory way of yours."
Marja- by coincidence, anncoulter.com is all over hormesis lately, with citations to studies.
ReplyDeleteDigital TV channel 26-4 brings NHK TV right to my screen from Japan, no need for any round-eye interpreter to foul up the message.
ReplyDeleteDirt, problem with that, is that from what I understand they aren't even telling the truth to the locals about how bad it is. So I'm pretty sure that jerky mcjerkoffington von reporter from America is getting an even fuzzier story. Toss that delicious turd of info into the blender of American media of hype and fear and we're all sucking on sh*t-info-shakes.
ReplyDeleteAll ya gotta do is drop that reactor down a portal, has no one called the guys at LHC?
ReplyDeleteFirst one to get them to mention bertrillium and zantitium gets a shiny new dollar!
ReplyDeleteI'll give anybody on-scene $100 if they start yelling "OMG! Headcrabs!" in front of a camera...
ReplyDeleteHave Ellen McLain do a press conference using her GlaDOS voice.
ReplyDeleteEverything is fine until the Heisenberg Filters go wonky. Then you better haul your fat ass outta the Jeffries Tube and RUN!!!
ReplyDeleteThe media use to set up long lens cameras on hills over looking the Regan Ranch and photograph Mr. Regan as he road his horse. He once said he would love to clutch his chest and roll off the horse. God! I miss that man.
Found the Coulter article.
ReplyDeleteInteresting subject, although the research seems to both sparse and inconclusive.
By the way, due to a lot of granites -> radon we can get to pretty high natural radiation levels in Finland, for example on one pretty well populated part of an esker called Pispalanharju in Tampere up to something like 35 mSv/year, if your house has been built on a bad spot. And then some people here can get into hysterics over what the wind may bring from Japan while posting rants about it from their nice house on that same beautiful Pispalanharju...
My god, come for the post, start for the comments! The only thing I'd suggest would be to have the midget go in and the normal-sized guy come out, but all of this is a recipe for some first-rate entertainment.
ReplyDeleteJim
Marja, I understand that the normal background radiation in New England is twice the level of most of the U.S., due to its Granite Outcroppings. I wonder if there has been any Correlation Studies done to all those Kennedy/Kerry/Markey/Frank/Leahy Uber Liberal Types in Congress over the last few decades vs. Exposure Time involving Brain Cell Decay.
ReplyDeleteMeanwhile, I think I saw a Giant Ant crawling around the Fukishima Complex on the latest news video, but I could be mistaken.
Jim,
ReplyDeleteOr - announce a press conference with all the techs - and send out the cast of Time Bandits.
What? No footage of Godzilla yet??? Maybe the earthquake got him...
ReplyDeleteJust so long as the oscillating over-thrusters are in good shape. You need an interoscitor to make repairs on them.
ReplyDeleteReally screw with them: Reference a Star Trek particle-of-the-week as you explain how the cosmic overthruster interacts with the flux capacitor to produce high energy verteron intersections and... oh hell, just make it up shamelessly
ReplyDeleteI actually saw one interview - I think it was on CNN - where (and I kid you not) Bill Nye the Science Guy was the expert interviewee.
ReplyDeleteHey, Bill Nye is awesome.
ReplyDelete"I've been saying for years that the containment vessels should have been built of Cargonite..."
ReplyDeleteMuch wit and all good. I have to say this may be the first catastrophe that I have taken to ignoring completely simply because all I can hear or read as less than worthless. I have no clue what the hell is happening and will just wait and see if it all blows over or all die. (Or maybe something blows over and we die.)
ReplyDeleteTEPCO isn't telling the truth to the Japanese Government, who isn't telling the truth to the IAEA or the US, or even different parts of their own ministries, much less telling the truth to the public. It's not an accident we're doing Global Hawk and U2 overflights (with their permission). The NRC Chair publicly calling them out on a complete lack of water in the #4 pool was a deliberate act, and it got the intended results.
ReplyDeleteThe Japanese aren't nearly as wild and exaggerated as the round-eye network.
ReplyDeleteThey explain the half-life of the radioactive iodine is just 8-days, so wait a week and it won't be such a problem, and that you can WASH with the water but don't drink YOUR BABY in it, because washing doesn't get it into your thyroid gland the way DRINKING does.
Also the "control-level" is the amount that a person can ingest for one YEAR with no effects whatsoever, a point made over and over - and one that you DO NOT hear whatsoever *here*, so OMG_OMG!!11!! the spinach is 28-times the control level! ... is like 28-days out of a YEAR. They're just pulling the spinach (OMG-OMG! X-126 DAYS!) because they are incredibly fussy about food purity beginning with absolute banana-zero.
And nobody there is talking core melt-down. From old, spent rods??
Oh, don't get me started......Oh wait I already have! Twice now!
ReplyDeleteAnon 5:44,
ReplyDelete"It's not an accident we're doing Global Hawk and U2 overflights..."
The words you're looking for are "Constant Phoenix".
"Constant Phoenix" beats "Looking Glass" in my book any day.
ReplyDelete"They explain the half-life of the radioactive iodine is just 8-days, so wait a week and it won't be such a problem,"
ReplyDeleteAnything with an 8 day half life is real nasty shit. Course depends on how much of it there is, but I'd much prefer something around with a 4 billion year half life. You know, your basic rock like stuff.
what would be perfect would be for godzilla to show up, take a whizz on the reactors to cool them down and then walk if as nothing had happened...
ReplyDelete'as if'...
ReplyDeletelong day...
@ Loren, you mean like Uranium?
ReplyDeleteJust wait till they find out that neutrino particles from the Fukushima Daiichi plant are streaming through their studio even as they speak...
ReplyDeleteI wonder if you could convince them that an aluminum foil head covering would protect their brain from the neutrinos?
...And yet all these people drive to work, which is far more a danger to them than a passing uptick in their dose of radiation.
ReplyDeleteJim
For my first comment as a long-time lurker, let's bring this back around.
ReplyDeleteI swear someone set off some sort of ADHD bomb ~10 years ago, with a supplementary drop within the last 5. Crop-dusting continues...
Either that, or at 39 years young, I get to start counting in badger years.
We've secretly replaced her coffee with dilithium crystals. Let's see if she notices.
ReplyDeleteWhere is Dr. Science when you need him? "Dr. Science - he knows more than YOU do."
ReplyDeleteLittleRed1
"Fire up the overthruster, Monkey Boy!"
ReplyDelete"Constant Phoenix" beats "Looking Glass" in my book any day.
Most folks don't know that Constant Phoenix tail number 62-3582 was a Looking Glass airframe before 2003. How's that for irony?
@ Gewehr98- Really? That's good stuff! I am impressed Sir!
ReplyDeleteGewehr98 _knows_ about the ADHD bomb.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, have you noticed that quite many of the articles defending nuclear power in the last weeks have been written by one type of greens: the ones whose main concern is global warming (or whatever it's being called right now)? So there's at least one thing global warming research has been good for...
ReplyDelete