PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Photo Psychic
rdfs:comment
  • TV detectives have unusually good luck with photographs. When they're talking to a witness in the witness's home or office, out of all the photos available the detective will pick one out -- usually a perfectly unremarkable one showing some person with his arm around the witness's shoulder -- and ask, "Who's this?", and the answer will be relevant to the mystery at hand. Often it's not even a question, the detective is just admiring the photo. Sherlock Holmes had similar luck with a photograph in The Adventure of the Cardboard Box, making this Older Than Radio.
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:all-the-tropes/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:allthetropes/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • TV detectives have unusually good luck with photographs. When they're talking to a witness in the witness's home or office, out of all the photos available the detective will pick one out -- usually a perfectly unremarkable one showing some person with his arm around the witness's shoulder -- and ask, "Who's this?", and the answer will be relevant to the mystery at hand. Often it's not even a question, the detective is just admiring the photo. What is very helpful is the way the witness will volunteer more information than any real person would. Instead of "That's my mother," they will answer, "That's my mother. This was taken just before she was torn apart by wolves." Sherlock Holmes had similar luck with a photograph in The Adventure of the Cardboard Box, making this Older Than Radio. Related to the Law of Conservation of Detail.