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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Three Inches
Genre
Created byHarley Peyton
StarringNoah Reid
James Marsters
Kyle Schmid
Stephanie Jacobsen
Naoko Mori
Julian Richings
Craig Eldridge
Antony Del Rio
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producersHarley Peyton
Jace Alexander J. J. Jamieson[1]
Running time90 minutes
Original release
NetworkSyfy
ReleaseDecember 29, 2011 (2011-12-29)

Three Inches is an American science fiction action television film, intended to serve as the pilot episode for a proposed series. Created by writer-producer Harley Peyton and directed by Jace Alexander it aired on Syfy on December 29, 2011. The show follows a group of people with superhuman abilities, focusing on Walter Spackman, played by Noah Reid, an underachiever who develops a telekinetic ability after being struck by lightning.

The movie received favorable reviews, but failed to spawn into the TV series.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Is The 5-Second Rule True?
  • Unit Conversion & Significant Figures: Crash Course Chemistry #2
  • Converting between Inches, Feet, Yards and Miles 128-2.4

Transcription

Hey, Vsauce, Michael here, and bananas are fantastic. They're actually one of the most radioactive foods we regularly eat. Sometimes they're difficult to peel from the top. One of my favorite ways to avoid that is to simply hold the banana and snap it in half. Boom, now it peels itself. It's a wonderful little trick, except when you drop it on the ground. This is unfortunate, but, if it picked it up quickly, would it be safe enough to eat? I mean, how quickly do the bacteria on the floor move onto the food? Some people call it the "5-Second Rule." Others, the "10-Second Rule." And still, others, the "2-Second Rule." But, is there any truth to it, or is it just something we say to allow us to eat food off the floor? In 2003, Jillian Clarke famously investigated this question. She found that 50% of men use the 5-Second Rule to eat food off the ground. But, 70% of women do. More importantly, she found that even brief contact with a contaminated floor will contaminate food, wet or dry. The Myth Busters found similar results. And a paper published in the Journal of Applied Microbiology got even more technical. The researchers contaminated various floor surfaces with salmonella, and they found that 5 seconds is way too long to wait. Bacteria adhere to dropped food almost immediately, but time does matter- after 5 seconds, they found that the food had acquired anywhere from 150-8000 bacteria. But, if left for a full minute, the number they found was 10 times greater. Now considering it only takes about 10 bacteria of certain strains of salmonella to infect you, you should probably think twice before eating off the ground. Oh, and don't complacently think that you're safe because the floor looks clean, or the food that fell on it does. Floors make great homes...for bacteria. Also, floors come in contact with the bottoms of our shoes, and the University of Arizona has found that 93% of our shoes are contaminated with fecal bacteria. I've linked all of these studies down in the description. They're great reads- very thorough. But, is it true that food dropped on a dirty floor becomes contaminated immediately? I mean, sure, practically speaking, that makes a lot of sense. But instantly? Is there a limit for how quickly bacteria can move from one object to another? Is there an amount of time, short enough, that were I to pick the food up within it, there would be no way for what it touched to contaminate it. Well, we're going to need to define "touch." I've talked about this before on Vsauce, and on Thinker, and MinutePhysics has a great quantum perspective, but when we say "touch," we tend to think of two objects contacting each other with no space in between. Unfortunately, that's not really what happens. At a subatomic level, atoms resist smashing together because their electrons repel. Electrons can be modeled as waves, waves that overlap and interact, but they never touch. There's always space between them. When I touch something, or someone, I'm really just feeling their electrons react to mine at a distance. A sub-atomically small one, but a real one. So, if that's the case, how come glue can stick things together? How come lipstick sticks to lips? And how can bacteria on a dirty floor stick to food that's been dropped on it? The positive charge from the protons in an atom or molecule isn't always balanced perfectly in space by the negative charge from electrons. Sometimes a molecule is asymmetrical and this imbalance is permanent, which gives the molecule a constant dipole, so it's like a tiny little magnet. But even in symmetrical molecules, electrons are mobile. At any one point in time they might happen to find themselves more towards one end of the molecule than the other, creating rapidly fluctuating dipoles, causing the molecule to act like a magnet. If molecules have a lot of energy they will simply whiz by one another, and their dipoles and those of their neighbors won't matter much. But, if you cool them down, slow them down, the dipoles will have more of an effect, which is why molecules tend to stick together as they cool- going from a gas, to a liquid, to a solid. That's a lot of information about molecules, but it's incredibly important. It's the reason things can get wet. In fact, when you get out of the shower, you, on average, weigh about one more pound more than you did before you got wet. It's also the reason Capillary Action happens. If you dip a napkin in a glass of water, you can watch water climb up the napkin against gravity. That's because the molecules of water have very strong dipoles, and they're attracted to each other (cohesion), and they're attracted to molecules of the paper (adhesion), more strongly than gravity pulls them down. If you want to learn more about intermolecular forces, I've put a bunch of links down in the description. But here's my question: how quickly do those forces act? Can two surfaces come into contact, briefly enough, that their molecules don't have time to be influenced by intermolecular forces. Well, for this, we're going to need Molecular Dynamics. Molecular Dynamics is the computer simulation of the physical movements of atoms or molecules. For instance, this is a simulation of a single Copper atom depositing on a Copper surface. Notice that the timer up there is counting off hundredths of a picosecond. These simulations need to have a narrow enough time-step to account for the fastest molecular vibrations of the material, including everything from wagging, to scissoring. Typically, time as brief as a quadrillionth of a second is taken into account. So, the 5-second Rule may be true...If we rename it the "1 Femtosecond Rule." Spend less time on the floor than that, and it's unlikely that room temperature molecules would have time to be influenced by intermolecular forces. Except, oops, I think we've been thinking too small. Intermolecular forces are fun, but objects can become entangled with each other on a macroscopic level. Glue, and makeup, and other sticky stuff often take advantage of the tiny imperfections- ridges, and nooks and crannies- on an objects surface. Sticky things can seep inside and hold on. Even surfaces that seem smooth to us, when you really get down to it, aren't smooth at all. Two sheets of paper from a phonebook may slide across each other quite easily, but multiply that friction by the number of pages in two phonebooks by interweaving the pages, and you've got yourself a monster capable of lifting an entire car. I was recently lucky enough to see this happen in real life. You can check out my adventure over at Fast, Furious, and Funny. It's a new channel, stay tuned because we lifted cars with more than just phonebooks... The adhesion between two objects caused by the shapes of their surfaces contributes to friction and is known as "mechanical adhesion." It plays a pretty big role in getting floor germs to sick to dropped food. In fact, if two surfaces can mechanically adhere, but aren't close enough to do so, we wouldn't say they were touching. And so, if by definition "touching" means that you can mechanically adhere to other object's surface, well, then, maybe the 5-Second Rule shouldn't be known as the "1 Femtosecond Rule," because if they're touching, it's already too late, and, instead, the rule should be known as the "Don't Touch Food That's Fallen on the Floor...Rule." But come to think of it, maybe we shouldn't be eating food that's touched anything because bacteria are everywhere, including on you right now. There are more bacteria on your body right now than there are people living in America. There are 40 million bacteria in one gram of soil, and 5 Nonmillion bacteria on Earth. It's been found that one out of every 10 bank cards, and one out of every 7 bills, has fecal bacteria on it. Here's something fun: go down to the comment section and type the letter "V." If you used a mobile phone to do that, congratulations, you just touched 6,281 bacteria. If you're using a desktop keyboard, you're a little safer. You probably only touched about 180. Cellphones are actually one of the most bacteria-ridden things we frequently encounter. If you want to estimate about how many bacteria are specifically on your phone, based on how clean you are, The Oatmeal has a really great quiz- you can find that in the description. But honestly, what amazes me the most isn't how dirty our world is, or how much bacteria there is; instead, it's the fact that despite those numbers, we don't get sick more often. Our immune system is amazing, but it relies on the same principles of adhesion that bacteria do. The forces that cause food dropped on the floor to pick up germs are the same forces that we need to fight them. They're same forces that bring us closer together, whether we like it or not. So, keep adhering, and, as always, thanks for watching.

