John Saxon - a true journeyman actor. When I was growing up, the guy popped up EVERYWHERE! And played EVERYTHING! I mean, from "Enter the Dragon" as one of the "good guys" to a guest star shot on "Starsky & Hutch" playing a male ballet dancer who thought he actually was a vampire!...😁
@@michaelstephens360 Can't argue that. Both guys can play anything. The only difference is that Saxon was a pretty boy even in his later years while Trejo's a weathered pro. I don't even give him grief for all the direct-to-video he does. Came into acting pretty late, turned his life around & he clearly loves to act. The paychecks are merely icing on the cake...😎
A couple of technical items: 1. The condemned's head is shaved and one pant leg is split to accomodate the leg and head electrode. 2. There's usually a tie down team to strap the condemned into the chair; they have been practicing constantly as directed by state procedures. 3.A saline soaked sponge is placed on the condemned's head beneath the head electrode to facilitate conductivity. 4.Generally when the current is turned on, the subject becomes rigid until the current is turned off.
Basically you die of lack of oxygen because you can not scream in pain or take even one breath while you wait to die in unbelievable pain for 1 to 3 minutes... One of the most barbaric execution methods ever invented.
Not quite right, as long as signs of circulation are present, one can't be pronounced dead. On the opposite, no circulation also can't tell about death, only about a necessity of CPR. In the far past no heartbeat was indeed equal to death, until 1960 or so. Now death can be pronounced fully when several symptoms appear combined, such as flat ECG line (assystolia), no pupil reaction etc.
@@fizjoterapiasan9359 I was taught that 30 min is the time you are able to call it, if you are doing CPR alone, without assistance. Otherwise it's keep going until relieved or stood down by paramedics... I hadn't thought about it like a doctor though... but makes sense that it would be both brain function as well as cardiovascular...
@@Rayman1971 a lot has changed since the past, and it used to vary between countries, now there is one pattern from International Trauma Life Support and American/European Heart Association, with minor adjustments depending of how first response systems work in certain countries - how teams are built, what ambulances are equipped with etc. However they all tell CPR must be maintained until one is pronounced dead by someone with necessary skills. Other cases when you stop - if someone is revived, if a sudden danger/need of evacuation occurs or if you become too exhausted and unable to continue. There are however cases of "absolute signs of death" such as beheading, decomposing body or post-mortem stiffness, when you don't have to do anything besides reporting. All we learn however doesn't work in a death row, where intention is not to save, but to kill somebody. I don't know how examination works there, as the purpose is opposite to all we learn CPR for.
I'm not saying kill everyone who goes to jail, you know what I mean? People who were proven with overwhelming evidence to be a 1st degree murderer in my eyes should not be allowed back into society. On the other hand, people who committed single, non premeditated murders (I believe second degree?) can be rehabilitated. You're absolutely right about the death penalty being meaningless in that regard. However it does instill fear, ie: if you kill somebody, there's a good chance you too will die.
The Spanish Inquisition used this method for interrogation but without the lethal electricity. It was called The Comfy Chair. Often if the victim was made of sterner stuff they would use a technique called The Soft Cushions. I reckon Cardinal Fang must have been a relative of the Pope. He was the bane of Richelieu's life.
@1:40, the translation could have been, 'This is the Attorney General. Is there any reason why the execution of Edwin Diablo Santo should not proceed?' Thank you.
I've seen dozens of high dollar Hollywood production electrocution scenes which were laughably inaccurate in the basic details of the process and here in this Spanish language television program, they nail it. 98% I'd rank it since they didn't show the little bit of water that squeezes out when the sponge contacts are pressed to the skin; to be fair though, sea sponge does have excellent water retention properties.
They don't normally use a breaker switch like that. They push a button, which will cycle the electricity. Florida if I recall correctly used a 5-25 second of high voltage (like 3,000) and then low (600, where the amps increased). The high voltage is intended to stun or cause unconsciousness, and the low is intended to destroy tissue. I think it was 3 cycles for 90 seconds total. This was pretty accurate it seems though. They like to throw sparking and electric noises in there.
