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hereforfun • 2 years ago

lol the criminal guy was like I know you killed the geezer, I will help you, kill the kids, then kill the blonde friend of the kids, and whoever tries to see us next, I will kill them too. And the black organisation blonde guy was like: yea Nah, slaps the fella with killer uppercut

Wiz Kidd • 2 years ago

"[M]odel the wind currents" - are you kidding me? What is he?

bari • 2 years ago

the cake!

hereforfun • 2 years ago

kids just do it the old fashioned way, stack a few boxes so when the fella opens the doors, the boxes fall on him and knock him out, then just run for it, or kick the cat at the other dude xD (I was just joking, dont hurt animals )

LesK • 1 year ago

ya know, that was a damn smart idea. since the dudes always opened the ass end of the truck TOGETHER... you might take them both down long enough for the kids to beat feet and get outta there. thing is... they're kids. how do they stack the boxes high enough to fall over and bury the two guys easily?

one way is, use some of the strongest boxes as stools or makeshift stairs. kinda like one of the ideas archeologists had about building the Egyptian Pyramids. make a huge dirt ramp almost as high as the pyramid and climb up it to put more stones on the next layer up... then add more dirt and make the ramp higher and higher... till you finish the pyramid... then dig it all up. the kids would want to put heavier and heavier boxes in the middle to the top of the 'wall' so they could push the 'wall' outwards themselves more easily and get outta the truck after the boxes fell.

the problem with your idea is the way these trucks' ass end doors work. there's a gap in the middle when the two doors start to open. if one or more of the two dudes SEES all those boxes suddenly appear from nowhere? they're going to try to shove the two doors shut and trap the boxes back inside the truck. the two levers on the doors are attached to two solid steel rods running the height of the doors. those rods have hooks on either end that grab onto the brackets above and below the doors. those hooks and brackets provide tension as the rods are rotated by the levers. so, if the two dudes shoved the doors closed fast and far enough, the hooks could catch the brackets and the levers would forcefully pull the two doors closed again.

to modify your idea, the kids should make TWO walls of boxes with a gap in-between. when the dudes opened the rear doors, they wouldn't immediately see boxes, just the gap. plus, if two kids shined their wrist-watch flashlights through the walls' gap into the guys' eyes as the doors open the guys might be blinded for a few seconds. maybe the blinded guys would allow the doors to swing open further. wider doors would let the boxes to fall more freely from the truck. ;) maybe add in one angry thrown cat into the mix too. ;)

lovestay • 2 years ago

furuya r so hot at the same time he's cute

IExistMe Official • 1 year ago

Mitsuhiko's lucky day

Wiz Kidd • 2 years ago

23:16 Am I tripping, or did Doc turn "Nan da kore?" into "Nan dekorēshon"? If so, the subbers should've put "Wot in decoration?" 😁

LesK • 1 year ago

the pun is a mixture of the Japanese interrogatory shocked declaration "nan de?"... as in 'what the...?' and the English word "decoration" as in ... what do you decorate a cake with? you decorate a cake with icing. and there is an old English slang phrase, "____ the icing on the cake." 'something' is put in front, that 'something' is the final piece of 'something else' that completes the entire 'something else'. usually the 'something' that comes first in the phrase is a minor detail, or very small component, or just something shiny, sparkly, or just 'decoration' and really has no usefulness to the 'something else' that it is decorating.

'icing on the cake' can also mean; a final big effort, push, grunt or strain, to complete a project or task or something that has taken a great deal of time to complete. that 'icing on the cake' is minor to the entire project, effort, task(s) that came before. but without that final bit the entire parts before then would have been completed, just without that smaller bit added on at the end.

for example. "I just bought my wife a new car. That five foot wide Red Bow on the hood? 'icing on the cake'.

or

"We have been building this road for four weeks now! The job's done boys, let's go to the bar and get wasted! All except you line painting crew members! You get to put the icing on this cake! 'hahaha!' No booze for you tonight!"

so here, the fansubbers not only had to translate Prof Agasa... who ALWAYS MAKES TERRIBLE JAPANESE WORD-PLAY PUN QUIZZES FOR THE Detective Boys Club members... but they also had to figure out some way for 'English speakers' to get Prof. A's pun across to 'English speakers'... because in the past... just about everybody else, other than Detective Conan Translation Project, has sucked hot sweaty donkey bawlz at trying to 'localize' Prof. A's puns for 'English speakers'.

because Japanese word-puns are fuuuuuuuuuuuuukkkkinnnng hard! to understand. especially when the Japanese folks mix ENGLISH (and other foreign words) into THEIR language's word-puns.

after these kids' ordeal with those murders... what's the 'icing on their cake' reward at the end? a demolished cake. ;> to quote Alanis Morissette "isn't it ironic, dont'cha think?" ;>

Noodlenjoyer4life • 2 years ago

Why didn't they just hide in one of the boxes?

