trolley problem: you and Albert Camus are standing by the railway. nobody is in any danger. do you let Albert Camus jump in front of the moving trolley?
I wouldn’t count anything that isn’t at least arguably as long as a movie. Wallace & Gromit: A Grand Day Out and the SpongeBob episode “Gary Takes a Bath” otherwise would count as well. There’s probably an otherwise qualifiable clone-focused episode of The Clone Wars, too.
Person 1 saying “haha” makes them a hypocrite if the words of the ancient stone frog are to be interpreted as being said by Person 1. Person 2 spoke their line with no braggadocio.
The plain Flat Silver dome gets the light blue color printed on it.
The dome is then tilted out of place a bit due to machine error and receives the Silver print at the wrong location.
The dome is straightened out but slips out of place downward due to the tilt, so the pad for the Dark Blue print does not come all the way down onto the dome, leaving the neck area nearly free of Dark Blue print and making the Dark Blue print look runny (or “melting off”).
The dome shifts slightly and receives the Black print and the Dark Pink print (not concurrently)
This sequence accounts for how the colors of paint are layered as well as the drift of print misalignment.
“It is my sad duty to inform you of a four-foot restriction on humanoid height.”
“I hear the directors of Genetic Control have been buying all the properties that have recently been sold, taking risks oh so bold. It’s said now that people will be shorter in height; they can fit twice as many in the same building site (they say it’s alright). Beginning with the tenants of the town of Harlow, in the interest of humanity, they’ve been told they must go—told they must go-go-go-go.”