@@patrickvolk7031 It's sort of a misnomer that the button or switch the operator pushes is what directly controls the flow of electricity going to the chair. What that button or switch (depending on the state) actually does is start a mechanical timer which in turn controls a series of oil filled relays that do all the switching between the high and low cycles. The reason it has to be an oil filled switch is because currents/voltages this high will arc through air which could cause a switch to physically blow up. Different states used various combinations of currents and voltages at different times but ~2000vAC was about the near universal standard. No state went as high as 3000vAC, the highest I'm aware of was the Nebraska chair at 2460vAC @7-10A which was way too high. It frequently led excessive smoking due to arcing between the skin and the head electrode. Florida's chair put out 2000-2200vAC @ 9-10A for 10 seconds, 1000vAC for 30 seconds and then back up to ~2000vAC for the last 10 seconds; rarely did it ever take more than 1 cycle in Florida. Georgia on the other hand started out with 2000vAC @ 5A and dipped back and forth between that and 240vAC for 5 minutes. Unlike in Florida, the Georgia chair frequently needed multiple cycles to finish the job; 2000vAC @ 5A is half the power of 2000vAC @ 10A. Earlier chairs were often even less powerful, the Sing Sing chair from 1891 to 1921 maxed out @ 2.5A!
That is the main reason the methods the US use are chosen. The ideal is showing the state just 'shutting off' the condemned, with no gore. Hanging has some science behind it, and too much drop results in decapitation, and too little can result in strangulation (with gasping, choking, and writhing). That's why the electric chair was adopted. And the gas chamber, which is not good. The condemned will naturally fight it, and it makes you gasp for air. It's not quick. The electric chair is more humane I believe, but it makes for a bad spectacle. It's not meant to suffocate the person, it's meant to destroy brain and heart tissue as will as suffocate the person. The brain is protected by the skull which makes the electricity want to flow around. Worse for the people watching because it literally cooks the condemned. You can kill someone with a 9-volt battery, if you get past the skin. Not many millamps to kill, while the electric chair uses a couple thousand times that because of the skin and the skull. Consider that for animals we use electricity or a captive bolt to stun them, and then slice their throats. A bullet to the back of the head is probably the most humane, but it would be horrifying to watch (and not feasible in slaughterhouses). The guillotine is probably similar in being humane. Even with lethal injection, they give a paralytic so the condemned doesn't seem to react, or they used to. For euthanasia in the EU, they give a fatal dose of barbiturates (which has an emetic in it to protect against accidental ingestion. They give the person a drug to tolerate taking the fatal dose beforehand). You get agonal breathing, as the body slows down working, but also absorbing the drug. The death penalty is brutal. I'm not against it, but I think it should be shown to be brutal, and not made nice just for public consumption.
Hey, that switch they used is actually a "Square D" disconnect switch. Additionally when the executioner pull the switches handle down he was actually turning the circuit, OFF. As a retired electrician I have installed many of these switches. This device would not be used in a real execution! Very cheesy movie.
@@jonbrad6285 Thanks Jon. I have installed many disconnect makes like Allen Bradly, Cutler Hammer, Siemans, and other and when the handle is in the "Up" position, that is an indicator that the circuit is energized. I am glad that I was not the only electrician that noticed that movie mistake!
heffoandjuff Ya, me too, and every manufacturer I know is similar in the on-off orientation! Just goes to show you that their attempt for mechanical accuracy
Unless it was installed upside down. I've seen execution rooms where they use a similar type of box, and just about Everytime it was oriented the right way where up was closed (on) and down was open (off).
Oohh yaa ...I watched faces death electrocution went to bed an started to be electrocuted making the sounds and shaking my daughter smacked me across the face an I woke up an told her what I was dreaming. Wow wow wow that was freaky thought the executed man put a voodoo spell on me. Never again watch that execution.
ROFL!!!!!!! Then came bronson in a execution chamber? Wow, he sure ventured off that long lonesome highway!! ROFL John Saxon chewing that toothpick looked like he has to go number two. Both of these actors have passed and are missed. this clip is utter camp thanks for posting.
What? No smoke, blood, body fluids, convulsions, and a death chamber with a chair that looks like it's been used frequently for the last 60 or 70 years?
Once I saw Nancy's dad from Nightmare on Elm Street I was like wtf he speaks English . I thought maybe the prisoner was only going to speak a different language.