LesK • 1 year ago

where do the kids put the stuff that was already in the boxes? ;) gotta think ahead a few more steps in 'your plan'. ;) this is a delivery truck, not a truck filled with empty boxes. :D

karo • 10 months ago

why doesn't conan want agasa and amuro to meet??

strange guy • 1 year ago

Wow no ran or kogoro here

strange guy • 1 year ago

The end of 2013

LesK • 1 year ago

i totally forgot! this episode came out on TV the exact same day 'Lupin III vs Detective Conan: The Movie' premiered in theaters.

strange guy • 1 year ago

That was last episode

LesK • 1 year ago

maybe the kids should have searched amongst the boxes and found some useful items. refrigerated freight often uses... DRY ICE! ;) big giant fog-bank coming out of the truck when the doors open would be cool! freight using dry ice is REQUIRED to mark the outside with a notice it is inside. just in case somebody accidentally opens the package with their bare hands and they lose some of their hands to the instant frostbite.

whaaaat else do you refrigerate while shipping? medical supplies. food. some chemicals are safer when moved cold. but i bet that truck is mostly filled with food items. a big bottle of hot peppers in brine? :> a jug of chili powder or ground chili flakes? hell anything with vinegar in it would hurt like hell if you threw the liquid into somebody's face and eyes.

ooh batteries! mmhm alot of batteries hate getting heated up, so if you're shipping batteries you need a temperature controlled truck. ESPECIALLY automobile batteries! ;) there's some damn deadly acids in those types of batteries! :> or if you found enough car batteries and some form of conductor, like the wiring on the lights inside the truck, you could shock the HELL out of whomever touched some metal on the doors when they went to open them.

well without a Swiss Army knife... cmon Conan... that is the MOST basic tool you could stick in your pocket for ... "well damn i'm trapped and i need a ____ !" situations.

LesK • 1 year ago

4:23 ok, somebody who knows more kanji than i do, translate the taxi receipt. i know the month and day is December 12. but Japanese companies/people sometimes mix THEIR calendar years in with the Julian/Gregorian year calendar. and i have NO idea how to read the Japanese calendar info.

i know they use a Month/Day/Year format like the Euros do with the JGC (Jul/Greg Cal). but i've NO clue what the kanji for December (twelfth month whatever they call it in Japan) is. and i vaguely remember the kanji for 12 looks like two 10s stacked atop one another. yeah, 10 is a simple 'square'... i think. so i'm FAIRLY certain that receipt reads December 12 ... also, the Japanese use the 24h clock not the 12h clock... so that receipt was printed at 21 minutes past Zulu or Midnight... so December 12, 12:21AM.

the NEXT line is what is SERIOUSLY confusing me! i've no clue what the first 2 kanji are, and the numerals 023 are baffling me entirely. i THINK that's supposed to be the YEAR line. but if it is... why isn't it on the same line as the month and day and time?

anyways, i get (vaguely) what the rest of the receipt means, 3,500 Yen for something, 500 Yen for something else, the credit card was charged a grand total of 4,000 Yen ... then a buncha credit card gobbledygook nobody ever understands ever...

i hope 9876 isn't the credit card number! :o that would be crazy foolish to print out on a receipt! no, wait, 16 digits. no, nevermind, the first two digits are wrong. the Major Industry Identifier codes are: American Express(34 or 37), Visa (4), Mastercard (5), or Discover (65 or 644 or 6011). anything 16 digits that starts with a 9 *if it is a credit card* will be some card that isn't specifically assigned to one of the 'big four' credit card networks.

Sekai • 2 years ago

The cake😢

Mir • 2 years ago

amuro's so cool i wish he isnt really a bad guy even though he's bourbon :">