• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

The movie rush hour, the payoff (50 million dollars)

dxkj

Lifer
I caught part of this movie and was realizing what a joke it was.....


20 million in 20's (thats 1 million bills)
10 million in 10's (another million bills)
20 million in 50's (another 400,000 bills)


2.4 million bills


All bills weigh ~ 1 gram (think paperclip)

~ 454 grams in a pound


2,400,000 / 454 = 5,289 lbs


No weigh in heck ..... lol such a silly point
 
Originally posted by: dxkj
Originally posted by: BigJ
If they did it in 500 denomination Euros, it'd only take 80,704 notes.

the point of the movie is that he specified 20 mill in 20, etc

And my point is that they should've asked for Euros 🙂

And FU to the person that overanalyzes this and notices that Euro coins and banknotes weren't used until several years after the movie was made.
 
Originally posted by: shortylickens
If they had used 1000 dollar bills it would work, but last I checked those were no longer legal tender.

They're legal tender, but they haven't been in circulation for quite a long time.
 
Originally posted by: lobadobadingdong
the official you have no life thread 😉

Count me in.

According to my calculations, 2.4 million bills would take up about 95 cubic feet.
Those would have to be some big fricken suitcases.
 
Back
Top