Why kill someone to show killing is wrong, it's actually cheaper for the state to keep them in prison for life without parole instead of going through the cost of the execution process.
well the problem is that someone has to kill the condemned, an "executioner". This person commits the same act/sin the condemned did - take a life. It doesn't matter if its authorized by state law, as the law was made by humans and we are all capable of wrongful decisions. Killing is killing, either allow everyone to do it, or no one.
SI EL NO SE ARREPIENTE DE CORAZÓN NADIE ABSOLUTAMENTE NADIE EN LA TIERRA PUEDE INTERCEDER POR NADIE POR EL PERDÓN DE SU PECADOS, QUÉ ESO QUEDÉ CLARO...
Agreed . @Andrew Polyak . Also, I believe that they need to keep all of their execution days out of the media, and only keep those execution days between the families of the murderer and the victim(s). People who don`t see how the prisoner got to this point in the 1st place will NEVER see why they do executions like this. And It causes them to think that the law is just looking for someone to kill when that is not the case at all. With that said, keep educating these people about logic. - Dwight
2:02 Two guys walk into the alcove. Suddenly, one of them vanishes into thin air, while the other one finds himself with a black hood over his head. Panicked and confused, he lashes out blindly, grabbing the handle of a nearby fusebox, pulls the handle DOWN, shutting off the power to the ice cream machine in the "D" block cantina.
can govener call a hold after first jolt revive him and exacute him later if questions arise can you get death penalty for three non violent felonies in some states three strike law ranks
@Sara James, I`m going to go a little further, than what @Andrew Polyak just stated to you. What if that killer that they executed that you were feeling sorry for happened to end up killing one of your loved ones? Ok, True that there are actually no winners here, but doesn`t the loved ones of the person murdered deserve some sort of a path toward some peace of mind without the existance of their loved one's murderer running in their head(s)? - Dwight
don owens -- I know and this is not how it works in reality. In reality there is movement as the body twists under the current. If not strapped down properly some will rhythmically hump the air with their pelvis. Then rarely does a prisoner die with the first 30 seconds of 1800V. Some die after the 300V cycle that follows, some survive and need another full execution to die and a few may need it a third time. I'll bet there was also one or the other who needed a fourth. By then I believe death does not come from the heart seizing, but simply because it is well done. And then there is that yummy smell. Did you know that you yourself are a red meat? I always thought myself we were more like chicken, but that is not so. I am also told we taste somewhere between beef and pork. And there you have this large piece of man-beef frying. Literally frying because around the electrodes as the current enters through the outer fatty tissues, there is some real sizzling going on like when you set a NY strip on its sides to crisp the fat on the edges. The electric chair is pure Americana, in fact it is the most American thing right after cowboy hats and western saloons.
statinskill , electricity gels the blood so thick that the heart can no longer pump , it has to be liquid to pump , the heart simply quits , and it's not the volts that kill , it's the Amps behind the volts , I have been shocked with 60,000 volts , but it had no Amps , it hurts , but don't kill
Jim Thomas During an electrocution the current is about 5 to 10A. That maps to the interval of [5;10]cs^-1*1800Jc^-1. The Coloumbs cancel and we get [9000;18,000]Js^-1 or anything between 9-18KW of power. That's joules per second. It takes one joule of energy to lift 100 grams (weight of a bar of chocolate) one meter against 9.81ms^-2 acceleration. That means with the same power in a second we could lift 100g of chocolate up to 9 to 18Km above the ground, or the convict at 80Kg which is 800*100g to a height of 9/800 to 18/800Km, or 11.25m to 22.5m (about 3 to 6ft). Every second. That means he would be going at around 40.5Km/h or in the medieval system of yours at around 25MPH roughly. But instead of giving him a ride, we are giving him a nice electrocution and his shade, spirit, Animus whatever can fly up into the sky at any speed it chooses to.
John Saxon - a true journeyman actor. When I was growing up, the guy popped up EVERYWHERE! And played EVERYTHING! I mean, from "Enter the Dragon" as one of the "good guys" to a guest star shot on "Starsky & Hutch" playing a male ballet dancer who thought he actually was a vampire!...😁
So he was the Danny Trejo of your day
@@michaelstephens360 Can't argue that. Both guys can play anything. The only difference is that Saxon was a pretty boy even in his later years while Trejo's a weathered pro. I don't even give him grief for all the direct-to-video he does. Came into acting pretty late, turned his life around & he clearly loves to act. The paychecks are merely icing on the cake...😎
Thought that guy looked familiar for some reason. I of course remember him from Mitchell.
