n, for bastard, jerk, creep, etc. Get some flashlights. This guy's not going to glow in the dark. "Flashlights" are the portable light bulbs that you need when the electricity goes out. "To glow" is to shine, or give off light. The media is having a feeding frenzy with this To be "in a frenzy" is to be acting with extreme excitement or emotion. This expression refers to the intense behavior of reporters when they discover a sensational story. Every network has a pirated shot of Marlon. "A stolen or inappropriately taken picture." The sponsors are threatening to rip up their contracts. The companies that pay to advertise on a TV show, or in the case of The Truman Show, to pay for "product placements." Sweep the harbor. You can "sweep" the floor with a broom, or in this case, move powerful lights across an area while looking for something. The lighthouse camera is up. A "lighthouse" is the tall building in the ocean that ships look for when trying to figure out where they are in relation to land. If anything mechanical is "up," it likely means functioning. Truman fights his creator in his most courageous attempt to find the truth. Resume transmission. Another way to say "continue" after something has been temporarily stopped. I got two to one he doesn't make it Whenever people use two numbers in an "x to y" type of expression, they usually mean that if they were gambling, they would consider this the odds of something happening. I need you to talk to the guys on the ferry. A type of ship that usually carries people back and forth between two places on the opposite sides of a body of water. The bottom line is that they can't drive the boat; They're actors! A useful and common expression that means "the simpleand most important fact." We're going to be accessing the weather program now. "To access" is one of those abstract verbs that can mean to get, use, reach or possibly obtain. In this context, a "program" probably refers to a computer software program. Enter in the coordinates now. An interesting word for bits of information, including for physical location. Capsize him. "To capsize" is what happens to a boat if it turns over in the water. Rarely used as a transitive verb, but there it is. Tip him over. "To tip over" someone is to push them so that they'll fall over. He's going to drown and he doesn't even care. "To drown" is to die in water by not being able to breath. The same lies, the same deceit. A nice little word meaning misrepresentation or falsehood. Say something, God damn it....You're live to the whole world. A vulgar but common way of expressing anger. It's much safer to eliminate "God" and just say"dam it." The second sentence means "the whole world is watching."
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