Plot

On the same day that 26-year-old Walter Spackman confesses his love to the non-reciprocating Lily, he is struck by lightning. He awakens from a coma to discover that he has gained the ability to move objects with his mind up to a distance of three inches. The mysterious Troy Hamilton recruits Walter to join his team of superheroes and Walter joins in the hope of helping to improve the world.

Walter's first mission is to recover a package on behalf of an unknown client. The "package" turns out to be a young girl named Cassie, who has a set of superhuman abilities. Deeply troubled, Walter quits the team but returns to headquarters with teammate Watts, best friend Macklin and Cassie's sister to rescue the girl. The next day Troy tells Walter that he had no idea that the "package" was a person. Upon learning the truth, he counted on Walter's sense of decency to lead him to quit and, as a "disgruntled former employee", rescue Cassie while giving Troy the "plausible deniability" he needed. Walter rejoins the team.

Cast

Main characters

  • Noah Reid as Walter Spackman, an underachiever who develops a telekinetic ability after being struck by lightning. He can move objects up to a maximum distance of three inches.
  • James Marsters as Troy Hamilton, an ex-Army intelligence officer who investigated psychics, got so interested in people with gifts, leading him to form his own team. He is the group's organizer and has no extraordinary powers of his own.
  • Kyle Schmid as Brandon, the field leader who is Troy’s son. He wears body armor and displays tactical finesse. He has no extraordinary powers of his own.
  • Stephanie Jacobsen as Watts; she can alter people's emotional states when she is near them, making them feel happy or sad.
  • Naoko Mori as Annika; she can mimic sounds she hears, so she does perfect imitations of people.
  • Antony Del Rio as Carlos "The Human Smell", the youngest member of the team who can emit a pungent gas through his pores. He often talks about himself in the third person.
  • Craig Eldridge as Todd; he has limited clairvoyancy, and gets stronger headaches the further into the future he looks. He has the power to see up to two minutes into the future.
  • Julian Richings as Ethan, an entomologist who can communicate with and control insects.

Supporting characters

Development

Syfy initially planned to develop Three Inches as an hour-long drama. Syfy announced the project in March 2010,[2] and the network ordered the pilot in October.[3] The pilot was delivered to the network at around the same time as the pilot for Alphas, another series with a similar premise. Syfy executives liked both pilots but felt that Alphas had better potential as an hour-long series. The network began exploring ways to reformat Three Inches, including possibly making it into a half-hour sitcom.[4]

Critical reception

Brian Ford Sullivan of The Futon Critic gave the pilot a generally positive review. He found that the show has "an inherent cleverness" and was fun to watch. He particularly praised the performances of Reid and Marsters. However, he found the show's mixing of tones, from Walter's "slightly wacky home life" to the gloominess of his daily existence to the camaraderie with his fellow heroes to the dark possible consequences of their mission, to be uneven.[5]

References

External links

This page was last edited on 5 March 2024, at 19:58
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