He will forever be known in the horror community for his roles in “A nightmare on Elm Street” and the original “Black Christmas”.
How did I ever find my way to this part of youtube
Just lucky
😄😄😄
I know. I'm so ashamed to be here. Thanks heavens for pseudonyms.
FergiDunk , curiosity.
Down the rabbit hole.
The inmate would have been in the chair already before witnesses are able to see him
A couple of technical items: 1. The condemned's head is shaved and one pant leg is split to accomodate the leg and head electrode. 2. There's usually a tie down team to strap the condemned into the chair; they have been practicing constantly as directed by state procedures. 3.A saline soaked sponge is placed on the condemned's head beneath the head electrode to facilitate conductivity. 4.Generally when the current is turned on, the subject becomes rigid until the current is turned off.
Basically you die of lack of oxygen because you can not scream in pain or take even one breath while you wait to die in unbelievable pain for 1 to 3 minutes... One of the most barbaric execution methods ever invented.
*I'd like to thank every last one of you fuc - ZZZZZTZTZTZTZTZTZ*
Unreasonable and unrealistic expectations are the root of all evil.
I believe that too.
In some cases where the heart is beating doesn't mean life is present. Life is gone when the brain is gone.
Not quite right, as long as signs of circulation are present, one can't be pronounced dead. On the opposite, no circulation also can't tell about death, only about a necessity of CPR. In the far past no heartbeat was indeed equal to death, until 1960 or so. Now death can be pronounced fully when several symptoms appear combined, such as flat ECG line (assystolia), no pupil reaction etc.
@@fizjoterapiasan9359 I was taught that 30 min is the time you are able to call it, if you are doing CPR alone, without assistance. Otherwise it's keep going until relieved or stood down by paramedics... I hadn't thought about it like a doctor though... but makes sense that it would be both brain function as well as cardiovascular...
@@Rayman1971 a lot has changed since the past, and it used to vary between countries, now there is one pattern from International Trauma Life Support and American/European Heart Association, with minor adjustments depending of how first response systems work in certain countries - how teams are built, what ambulances are equipped with etc. However they all tell CPR must be maintained until one is pronounced dead by someone with necessary skills. Other cases when you stop - if someone is revived, if a sudden danger/need of evacuation occurs or if you become too exhausted and unable to continue. There are however cases of "absolute signs of death" such as beheading, decomposing body or post-mortem stiffness, when you don't have to do anything besides reporting.
All we learn however doesn't work in a death row, where intention is not to save, but to kill somebody. I don't know how examination works there, as the purpose is opposite to all we learn CPR for.
Is that what happened to republicans??
The down part is not ALWAYS the "OFF" position. There are places where it is reversed.
Yes, Australia is one.
in australia down is the on position for light switches.
My friend got executed yesterday and I had to watch him die 😭😭😭
@@ljshelly141 yea he robbed 2 banks an kille d12 people
Did he got exucuted by an electric chair
That's evil. I hope noone else has to experience something like that
Sorry
I am sorry for you loss 😔
NIGHTMARE BEACH (1989) UMBERTO LENZI
I love how its a bunch of people on motorcycles outside the prison
It’s*
The first time someone opened a disconnect to energize the chair.
That’s funny when the executioner opens the disconnect instead of closing it.
Electric shock therapy, guaranteed to cure all known criminal tendencies.
I'm not saying kill everyone who goes to jail, you know what I mean? People who were proven with overwhelming evidence to be a 1st degree murderer in my eyes should not be allowed back into society. On the other hand, people who committed single, non premeditated murders (I believe second degree?) can be rehabilitated. You're absolutely right about the death penalty being meaningless in that regard. However it does instill fear, ie: if you kill somebody, there's a good chance you too will die.
The legal process of appeals costs more than a life sentence. Just look at the CA stats.
