I think the real question is, am I the only one who sees a hottie tied to a chainlink headboard and immediately thinks about Alyson Hannigan?
Book ,'Our Mrs. Reynolds'
Lost: OMGWTF POLAR BEAR
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I think the real question is, am I the only one who sees a hottie tied to a chainlink headboard and immediately thinks about Alyson Hannigan?
Not anymore.
So, could the cable running from the ocean to Danielle's lair be generating electricity?
Only if it's plugged into a nuclear submarine.
I think the real question is, am I the only one who sees a hottie tied to a chainlink headboard and immediately thinks about Alyson Hannigan?
Mmmm.... Alyson Hannigan....
Only if it's plugged into a nuclear submarine.
I wouldn't immediately dismiss the possibility.
Russians coulda sold one to the polar bear.
am I the only one who sees a hottie tied to a chainlink headboard and immediately thinks about Alyson Hannigan?
Bored now.
I'm starting to see the shape of the backstory here.
A gang of international polar bear smugglers ran their nuclear submarine into a reef... blah blah blah... illegal genetic research... mumble mumble mumble... polar bears on a treadmill... handwave handwave handwave... Hurley is Satan.
It all makes sense.
Have the car batteries been used all that much?
Car batteries will run down on their own in a year or two if they're not charged somehow.
Another possibility is that there was a more recent shipwreck/plane crash/lost motorist/reality show production company (take your pick) that Danielle scavenged after she killed that set of survivors.
A car battery is only 12 volts, so I think it's unlikely that electrocution is a worry. Go wild.
For the record, it's not the voltage but the amperage that you have to watch out for. There's a specific amperage (I forget what the number is, exactly) that will stop the human heart that occurs at a fairly low power level - it interferes with the body's own nervous system signals. Shocks above that level might throw one's heart rhythm off temporarily, but I don't think there's much danger of death until you get into cooking territory.
True enough, Matt, but if a car battery could kill, think of how many weekend mechanics we'd find dead next to their cars.