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4 posts tagged “24.”

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January 8, 2007
See the 24 Season Premiere a Week Early

Posted by Andrew Hearst

The sixth season of 24 begins next Sunday and Monday, the 14th and 15th, with two one-hour episodes each night. But you can watch the four episodes right now: Someone has uploaded torrents from a preview DVD that Fox will be offering for commercial sale starting on the 16th. You might be able to find them here.

season 6 of 24

For details about how to download torrented videos, go here.

[thanks to Al Abut for the tip.]




May 21, 2006
“Drop the Serif and Put Your Hands in the Air! Now! Damn It!!!”

Posted by Andrew Hearst

Wow, the 24 post from last week is one of the most-trafficked items I’ve ever posted here. A lot of people obviously find such an analysis to be freakish and obsessive, but honestly, those of us who care about type and design can’t help but notice those sorts of things. Most people don’t even know the difference between a serif font and a sans serif font; naturally many of those people are going to say, as one person did on Dave Barry’s blog, “WTF is he talking about?” The post has been called “astounding” and “rad” and “a great find,” but also “nutty” and “admittedly dull.” And then there’s this comment that was posted on CNet’s blog, which I can’t resist quoting in full:

CNet, you have officially reached the bottom. Not only did you come across this absolutely ridiculous blog posting, but you actually felt the need to torture us by linking us to it and making us think it actually contained even a tiny bit of relevant information. I can never have those few minutes back. I hate you.

Needless to say, I do not want to get a beer with that guy. I’d rather get a beer with Stephen Coles of the excellent site Typographica, who wrote to tell me that the font used for the 24 clock is a commercially available typeface called “LCD,” which you can buy here for $34.50. As you can see, the kerning of the 1’s is built into the font:

LCD, the font used for the clock on 24

I’d also rather get a beer with my pal Lindsay, who wrote to say this: “Finally, something so nerdy that it’s travelled through a worm hole and come out on the other side as cool. … This post is what the internet is FOR.” Right on!

I would also like to call your attention to the fact that Dave Barry has been liveblogging 24 regularly over the last few months, and it’s pretty hilarious.




May 14, 2006
There Is Something Weird Going on With the Clock on 24

Posted by Andrew Hearst

Jack Bauer

Okay, I am a TOTAL FREAK for having noticed this weird typographic pattern on 24. You have been warned. My discovery of this bizarre typographic anomaly took place in a few steps over the course of several episodes, so bear with me as I explain.

I loved the first season of 24, but I gave up on the show after the second season, because the pulled-out-of-thin-air plot twists, the hammy acting, and the fluid-as-water loyalties of the characters became increasingly maddening. “This show is ridiculous,” I eventually said to myself, perhaps when drunk, because I don’t usually talk to myself. “I refuse to watch it anymore.” But thanks to recommendations from a few enthusiastic friends, I returned to the show late in the fourth season, and now I’m totally hooked again. The fifth season has been fantastically entertaining. The producers have worked out most of the kinks in the format and now know exactly what they’re doing. The show is still ridiculous sometimes, but that’s part of the fun.

A few months ago I began to notice something unusual about the 24 clock—the timer that appears onscreen at regular intervals throughout each episode. It’s modeled on a standard LED clock, the kind you’ll see on the radio next to your bed or the microwave in your kitchen or inside a ticking rogue nuclear weapon once you’ve pulled off the face plate. You know—the standard workaday places. On a typical such clock, each number is rendered within a matrix of two vertical bars on either side and three horizontal bars in the middle. At first glance, the 24 clock appears to be based around exactly that sort of matrix. Here’s a screenshot from last Monday’s episode:

24 clock, 03:40:29

A couple of months ago, I noticed that the 24 clock renders the numeral 1 with a short serif at the top. Here’s another screenshot from last Monday’s episode, with the serif circled:

24 clock, 03:51:57

That serif is a needless typographic flourish. A normal clock wouldn’t have a serif there, and in fact it’s totally illogical for the 24 clock to have one: None of the other numerals show evidence that the LEDs on top are split in half and can render a serif. The LED bars along the top are always solid when used in the other numerals, and the light that illuminates the top bars in the other numerals is consistent and unbroken.

So I noticed this and it amused me, but I didn’t think much of it, because why should the 24 clock have to be logical and believable? Every episode of the show contains a lot of stuff that’s illogical and unbelievable. This typographic inconsistency is no more ridiculous than, say, Jack Bauer sneaking onto a diplomatic flight, hijacking the plane in midair, finding the evidence that implicates the president, forcing the bad-guy copilot to land the plane on a Los Angeles freeway, and then eluding the president’s military goons once the plane comes to a halt on the makeshift runway. To mention just one recent half-hour sequence.

[Continue reading "There Is Something Weird Going on With the Clock on 24"...]




October 16, 2005
Jack Bauer Races Against the Clock ... to Ensure That His Coffee and Desserts Taste Delicious


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