Some subtitles to this movie would be great
Greetings from South Africa
Totally agree
The Spanish Inquisition used this method for interrogation but without the lethal electricity. It was called The Comfy Chair. Often if the victim was made of sterner stuff they would use a technique called The Soft Cushions. I reckon Cardinal Fang must have been a relative of the Pope. He was the bane of Richelieu's life.
Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition!
Ah. ah, ah.... Monty Python!!!!!!! Sadly, not too many people seem to get it!!!!
@@johnbednarzjr.3089
Confess, woman confess!!!!!!!
They had no plugs no elettricity burning was the choice therfore
Quote sad even if deserved
"He looks like a criminal." Beavis and Butthead episode circa 1990 something.
Something like this doesn't belong on the UA-cam forum.
Oooo...It's John Saxon . My childhood hero !
@1:40, the translation could have been, 'This is the Attorney General. Is there any reason why the execution of Edwin Diablo Santo should not proceed?' Thank you.
2:10
That's John Saxon who played Nancy's dad in A Nightmare on Elm Street!
Rip John 💔
I've seen dozens of high dollar Hollywood production electrocution scenes which were laughably inaccurate in the basic details of the process and here in this Spanish language television program, they nail it. 98% I'd rank it since they didn't show the little bit of water that squeezes out when the sponge contacts are pressed to the skin; to be fair though, sea sponge does have excellent water retention properties.
They don't normally use a breaker switch like that. They push a button, which will cycle the electricity. Florida if I recall correctly used a 5-25 second of high voltage (like 3,000) and then low (600, where the amps increased). The high voltage is intended to stun or cause unconsciousness, and the low is intended to destroy tissue. I think it was 3 cycles for 90 seconds total.
This was pretty accurate it seems though. They like to throw sparking and electric noises in there.
@@patrickvolk7031 It's sort of a misnomer that the button or switch the operator pushes is what directly controls the flow of electricity going to the chair. What that button or switch (depending on the state) actually does is start a mechanical timer which in turn controls a series of oil filled relays that do all the switching between the high and low cycles. The reason it has to be an oil filled switch is because currents/voltages this high will arc through air which could cause a switch to physically blow up. Different states used various combinations of currents and voltages at different times but ~2000vAC was about the near universal standard. No state went as high as 3000vAC, the highest I'm aware of was the Nebraska chair at 2460vAC @7-10A which was way too high. It frequently led excessive smoking due to arcing between the skin and the head electrode. Florida's chair put out 2000-2200vAC @ 9-10A for 10 seconds, 1000vAC for 30 seconds and then back up to ~2000vAC for the last 10 seconds; rarely did it ever take more than 1 cycle in Florida. Georgia on the other hand started out with 2000vAC @ 5A and dipped back and forth between that and 240vAC for 5 minutes. Unlike in Florida, the Georgia chair frequently needed multiple cycles to finish the job; 2000vAC @ 5A is half the power of 2000vAC @ 10A. Earlier chairs were often even less powerful, the Sing Sing chair from 1891 to 1921 maxed out @ 2.5A!
What about the leather cap with a wire attached? That thing would vaporize the second any current hit it. No sea sponge? Budget film at best
Turning a stock Square D switch to the off position to start it?
Such terrible all opinions...
they make it look like its not painful and it goes by quick-
That is the main reason the methods the US use are chosen. The ideal is showing the state just 'shutting off' the condemned, with no gore. Hanging has some science behind it, and too much drop results in decapitation, and too little can result in strangulation (with gasping, choking, and writhing). That's why the electric chair was adopted. And the gas chamber, which is not good. The condemned will naturally fight it, and it makes you gasp for air. It's not quick. The electric chair is more humane I believe, but it makes for a bad spectacle. It's not meant to suffocate the person, it's meant to destroy brain and heart tissue as will as suffocate the person. The brain is protected by the skull which makes the electricity want to flow around. Worse for the people watching because it literally cooks the condemned.
You can kill someone with a 9-volt battery, if you get past the skin. Not many millamps to kill, while the electric chair uses a couple thousand times that because of the skin and the skull.
Consider that for animals we use electricity or a captive bolt to stun them, and then slice their throats. A bullet to the back of the head is probably the most humane, but it would be horrifying to watch (and not feasible in slaughterhouses). The guillotine is probably similar in being humane.
