CANADIANS understand how public service announcements work. (Warning: Music, sound, and it's a Canadian "workplace safety" PSA. Those are generally pretty gruesome.)
We've gotten the practice at making them good, from centuries of experience in teaching our children to avoid the moose.
Here's another example - it's a catechism that we ensure all schoolchildren know by heart, by the time they're able to spell their own names:
Q: What do we do when we are awake?
A: Keep two eyes on the sky.
Q: What do we do when we sleep?
A: Keep one eye on the sky.
Q: What do we do when we see the moose?
A: Dig hard, dig deep, go for shelter, and never look back.
We've gotten the practice at making them good, from centuries of experience in teaching our children to avoid the moose.
Here's another example - it's a catechism that we ensure all schoolchildren know by heart, by the time they're able to spell their own names:
Q: What do we do when we are awake?
A: Keep two eyes on the sky.
Q: What do we do when we sleep?
A: Keep one eye on the sky.
Q: What do we do when we see the moose?
A: Dig hard, dig deep, go for shelter, and never look back.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-05 04:33 pm (UTC)I don't see her face going into the deep fryer either, but she fell sideways towards what could be a deep fryer. I think that was the accident they tried to portray based on the quick flash of injuries. I have difficulty picturing the kind of exposed burns they picture stemming from quick exposure to boiling water, but I can easily see it coming from boiling oil, and there is a flame burst so there's something flammable there. That said, we don't know if that really was water in that pot or something completely different. I'm not not an EMT or medical professional, my experience is based on injuries I sustained being splashed with a similar quantity of boiling water, so I may be completely mistakened.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-05 04:56 pm (UTC)The fire flareup looks like she hit a frying pan on the way down and upended oil onto a grill or something. That could have actually gone way worse, because if the grease lights on fire and water is added, then the flaming grease actually floats on the water and becomes really hard to contain.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-05 05:25 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-05 05:04 pm (UTC)Her face didn't go into one of those on the way down, and she didn't get back up after she was lying on the floor. What she hit on the way down was a stove, not a fryer. I'm not seeing any reason to assume an accident caused by falling into a fryer. Heck, even the accident didn't look severe enough--you could still see bits of pink on her face under the blisters, and she had all her hair.
(You poured up to twenty-five gallons of boiling water, which may have been hotter than 100' Celsius (because a solute solution can actually exceed the boiling point of water) onto your face, and you call it a splash? I am stunned, and a little impressed.)
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-05 05:25 pm (UTC)