Difference between revisions of "2811: Free Fallin'"

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{{incomplete|Created by a Vampire on Ventura Boulevard - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
 
{{incomplete|Created by a Vampire on Ventura Boulevard - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
  
In this comic, Randall suggests that due to an obscure law, the [[wikipedia:National Transportation Safety Board|National Transportation Safety Board]] (NTSB) has to do a report if a song is downloaded to a [[wikipedia:Flight data recorder|flight data recorder]]. In this instance, the song used is [[wikipedia:Free Fallin'|''Free Fallin''']] by [[wikipedia:Tom Petty|Tom Petty]]. The NTSB issues reports on incidents involving airplanes. In this comic, the lyrics of the song are used to describe the actions of the incident aircraft over northern Los Angeles County, California. Tom Petty flies his aircraft, starting from his home in Reseda, gliding over Mulholland Drive, skywriting the name of his loved one, and then presumably either skydiving from the craft or turning off its power to achieve free fall. Assuming Tom Petty is the [amateur] solo pilot, either action would be a dangerous maneuver risking not only his vehicle but the lives of the civilians below, and quite possibly his own.
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In this comic, Randall suggests that due to an obscure law, the [[wikipedia:National Transportation Safety Board|National Transportation Safety Board]] (NTSB) has to do a report if a song is downloaded to a [[wikipedia:Flight data recorder|flight data recorder]]. In this instance, the song used is [[wikipedia:Free Fallin'|''Free Fallin''']] by [[wikipedia:Tom Petty|Tom Petty]]. The NTSB issues reports on incidents involving airplanes. Interpreting the song's lyrics as a description of an incident, the NTSB creates a report describing a flight over northern Los Angeles County, California. The pilot apparently takes off from his home in Reseda, gliding over Mulholland Drive, skywriting the name of his loved one, and then presumably either skydiving from the craft or turning off its power to achieve free fall. Assuming Tom Petty is the [amateur] solo pilot, either action would be a dangerous maneuver risking not only his vehicle but the lives of the civilians below, and quite possibly his own.
  
 
The title text refers to the song "Crash Into Me", off the Dave Matthews Band's second album, ''Crash''. The investigation team likely would not enjoy a song which reminds them of their job, even if it was referring to love instead of planes {{citation needed}}.
 
The title text refers to the song "Crash Into Me", off the Dave Matthews Band's second album, ''Crash''. The investigation team likely would not enjoy a song which reminds them of their job, even if it was referring to love instead of planes {{citation needed}}.

Revision as of 19:14, 5 August 2023

Free Fallin'
Their crash investigation team had some particularly harsh words for Dave Matthews.
Title text: Their crash investigation team had some particularly harsh words for Dave Matthews.

Explanation

Ambox notice.png This explanation may be incomplete or incorrect: Created by a Vampire on Ventura Boulevard - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.
If you can address this issue, please edit the page! Thanks.

In this comic, Randall suggests that due to an obscure law, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has to do a report if a song is downloaded to a flight data recorder. In this instance, the song used is Free Fallin' by Tom Petty. The NTSB issues reports on incidents involving airplanes. Interpreting the song's lyrics as a description of an incident, the NTSB creates a report describing a flight over northern Los Angeles County, California. The pilot apparently takes off from his home in Reseda, gliding over Mulholland Drive, skywriting the name of his loved one, and then presumably either skydiving from the craft or turning off its power to achieve free fall. Assuming Tom Petty is the [amateur] solo pilot, either action would be a dangerous maneuver risking not only his vehicle but the lives of the civilians below, and quite possibly his own.

The title text refers to the song "Crash Into Me", off the Dave Matthews Band's second album, Crash. The investigation team likely would not enjoy a song which reminds them of their job, even if it was referring to love instead of planes [citation needed].

Map item Corresponding Free Fallin' lyric
Tom Petty home And it's a long day livin' in Reseda
vampires And all the vampires walkin' through the valley
Move west down Ventura Boulevard
boys (bad) And all the bad boys are standin' in the shadows
girls (good) (sad) And the good girls are home with broken hearts
glide phase I wanna glide down over Mulholland
skywriting incident I wanna write her name in the sky
 ? I'm gonna free fall out into nothin'
Gonna leave this world for awhile
I'm free fallin'

Transcript

Ambox notice.png This transcript is incomplete. Please help editing it! Thanks.