Even with lethal injection, they give a paralytic so the condemned doesn't seem to react, or they used to. For euthanasia in the EU, they give a fatal dose of barbiturates (which has an emetic in it to protect against accidental ingestion. They give the person a drug to tolerate taking the fatal dose beforehand). You get agonal breathing, as the body slows down working, but also absorbing the drug.
The death penalty is brutal. I'm not against it, but I think it should be shown to be brutal, and not made nice just for public consumption.
as a goof i'd fill my pockets with popcorn
Before or after it's popped? If it's already popped, I don't think it would have the same affect that you are looking for.
Hey, that switch they used is actually a "Square D" disconnect switch. Additionally when the executioner pull the switches handle down he was actually turning the circuit, OFF. As a retired electrician I have installed many of these switches. This device would not be used in a real execution! Very cheesy movie.
heffoandjuff
Ha! Exactly correct!!
@@jonbrad6285 Thanks Jon. I have installed many disconnect makes like Allen Bradly, Cutler Hammer, Siemans, and other and when the handle is in the "Up" position, that is an indicator that the circuit is energized. I am glad that I was not the only electrician that noticed that movie mistake!
heffoandjuff
Ya, me too, and every manufacturer I know is similar in the on-off orientation! Just goes to show you that their attempt for mechanical accuracy
was usurped for the perhaps dramatic motion by throwing the breaker DOWN.
I'm an electrician and at 2mins he turns OFF the square d disconnect, therefore he shouldn't be getting electrocuted.
Unless it was installed upside down. I've seen execution rooms where they use a similar type of box, and just about Everytime it was oriented the right way where up was closed (on) and down was open (off).
An actual execution with The Chair was shown on one of the Faces Of Death movies in the 80’s or 90’s. Pretty gruesome. This is extremely sanitized.
I don't think I could bear to watch it tbh
I've heard several times that the Faces Of Death electrocution scene was staged.
@@jadetaylor2443
I could.
FOD has been debunked as staged.
Oohh yaa ...I watched faces death electrocution went to bed an started to be electrocuted making the sounds and shaking my daughter smacked me across the face an I woke up an told her what I was dreaming. Wow wow wow that was freaky thought the executed man put a voodoo spell on me. Never again watch that execution.
ROFL!!!!!!! Then came bronson in a execution chamber? Wow, he sure ventured off that long lonesome highway!! ROFL John Saxon chewing that toothpick looked like he has to go number two. Both of these actors have passed and are missed. this clip is utter camp thanks for posting.
TOTs Disney Channel ad plays before this video.
What? No smoke, blood, body fluids, convulsions, and a death chamber with a chair that looks like it's been used frequently for the last 60 or 70 years?
what's the name of the movie?
Nightmare beach
If your wondering the movie is named Nightmare Beach
So we see 3 actors who have since passed: Lance LeGault (1935-2012), Michael Parks (1940-2017) and most recently, John Saxon (1935-2020)
DAngelo 136 I noted the same thing!
Roses are red
Violets are blue
The title's in English
It should be too
Joshua Denbigh , the electricity was in English
xD
Once I saw Nancy's dad from Nightmare on Elm Street I was like wtf he speaks English . I thought maybe the prisoner was only going to speak a different language.
YOU ARE NOT BILINGUAL ! OH WELL.
roses are red
violets are supposed to be purple
the actual heck is going on
No, the electric chair.
Hoi
@@saucyswipe Sheesh🐸🐸🐸🐸
N9
@Stardust senpai N999
@Stardust senpai N1O
I remember bruce lee in this movie (enter the dragon)
Is it because of that one actor who played in one of his movies?
John Saxon
One of his buddies in the movie
If anyone's interested, it's from 1988 Nightmare Beach
quietest cleanest electrocution I have ever seen. where is the slight jerk and downloading coming
Kind of like microwaving a cold taco that you had left over in the fridge from last night. Hot or mild sauce?
The execution of the video process are now being seen?
Ppl can't hear him, tough ...
What type of music was that at the end 🤔
Μια τόσο φρικτή εκτέλεση, με μουσική υπόκρουση...
Ανθρωποθυσίες του νόμου ... Αν είναι δυνατόν...
