Speaking of driving, we're getting information about candidates for my boss at work, and one of them said in her pre-interview questionaire or whatever that she would learn to drive if she got the job! Fascinating. I actually don't think it would be necessary, but she was working on the assumption that it would.
Natter 45: Smooth as Billy Dee Williams.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I remember thinking that was weird too, but wasn't the flight delayed because of bad weather? Maybe neither of them are very good snow drivers...
This is funny because I never watched House and, yet, I think I know the episode you're talking about because the writer of the ep discussed it in LJ and said:
Going by plane was more problematical, but I could see them taking a commuter flight out of some small airport around Princeton. (There is indeed a small commuter airport near Princeton, but it doesn't go to Baltimore; our airports on both ends were strictly imaginary.) I say "problematical" because I'm from New Jersey, and my first impulse would be to take the train. I discounted automobile, because the traffic delays would make it impractical, and no business organization would want to send two people whose hourly wages verge on astronomical on a long, tiring car ride -- it would be a false economy, and would hardly leave your lawyer fresh as a daisy and ready to argue. In the end, train vs. plane seemed a toss-up; I've seen plenty of people take short business flights, so the idea didn't shock me, and though weather can keep a train station isolated as well as an airport, it would be harder for a mass audience to grasp intuitively.
I do understand that the Needs of the Drama are different than the needs of real life, but still. I think I just would have made the fake location farther and/or more awkwardly placed.
You may think, "But why not just say Medicaid is somewhere more distant -- in Chicago, for instance?" In fact, that point was raised. (You would be shocked at the number of points that are raised over a television episode.) What I'm going to say may seem a too-subtle writing issue, and you're free to disagree with it. It's true that only a comparatively small portion of the audience would know that Medicaid was in Baltimore, so it may seem a harmless change. But while creating imaginary airports, or small towns, or even, sometimes, entire obscure nations, is within the rules of the game, taking something that exists in the real world and modifying it that greatly feels like a cheat.
hee
ETA: I should just post the link because I thought the post was interesting.
Go again, Jesse! Go again!
But while creating imaginary airports, or small towns, or even, sometimes, entire obscure nations, is within the rules of the game, taking something that exists in the real world and modifying it that greatly feels like a cheat.
Huh. Of course, I lost track of the reason they were in Baltimore anyway.
taking something that exists in the real world and modifying it that greatly feels like a cheat.
Something like...the real geographical distance betwen Baltimore and Princeton? And the existance of the Acela train's first class car, which is ever so much more comfortable than any airplane, especially for someone with chronic pain who might need to get up and walk around?
(I mean, I get what he's saying, but I think there are more people from Maryland and/or New Jersey than there are people who know where Medicaid's offices are. IJS.)
I dunno. I've never heard of that train. I was just having some fun.
Everyone in this part of the country yelled THAT ISN'T BWI as soon as the scene started.