If you’re a #LineOfDuty Fan you might of heard about the QR code Easter egg.
Here is a summary, nothing much in the way of spoilers, but there is a handful of videos on YouTube which go into more detail if you really want to go that route.
@jdpoc A few weeks ago a few people were posting cryptic messages connecting #LineOfDuty with a QR code. It took folks quite a while to find it without guidance but it’s there on the magazine cover which highlighted the murdered journalist.
@jdpoc Some people have had more technical skills than me and have screencappec this QR code, cleaned it up, and scanned it which takes you to a website which give you this:
@jdpoc The important point here, people are saying, is the identity of the new Chief Constable. Philip Osborne. He was Steve Arnott’s boss way back in series 1. Recognise him now?
This goes right back to Series 1, Episode 1 Scene 1.
@jdpoc On this page is also the next link, another web page: which gives you this, a copy of a prescription issued to Steve Arnott. Down at the bottom you’ll see something that doesn’t usually appear on prescription forms: a line of Morse code.
@jdpoc Once decoded this guide you to a short video on Vimeo, which I don’t think has been shown on the show.
@jdpoc In the description of this video is another link. This takes you to an image hosting site, and a gift with four messages as follows, the last one being a link.
@jdpoc So where does the link take you? It takes you to a very high resolution image of the incident board in the AC 12 office. Any clues here? Yes. The yellow post-it note is new. And that contains a bit.ly address.
@jdpoc This latest clue leads you to an unlisted video on the BBC iPlayer website. This contains a scene which was either deleted, or is still to be shown. For that reason, I’m not going to show that scene.
@jdpoc … And after that, you get a little phone message from Ted Hastings telling you that you now have enough information to crack the case.
@jdpoc It’s a marvellous little trial set up by the makers of #LineOfDuty, but I have to be honest, even following it I’m none too much the wiser. Perhaps better minds then I have followed the trail ... and come to a different conclusion.
@jdpoc If you want to follow the trail, it starts here:
THIS DAY in 1945, as Paris was liberated from the Nazis, with street fighting still ongoing between Germans and Resistance, Alex Allegrier-Carton of the famous Lucas-Carton restaurant went down to his basement with a team of workers ...
Through the war, because his place was a favourite of the German officers (they'd read about it in guidebooks) he encouraged the Paris Resistance to meet in an upstairs room - the last place the Gestapo would ever think to check, and they never did ...
On this day he had a task to perform.
He pointed to an old wall, telling the workmen to knock it down.
Behind it was the greatest wine cellar in Paris, bricked up in 1940 using antique stones, disguised from the Germans throughout the entire war.
At some point in this campaign, an increasingly desperate Tory Party might drop the Zinoviev Bomb.
Let me give you some context.
The 1924 General Election:
Just 4 days before voting, the Daily Mail ran a story about a letter - the now infamous 'Zinoviev' Letter - from the Soviet Communist Party to the British Labour Party, suggesting (among other things) ... a UK and Empire-wide Bolshevik Revolution.
Just came across this lovely little history story:
Back in 1962, EMI were working on various computerised systems for various purposes. Due to funding issues, the entire department was to be closed down.
EMI were losing cash and in real trouble.
Then their music division discovered a band in Liverpool that looked quite promising ...
The cash generated by the global success of the Beatles propped up other struggling divisions within EMI, including the division run Godfrey Newbold Hounsfield, allowing him to continue his research ...
Because we’re looking at the problem from the wrong end.
The small boats are not a crisis, only in that they add to the real problems:
- The rapidly growing shortage of hotels for asylum seekers;
- The interminably long delay for those people to have their applications processed.
Solve THOSE two problems … in an efficient, humane and legal manner … and the actual boats become a minor distraction, easily handled through a better process.
In addition, you solve the shortage of hotels … by solving the delays to processing of asylum applications.