The Tempest - S5-E10
Other mistake: After getting the horses inside the barn, Mike sees the twister and hurries inside the homestead to grab Katie and take cover under the staircase. When Sully and Brian arrive the next morning to find debris littering the house, they call out for Mike, and she comes rushing down the stairs holding Katie, instead of coming out from the staircase where they were safe.
Suggested correction: By morning, the tornado has already hit and its threat is long passed, so there was absolutely no reason for Michaela and Katie to have remained hiding under the staircase. Prior to that scene, Sully and Brian were on their way back home, and when they took refuge from the twister, they released their four horses to instinctively find their own safe place. After the tornado passed, once it was safe to ride again, Brian and Sully needed to first find all their horses, and then continued riding back home. As you said yourself, "Sully and Brian arrive the next morning."
Factual error: Horace catches the ball during the first half of the final competition as Otis approaches 4th base/pitcher's mound, which outs him automatically yet Michaela nor the team call it.
Suggested correction: He was out. It was obvious that he was out when Quinn said he caught it. There would be no point in having to call him out. Otis is then seen telling his players to return to their bases because they could be tagged out. But he doesn't bother going anywhere because even he knew he was out. And we do see the players get called out.
Character mistake: Loren mistakenly calls each pitch at the batter's mound a strike, when that is when a pitch is out of batting mounds, or the batter misses. A ball is when the batter ignores the pitch or doesn't make a swing.
Suggested correction: A player doesn't have to swing for a pitch to be a strike. He called them correctly.
Well unless I've missed something over the years in baseball... and Loren's obvious confusion on what to call... when a batter remains stationary during a pitch, that is a standard all-out ball. When the batter moves or swings and misses the pitch, it is a strike.
His initial hesitation had nothing to do with it being a bad call. And yes, you've missed a lot over the years. A batter can move or even check swing and still the pitch could be called a ball. When a batter remains stationary, that doesn't change a strike into a ball just because he didn't swing or attempt to swing. The poem "Casey at the Bat" is all about him not swinging on the first two pitches, and they were both called strikes.






