Of Human Action
- Episode aired Nov 12, 2009
- TV-14
- 44m
The Fringe team investigate a child that is supposed to have mind control abilities. Peter is kidnapped and controlled by him. Walter is extremely worried and afraid he might lose Peter agai... Read allThe Fringe team investigate a child that is supposed to have mind control abilities. Peter is kidnapped and controlled by him. Walter is extremely worried and afraid he might lose Peter again.The Fringe team investigate a child that is supposed to have mind control abilities. Peter is kidnapped and controlled by him. Walter is extremely worried and afraid he might lose Peter again.
- Officer Gibson
- (as Doron Bell Jr.)
- Officer Jenks
- (as Ryan Booth)
- Clerk
- (as Phil Cabrita)
- Seth Davies
- (as Peter Graham-Graudeau)
- Officer Williams
- (as Irene Karas)
- Renee Davies
- (as Jacqueline Steuart)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAt :47 in the episode as the police car turns to enter the parking structure the observer is seen across the street watching from behind a silver car.
- GoofsWhen the store clerk electrocutes himself, he places the key in the large slot on the outlet. This is the neutral connection that, unless miswired, would only have a few volts and not spark or cause the electrocution.
- Quotes
Walter Bishop: Once you are given the order to put on the headphones, do not remove them under any circumstances. If you do, you may die a gruesome and horrible death. Thank you for your attention and have a nice day.
- ConnectionsReferences The Simpsons (1989)
These five Fringe episodes depict our wait for the "Leader of the First Wave" to make his move - Dream Logic, Earthling, this one, August and Snakenead: These are all unrelated, Non-Pattern cases.
These are provided to give us background on Walter, Peter, The Observers, and Massive Dynamic.
An Attention-Deficit Disorder kid Tyler Carson (Cameron Monaghan) has been "kidnapped" by two used car salesmen. This is humorous enough, but when police catch up, they mysteriously kill each other off and one jumps from a high parking structure. Splat!
Walter correctly assumes "Mind Control" in this one - He was wrong about this in "Dream Logic" but he is correct this time.
I view these cases are "Fringe Practice" - They have nothing to do with "The Pattern" but they give Fringe Division good experience in dealing with strange events. Walter becomes Strangely Lucid when the threat shifts from the Tyler to Peter.
Because it was not the kid who had been kidnapped. It was the Kid all along. He has a Pez Dispenser full of drugs that were designed to allow pilots to interface with an airplane flight control.
But the kid, being ADHD, Testosterone-ridden, Angst Filled, with the addition of the Massive Dynamic drugs: As Walter says, "It's a Mind Control Cocktail."
Walter has to figure this one out on his own, he usually gets help from Peter, but Peter has been selected as a Taxi Driver for the kid, and has enough to worry about. Walter gets help from Olivia in a turnaround, they decide to "crash" the kid like an errant version of Windows Vista.
But the NSA thinks the kid wants to sell Massive Dynamic secrets to a foreign government: Therefore it becomes a race as to who can catch them before Peter becomes Collateral Damage. Fortunately, Fringe Division gets there first.
This is what happens when a Kid thinks he just a Kid and not a Massive Dynamic Experiment. Nina Sharp has found a way to report these goings on to William Belly on the other side, she has a quantum-entangled old Silicon Graphics "Dumb Terminal" which can send messages to the other side just like the typewriter at the secret place in Brooklyn. I used to have one of those, they are nothing but a keyboard attached to a Monochrome CRT that echos what you type. They used to make them in El Cajon, California, on Main Street. Maybe on the other side, the factory is still there. But on this side, that factory has been trashed long ago.
This is the irony of Massive Dynamic: They have access to the best state-of-the-art tech, but Nina uses an Anachronism to communicate with William.
At the very end, we get to see the scope of the "Tyler" experiment. Like everything else they do, it is "Massive." - and it occurs to me that this should have been exploited in season five. They literally had an army of Tyler's, who when a few years older might have been able to be recruited to fight the observers. You wonder, what ever happened to these guys? There was also the super soldier from season one episode two, they also had a room full of those guys as well. And they also had "Joseph Meegar", who could electrocute people just by thinking about them. Massive dynamic spirited them away, all of them. Some of them we never heard about ever again, others, like Nick Lane, became integral to the season two storyline.
Whatever happened to all of these massive dynamic experiments? Also this shows that Nina Sharp was not exactly quite upfront with fringe division as she was pretending to be... sure, she was an ally, but she was responsible for all of these experiments.
- XweAponX
- May 21, 2012