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Question:

The UK version of Leona Lewis's Bleeding Love What happens to everyone at the end of the song?

This has perplexed me so Ive decided to map it out. From first appearence in the video, the blond is 1, (00:15), the girl on the bed is 2, (00:37), the blk guy is 3, (00:47), the girl who dresses up for 3 is 4, (01:51), 5, (02:14), is the girl looking depressed on the bed and the last guy, 6, (03:51), is the one waiting for 5 at the door w/ flowers.The blond, at first, is crying on the sofa. Soon she fights w/ 3, tells him to leave and then she breaks down.What happens to her?The girl on the bed is crying looking at the pictures on the bed, then she rages and begins to hit them. Later , an anonymous guy enters the hotel and fights w/ 3; toward the end of the video she starts a fire, pulls a track from her hair and little is seen from her.What happens to her after the fight?3 is the blk guy who fights w/ 1 and cheats on her w/ 4; he gets caught making out w/ 4 by the aforementioned anonymous guy and fights w/ him.What happend after the fight?

Answer:

You aren't supposed to fold an electric blanket in use, or even in storage. You could break the heater wires inside due to the bending and folding (causing it to either stop working, or even to short out and cause a fire). You could also have a fire hazard from the trapped heat under the mattress (or at the very least, cause the thermostat to malfunction!). The stress from being stretched under the mattress while someone lies on top might also break the wires.
I had a similar problem with a smoke detector which would go off when the steam from the kettle happened. The unit was 25ft away, and of course this is NOT smoke. Did some checking and found out that some of the detectors with certain components do this so changed ours and no problems since! Ours is not hard-wired but straight battery. Ours also has NO radio-active components in it, which we understand is the best one to have, and not just for the obvious reasons. You may have a similar problem to me because it sounds like your detectors may be reacting to heat [like the steam from my kettle] and not to a fire's CHEMICAL component, which is what a detector is supposed to sense! Take all of your detectors [the ones you took out and the ones installed] to a testing facility [check with your local council, fire authority, electricity authority, etc] for the correct one to go to, for your own peace of mind and for others who may have the same units, that COULD BE FAULTY FATAL in the event of a fire. I am sorry for your frustration and hope you get the right help, SOON!!

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