
Out Of Mind, Out Of Sight - S1-E11
Visible crew/equipment: At the very end, as the invisible girl gets taken along a corridor by the FBI agents, check the top of the screen - a boom mike creeps in as the agent says his line, then is withdrawn.
Out Of Mind, Out Of Sight - S1-E11
Visible crew/equipment: After Cordelia wins May Queen, Buffy, Xander and Willow are talking, and right before she walks away, you can blatantly see an on-set light reflector being reflected in Buffy's sunglasses.
Out Of Mind, Out Of Sight - S1-E11
Visible crew/equipment: When Giles, Willow and Xander are trapped in the storage room with the leaking gas, at one point you can blatantly see a massive set-light reflected in Giles glasses. (This is fairly common, as often lights are reflected in his glasses, but it's particularly noticeable here).
Out Of Mind, Out Of Sight - S1-E11
Visible crew/equipment: When Angel and Giles talk in the library, in multiple shots you can see stage lights and light reflectors being reflected in Giles' glasses. (This is actually fairly common in many of his scenes, but it's particularly noticeable here).
Out Of Mind, Out Of Sight - S1-E11
Visible crew/equipment: When Buffy and Cordelia enter the mop closet you can see the shadow of the boom microphone on the wall near Buffy's head (left side of screen). (00:31:44)
Chosen answer: "So goes the nation" seems to have been used on many occasions, with various different US states in the "As .... goes" section. Most commonly it seems to be California that's considered to lead the way, but probably most other states have appeared in the lead role at some point or another. Other things have also been used - no less a person that Pope John Paul II said "As the family goes, so goes the nation...". The origin of the quote format is unclear - in US politics it goes back into the 19th century, when it was Maine that held the title spot, but, while no definitive origin is known, it seems highly likely that it goes back considerably further than that.
Tailkinker ★