This is Florida's electric chair
I always thought that with Square D disconnects pulling the lever down killed the power!
What movie is this
1:45 and 2:07 is the recorder working with the explorer :-)
The death penalty is a dark side of the justice system.
Killing, even state sanctioned is barbaric. Wish it illegal in all States but don’t see that happening soon.
What movie was this from?
Why am I watching this at 10:25pm
Idk but hey army
Why kill someone to show killing is wrong, it's actually cheaper for the state to keep them in prison for life without parole instead of going through the cost of the execution process.
And they had the unadulterated NERVE to Start Singing the Final Song,...........................
In English .
Haha was waiting for the dude (who got executed) spring back to life & say to the doctor wtf are you doing quack!!!!😂😂
Always make sure it's switched off before you apply the stethoscope......
I wish the physician would've also examined Diablo's eyes.
Lub dub! Lub dub !Lub dub! The doc checked his heart with a stethoscope before pronouncing him dead.
That looked like the old Florida electric chair.
well the problem is that someone has to kill the condemned, an "executioner". This person commits the same act/sin the condemned did - take a life. It doesn't matter if its authorized by state law, as the law was made by humans and we are all capable of wrongful decisions. Killing is killing, either allow everyone to do it, or no one.
Η κοινή λογική, ο κοινός νους...
Nicely done!!
From Which Movie is that scene?
How can I watch this
He became a Franciscan fryer
Why on earth are you showing this ?
We're sorry for losing valuable lives when will they understand that? Why don't they have a heart like us that can feel pains of even animals
Hmm electrocution is a painful experience
0:48 he was from Game of death
SI EL NO SE ARREPIENTE DE CORAZÓN NADIE ABSOLUTAMENTE NADIE EN LA TIERRA PUEDE INTERCEDER POR NADIE POR EL PERDÓN DE SU PECADOS, QUÉ ESO QUEDÉ CLARO...
For those of you who are fooled into thinking this is real I guarantee you it is a movie as I recognized two well-known actors.
The hell you say!
Still alive?
E la gente piace a guardare che schiffo di spettacolo...😖
John Saxon is the man R.I.P turns out he lived right down the road from me and never knew probably could have met him sucks
I'd never give up my hands that easy to be strapped down, you'd have to fight me!!!
What good would it do ?
Gary Morris few seconds more to live
@@SuperPrestogamer So what? it doesn't change a thing. Your answer is silly,
This is a movie and not a real execution.There is one actor I recognize from the movie "Enter the Dragon" in the "audience"
That was John Saxon. The Dr was Michael Parks who stared in "Then Came Bronson", back around 1969
It's John Saxon as one of the selected witnesses
Thanda Sibisi , I recognize most of them , even the guy in the chair , Michael Parks is dead , may 2017
It’s John Saxon from Nightmare on elm street 1984
Woh! The priest is Col.Decker from the A-team!
Wouldn’t it be funny if the phone rang and it was a wrong number or a telemarketer?
9-12-20
Our records indicate that your vehicle may be available for extended warranty work, press 1 to confirm or 2 to no longer be contacted.👍👍👍🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
bohhica1 God damn don’t get me started on that I got like 3 of those calls recently.
9-26-20
A warped sense of humor - just like mine!
As you have an overdue account outstanding we have to cut your electricty after this phone call.
"You were recently involved in an accident" etc blah
Agreed . @Andrew Polyak .
Also, I believe that they need to keep all of their execution days out of the media, and only keep those execution days between the families of the murderer and the victim(s).
People who don`t see how the prisoner got to this point in the 1st place will NEVER see why they do executions like this.
And It causes them to think that the law is just looking for someone to kill when that is not the case at all.
With that said, keep educating these people about logic.
- Dwight
Wrong.
@@TheBatugan77
No . Not wrong .
I like how they turn the power switch off then he gets electrocuted...classic
Down is "on" where I come from.
@@dunruden9720 Where you come from is ass backwards buddy
Tvsetsamewaynothingongoodturnitoff
Howdidtheydoit
Yurrgessisgoodasminegoodqueston
Priest looks more evil than the condemned !
