At regular intervals at Griffith Observatory, in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, curators fire up the Tesla coil, that spark-emitting metal orb in a huge cage that featured in La La Land. For a better film reference, think a cackling James Whale-era Frankenstein, Igor having just thrown the switch.
I was lucky enough to witness the 3.50pm showing a few days ago. At the sight of hundreds of thousands of volts arcing a voice next to me said to his companion, "Is that real?"
I appreciate that this was more knee-jerk expression of awe than literal question, but it immediately got me thinking. If he wasn't expressing some concern about his own ability to tell reality from fantasy, what could he mean?
You see, whilst there are many things that a Tesla coil can allude to - lightening in a bottle, the battles of the Norse gods, the formation of the stars themselves - there isn't really anything else that can suggest a Tesla coil itself. It's its own special effect. You can't fake it. It's not like putting antelope horns on a hare to get a taxidermy jackalope. Or getting an actor to play dead or play a zombie. The easiest way to suggest a Tesla coil is, um, a Tesla coil.
Is it real? The stranger answer would be 'no'.
So, if there's one thing more impressive than a Tesla coil going hell-for-leather, it's something that can imitate a Tesla coil going hell-for-leather.
I was lucky enough to witness the 3.50pm showing a few days ago. At the sight of hundreds of thousands of volts arcing a voice next to me said to his companion, "Is that real?"
I appreciate that this was more knee-jerk expression of awe than literal question, but it immediately got me thinking. If he wasn't expressing some concern about his own ability to tell reality from fantasy, what could he mean?
You see, whilst there are many things that a Tesla coil can allude to - lightening in a bottle, the battles of the Norse gods, the formation of the stars themselves - there isn't really anything else that can suggest a Tesla coil itself. It's its own special effect. You can't fake it. It's not like putting antelope horns on a hare to get a taxidermy jackalope. Or getting an actor to play dead or play a zombie. The easiest way to suggest a Tesla coil is, um, a Tesla coil.
Is it real? The stranger answer would be 'no'.
So, if there's one thing more impressive than a Tesla coil going hell-for-leather, it's something that can imitate a Tesla coil going hell-for-leather.
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