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The effect is like stumbling across a street-theater production of Eyes Wide Shut by the drama club at your local middle school. Despite a musical score that's constantly broadcasting exactly how scared we should be at any given time (note to horror TV shows: Do not do this), the sequence genuinely gets under your skin. Indeed, the most unnerving image doesn't involve the masks or the ritualized trial at all: It's the little girl that Molly encounters, playing with a tangle of wires in a vacant lot in the middle of the night by herself. There's something wrong about that — but it's a primal wrongness we can recognize all around us, in a country where economic dislocation and racist legal policies leave kids to fend for themselves all the time. It ties to another great moment from the previous episode, when Officer Dennis Zalewski tells Henry he won't testify on behalf of The Kid, not even anonymously; he can't risk losing his employee health benefits and he'd be working at a Wal-Mart rather than a prison if there were one within driving distance.
Things are getting a little strange in Castle Rock. Granted, there's been no shortage of oddness in the show so far: the guy who decapitated himself with his own car; a feral kid convict found kept in a cage; the occasional dog corpse in a suitcase or container filled with fingernail clippings. (E) And so on. But in "Local Color, " the third and final episode Hulu released in its opening salvo, the real shit — the high uncut, Advanced Weirdness 101 — officially kicks into high gear. Let's start where the show does, with young Molly Strand straight-up murdering a guy. Possessing — or possessed by, considering how miserable they make her — psychic powers, she's obsessed with her neighbor Henry Deaver long before the night he disappeared. The connection runs so deep that when she was interviewed by cops that night, she had to hide her fogged-up breath, courtesy of the freezing temperatures she's experiencing on her lost friend's behalf. It's worth noting that days later, while Henry is still missing and his injured dad is recuperating at home, Molly strolls across the frigid street in nothing but a nightgown, bare feet and all.
However, I ran into a few problems while making it, which I write about briefly, mainly to do with drilling and measuring out panels – both of which I ballsed up terribly... – 12HP 004 – Dual Shift Register Right-click save target as! Two deceptively powerful and useful little tools tucked in nice and tight on a small panel. Chain them together for a larger 8-bit register! The article covers what shift registers actually are, a tiny sampling of their many uses and a look into a circuit building block that we'll be getting very familiar with – the leading edge detector. There is also what I hope will be the last of my woes from working with acrylic for the front panel. – 8HP 005 – R-2R Right-click save target as! R-2R is two "R-2R ladders" in a tight 6HP package. The four inputs act as a 4-bit digital-to-analogue converter that is perfect for generating stepped waveforms to drive oscillators as a CV source or to create more interesting sounds than the raw squarewaves everything has been putting out till now.