Out sports. Ugh where despite added protection. crashes sometimes theres not a lot of thought that goes into what people do. thumps over at whacked out research farm, were removed all the energyinefficient fluorescent lighting tubes, gave everyone a 2 flashlight, and passed the savings on to our bookie. And fall backwards through these 13 fluorescent tubes laced through some lattice fencing we found at the community garden. And just in case thats not painful enough, we spiced up the cardboard landing pile with a few dozen mousetraps. As larry makes the climb, is our boy going danny glover on us i. E. , getting too old for this . Add more hardcoreness, man. larry speaking is it the mousetraps . Narrator so, youre cool with the real danger presented by the immutable laws of physics, but superstition has you nervous . Thats our larry so sweet, yet so stupid. Now, come on. Less stalling, more falling. yells narrator timber crashes narrator hes fine. crashes slap some bandaids on those boob
11:48 am The Amazon series
Upload shows a comedic and probably more realistic version of what would happen if humans could live online after they die. Courtesy of Amazon Studios
In the Amazon original series
Upload, a young programmer named Nathan Brown uploads his mind to virtual reality after his body is critically injured in a car accident. Mind uploading is a familiar trope, but science fiction author Tobias S. Buckell says that
Upload presents an interesting new spin on the idea.
“We’ve all heard about people getting uploaded, and we all know how people can use the virtual world to live out their fantasies, but it was really interesting how the virtual world becomes a world with consequences and problems and issues that the character has to navigate,” Buckell says in Episode 457 of the