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Post by TheKat on Feb 3, 2005 21:48:59 GMT -5
Ok, what's his deal is he just very adamant about things or kind of crazy... how in the world did he expect to use that Jackhammer?!?! This has been puzzling me for quite sometime... It was funny as "the place opposite of heaven" but man... what was up with that...
Kaytee
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Post by Mac on Feb 3, 2005 23:33:25 GMT -5
It was funny as "the place opposite of heaven" Rwanda, circa 1994? It doesnt take a genius or a weightlifter to use a jackhammer...
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Post by TheKat on Feb 4, 2005 13:08:49 GMT -5
I know that but goodness he should have taken it outside. And where did he get it from? How did he plan on using it.. Z cracks me up.
<--- here's a clue just for Mac it begins with "H"
Kaytee
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Post by MirrorCard on Feb 4, 2005 21:07:42 GMT -5
Ok, what's his deal is he just very adamant about things or kind of crazy... how in the world did he expect to use that Jackhammer?!?! I think the writers were running out of possible roles for him midseason 3. Nanotechnology had Z acting rather strangely when they gave him the "moral compass" role in that episode. He didn't do too much outside of that. Vision, Prof Z didn't do too much either. I'm sure Corrine would know about the blackbag blindfold since the eyes are rather close with the brain, her dad being a brain sergent. Prof Z really wasn't needed in this episode. Hologram, it did not seem like Prof Z played an important role. His analysis of the device was filler (and a bit random even though logical). He really was comic relief in the episode, the way he reacted to his coffie being taken (showing a passive role in the episode) and chewing on his finger when telling the others what the remaining time was (notice he didn't influence the vote on the pendant). You could say that Probability was a Marshall and Prof Z episode. Outside of Prof Z being acknowledged as a Science Club member, nothing really occured with him. He discouraged the belief of strangeness with probability (which breaks from his curiosity of the strange things at the school which is established by season 1 and 2 episodes) but then changed his mind. Prof Z's character was really more of a confusion-inducing one on the Science Club figuring out what was going on instead of being helpful like he normally us. Chirality seemed to undo the streak of Prof Z's lack of character development in the previous 4 episodes (and caught up Durst as well).
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Post by Professor Z's Girl on Feb 4, 2005 22:17:08 GMT -5
Ok, what's his deal is he just very adamant about things or kind of crazy... how in the world did he expect to use that Jackhammer?!?! This has been puzzling me for quite sometime... It was funny as "the place opposite of heaven" but man... what was up with that... Kaytee [glow=blue,9,999] Yeah like I said on another thread, I could see how olive oil or any other lubricant would work, (though they wouldn't really need it where Vaughn could slide his hand) but I don't see how he could use a sledgehammer, torch, or jackhammer & not harm Vaughn & Corrine. I wonder how he got hold of a jackhammer unless he had some sort of permit or something & I wonder where he would've gotten 1 in the first place cause the last time I checked, you can't get 1 in a hardware store like you can a sledgehammer or a torch.[/glow]
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