I forget what his name is but he plays villains in TV shows like Knight Rider and other movies I guess he's got that evil Look to Him like the devil
@@gearheadAbe but he already repented and now taking the oath of priesthood
@@gearheadAbe his name is lance de gault he played colonel decker in the A-team
They feel nothing...brain is fried immediately.
1:57 It sounds so cruel 😟😟😟
They clearly tried to copy florida’s setup ..
We must be related. That was the first thing I noticed.
2:02 Two guys walk into the alcove. Suddenly, one of them vanishes into thin air, while the other one finds himself with a black hood over his head. Panicked and confused, he lashes out blindly, grabbing the handle of a nearby fusebox, pulls the handle DOWN, shutting off the power to the ice cream machine in the "D" block cantina.
That was like not even 500 volts it’s usually 2000 volts
Why all of these elaborate forms of execution...the simplest and most merciful is to have the head lopped off by a sword.
John Saxon, from Enter The Dragon
He was also in a nightmare on elm street 1 and 3
I don't care if they are in prison
Anyone know the name of the movie
🤣 Burn, baby, burn. Turn that juice up.
What is the name of this movie?
Y am I here
What movie is this?
Square D makes the best breaker boxes
That wasn't even close to reality
Mainly because the condemned man died instantly. The electric chair is far cruder, and death from it far more long drawn-out, than depicted here.
well said !!!!
What are you doing😓🥺
can govener call a hold after first jolt revive him and exacute him later if questions arise can you get death penalty for three non violent felonies in some states three strike law ranks
@Sara James,
I`m going to go a little further, than what @Andrew Polyak just stated to you.
What if that killer that they executed that you were feeling sorry for happened to end up killing one of your loved ones?
Ok, True that there are actually no winners here, but doesn`t the loved ones of the person murdered deserve some sort of a path toward some peace of mind without the existance of their loved one's murderer running in their
head(s)?
- Dwight
That looked like William Shatner playing the doctor.
...Michael Parks...
@@paradiseroad6405 I don't envy Mr. Parks. Nobody would want to look like Capt. Kirk.
This is just a scene from a class Q movie.
Is this worse than going to the dentist?
Worse than cutting the finger with A4 sheet.
This movie is called nightmare beach. Its dubbed in spanish
So is a movie?
Thank you
The electric chair killed this man in just few seconds.
don owens -- I know and this is not how it works in reality. In reality there is movement as the body twists under the current. If not strapped down properly some will rhythmically hump the air with their pelvis. Then rarely does a prisoner die with the first 30 seconds of 1800V. Some die after the 300V cycle that follows, some survive and need another full execution to die and a few may need it a third time. I'll bet there was also one or the other who needed a fourth. By then I believe death does not come from the heart seizing, but simply because it is well done.
And then there is that yummy smell. Did you know that you yourself are a red meat? I always thought myself we were more like chicken, but that is not so. I am also told we taste somewhere between beef and pork. And there you have this large piece of man-beef frying. Literally frying because around the electrodes as the current enters through the outer fatty tissues, there is some real sizzling going on like when you set a NY strip on its sides to crisp the fat on the edges.
The electric chair is pure Americana, in fact it is the most American thing right after cowboy hats and western saloons.
statinskill , electricity gels the blood so thick that the heart can no longer pump , it has to be liquid to pump , the heart simply quits , and it's not the volts that kill , it's the Amps behind the volts , I have been shocked with 60,000 volts , but it had no Amps , it hurts , but don't kill
Jim Thomas During an electrocution the current is about 5 to 10A. That maps to the interval of [5;10]cs^-1*1800Jc^-1. The Coloumbs cancel and we get [9000;18,000]Js^-1 or anything between 9-18KW of power. That's joules per second. It takes one joule of energy to lift 100 grams (weight of a bar of chocolate) one meter against 9.81ms^-2 acceleration. That means with the same power in a second we could lift 100g of chocolate up to 9 to 18Km above the ground, or the convict at 80Kg which is 800*100g to a height of 9/800 to 18/800Km, or 11.25m to 22.5m (about 3 to 6ft). Every second. That means he would be going at around 40.5Km/h or in the medieval system of yours at around 25MPH roughly. But instead of giving him a ride, we are giving him a nice electrocution and his shade, spirit, Animus whatever can fly up into the sky at any speed it chooses to.