24 Dusk

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Once of the contrivances of 24 I always found rather amusing was speed at which evening would fall. As the series is spread over the course of a day, dealing with the rapidly changing light at dawn and dusk is obviously problematic, so the solution was clearly borne of pragmatism: Simply send the characters indoors for the best part of an hour, and then let them emerge into darkness at the end of it. It's so obvious what's happening that it almost feels like a nudge and a wink from the producers of the show to the audience - "We know, we know, but it's the best we can do. Just suspend your disbelief and go along with it m'kay?"

Why do I mention this? After a few months of gradually failing light in the evenings, it seems the one clock change on Sunday morning finally proved the tipping point. I stepped out of the house earlier this evening into near complete darkness. Quite a change from the dusky grey I would have emerged into last week. That, plus the fact that the temperatures have plummeted over the last week or see lead me to conclude that winter is well and truly on it's way. Still less that two months to go before the winter solstice arrives and things start to brighten up once more...

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1 Comments

Kevin said:

Plummeted? Hah, I say. Snow, yes, snow on Oct 11th with a high of -2c on that day.

Folks from Seattle think it's wet in their state, but return from trips to Scotland complaining about the rain. Folks from Chicago think it's particularly windy[1] when they stroll through Edinburgh. But when Siberians arrive in Minnesota in winter, their cries of "Gods it's cold!" provoke a sick and depraved sense of local pride.

Now, gotta go fit snow tyres to my bike...

[1] Actually, there's some claim that the 'windy' in 'windy city' in fact stems from, to oversimplify, windbag marketers from Chicago.

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This page contains a single entry by Mark published on October 30, 2006 10:57 PM.

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