[Map of San Fernando Valley, California, with dotted line labeled “flight path” and several other features marked on and around the line:]

  • Tom Petty home (in Reseda)
  • flight path (the dotted line)
  • vampires (on Ventura Boulevard, with an arrow pointing west)
  • boys (bad)
  • girls (good) (sad)
  • glide phase (over Mulholland Drive)
  • skywriting incident (loops in flight path)
  • ? (at end of flight path, near Burbank)

[In the top left of the map, the logo of the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB)]

[Caption below the panel:] Due to an obscure law, if you download a song onto a flight data recorder and send it to the NTSB, they have to do a report on it.


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Discussion

Is it just me, or does the caption cast a shadow?

I didn't spot it, but when I zoomed in, yup, there's a grey "shadow", particularly the top line, particularly "onto" and the W in "law" (looks like the black version the W is sloppier). I think Randal does a draft first - in physical form this would be pencil, not sure if XKCD is purely digital - to plan out, like checking letter spacing, then does the final version over the draft, and the grey is that draft. NiceGuy1 (talk) 05:04, 5 August 2023 (UTC)
Aye, we've seen it before, possibly even enough for it to be Catagoried. I suspect he does (at least one) draft-layer for text (as well as whatever layers he uses to plan and redraw the lines/other artwork, e.g. to replicate actual acurately generated maps "in line-drawn approximation" style) and then sometimes only drags the transparency up to the high-0%s/opacity into low single digit%s rather than the whole way. Or perhaps he normally drags them to "still notably visible" which reminds him to de-visible/delete the unwanted layers, but the remaining 'onion skin' effect is too muted to remind him. Obviously, we only get to see the flattened image not the 'working copy', so it's speculation (does he even say he uses a particular software, Photoshop/GIMP/whatever, as well as what technique he employs?), but this might well be considered a revealing detail (of interest to those who are interested in such details, tautologically) worth at least this quick Talk-page ramble. ;) 172.71.242.194 09:08, 5 August 2023 (UTC)

The DMB song referenced in the tooltip is "Crash Into Me" Jdavis103 (talk) 20:53, 4 August 2023 (UTC)

Okay, other than name-dropping Reseda, Ventura Blvd., and Mulholland, I'm not sure how those lyrics would translate to THAT flight path, :) (for example, why is THAT "the shadows"? Looks mountainous, is that a name/nickname for those mountains? Why is the skywriting incident THERE, and spirals?) And WEIRD coincidence, lately I've been looking into a Family Guy joke about Dave Matthews! Peter has Dave's head as a punching bag, punching it does a scat I find familiar, I'm sure it's famous, but I'm having trouble identifying it (then he switches it for David Lee Roth doing Just A Gigolo, THAT one is easy) NiceGuy1 (talk) 05:12, 5 August 2023 (UTC)

Those are the western mountains. The song takes place later in the day presumably ('it's a long day livin' in Reseda' implies the day is ending) so the sun would be setting in the west, mountains to the east would be in sunlight, the mountains to the west would cast shadows into the area of the map. Time of day is further supported by the vampires moving west down Ventura, as vampires are not normally cool with bright sunlight. The skywriting part takes place immediately after gliding over Mulholland If you assume the song is in chronological order. The line 'I wanna glide down over Mulholland' is immediately followed by the line 'I wanna write her name in the sky' --172.68.174.242 13:36, 5 August 2023 (UTC)
Yeah, okay, that tracks. I don't know the song enough to know the lyrics off the top of my head (though enough to recognize them, particularly the names mentioned), and didn't want to look them up then flip back and forth between tabs. Still, "shadows" seems a bit reaching as a reference, like he's trying too hard to mention another lyric, :) NiceGuy1 (talk) 04:29, 12 August 2023 (UTC)

Any relation to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trevor_Jacob#Airplane_crash ? Villemoes (talk) 06:50, 7 August 2023 (UTC)

I can see why you might guess that, but being nearly two years later means the timing doesn't work as an inspiration that way, and now being still a few months from the anniversary means not THAT way either... Meaning the only correlation is crashing a small plane. And that they're both California - though it talks about Mammoth Mountains, which look way east from the cities which may be the one in the song (I only barely know they're California, I think L.A.). It's SOMETHING, but too vague to consider it a definite connection, IMHO. NiceGuy1 (talk) 04:29, 12 August 2023 (UTC)