Hilty discovered the fire after he heard a smoke alarm going off within the house as he stood outside the neighbor's home. He entered the house to find it filling with smoke, prompting him to call for assistance, said Miller, noting that had it not been for Hilty hearing the smoke detectors, “it would have been a lot different and they could have lost their whole house.”…
The chief explained that video consists of the Conditt describing the bombs “with a level of specificity” and in with some detail. In the video confession, Conditt also compared and contrasted the six bombs he used and “he identified what those differences were.”…
The movie opens with Radio pushing his cart through the street and shows a woman moving her child away from him, a man staring at him, and another man who almost runs him over calling him a “moron.” I liked that they started this way to establish what he goes through on a daily basis. Radio is constantly looking down allowing the viewer to realize that he has some sort of disability. Other times throughout the movie members of the town can be seen starring and laughing at Radio. The coach ignores their behaviors and continues his friendship with Radio despite what others think.…
Boom! The sound snaps us all to life, ensnaring our senses and shaking every fiber of our beings. In less than ten seconds we're all on our feet and almost in complete chaos. I snatch up my gun and the first few of us rush out of the barracks to find the colonel for orders. Boom! This time the blast is right behind us and our barracks bursts into a roaring wall of flames. The blast sends us falling face first to the ground. All of our fellow soldiers, our friends, were still inside and now the building is crumbling in a massive inferno. "We have to move!" Chris says, leaping to his feet, and the three of us run through camp and locate the colonel. "Grab a gun and form up on the coast line. We don't need to fight on two fronts." He orders us.…
1. Describe the nature of the voice in the opening paragraph. Is there any humor and irony?…
Then it began. Lullabies the reverberated across the house, with intermittent, ear splitting emphasized high notes that suggested the voice was miserably sobbing. Seconds later a door creaked open. My nose contorted at the smell of my own fear.…
Chapter 5: Radio Nowhere. Charles Pierce digs deep into the world of talk-radio on politics. The radio hosts he spoke of were all different in the way they think about or interpret issues occurring in politics. The first host that Charles spoke about is…
What would you do if you heard a knock on your door at 2:00 am and someone informed you that your husband was dead? This is the scenario that happens to Kathryn Lyons and her husband Jack Lyons, who is a pilot. Kathryn is now trying to juggle raising her fifteen-year-old daughter Mattie with the help of her grandmother, Julia, and trying to avoid all the questions and accusations from the press. She is also discovering things about her husband that she never knew before and wondering why he was keeping these secrets from her all these years. In this journal, I will be questioning, predicting, and connecting.…
'After that, listen carefully, we pretend we are aiding someone who fainted, and "accidentally" discovered the bomb; the hotel security staff get in charge, and we disappear unobtrusively. What do you think?'…
In Homer's Greek epic poetry, "Odyssey", the Sirens are described as devilish, mythical creatures while in Margaret Atwood's poem, the "Siren Song", are portrayed as innocent, mythical creatures trying to escape their fate while using tone, point of view, and monologue to each's advantage of portrayals of the Sirens.…
In (pg : ) it states that the old man was yelling louder and the sound might be heard by a neighbor. This makes the story suspenseful and makes the reader want to know more about the neighbors hearing the sounds of the old man yelling. Therefore another example is in (pg : ) the police came into the old man's house because of the neighbors hearing the yelling from the old man. This really makes the reader anxious of knowing what's going to happen and the fear of the murderer getting…
A man’s, adult voice distrupt and countdown “Ten, nine, eight …” As the countdown ends, the camera zooms into the girl’s eye, and we see the sudden explosion of an atomic bomb after explosion mushroom ahped fumes spreads…
The announcer raises his finger and says ´Quiet, please.´ Winchell bounces up and down in his double-cushioned chair to find out if it squeaks. The light above the clock turns red, indicating that the microphones are alive.…
In June of 1838, Ralph Waldo Emerson, writing in his journal, observed, "A man must have aunts and cousins, must buy carrots and turnips, must have barn and woodshed, must go to market and to the blacksmith's shop, must saunter and sleep and be inferior and silly." This is transcendentalism at its most practical, intended for people who, unlike Emerson's moody disciple, Thoreau, don't have the time to sit by a pond and complain about society. Were that the case, we'd all be living in Portland, Ore., making Bright Eyes records. Instead, we live on the Internet, which is why this quote is oddly relevant, as we seem to have, unconsciously, absorbed its practical…
At first, I could only hear panicked breathing, but then a thin, hoarse voice resonated in the almost empty room. The sound was tinny and a little distorted, but there was no mistaking the man’s fear. He was speaking quickly and disjointedly in what I could only assume was Russian, but he’d occasionally break off into a coughing fit followed by half-deranged sobs. It was pitiful to witness. Was it live? I couldn’t tell. There was a sound like a gun being fired from the speaker, and for a moment I though the man was…