Induction is a genre that finds its form in the industrial jeopardy film. The Highway Safety Patrol has done the most to elevate the genre to the standard of an art form; i.e., the capacity to form and be formed through a medium, which is plastic. Signal 30 is a 1959 trigger film shown widely to high school students into the 1980s, and that takes its name from the Ohio State Highway Patrol for a fatal car accident. Like its California counterpart, Red Asphalt, Signal 30 features graphic footage of mechanized death; of dismemberments; of real blood that will never, unlike film, flow backwards into the reminder to wear a seatbelt. "Last August," confesses the Sociologist Ashley Mears, "I spent a day filming bangers at Anna Rothfuss's rented condo." Mears, a former fashion model, says the one that performed best online was a cheater drama: "The suspense of waiting for a cuckolded spouse to find out keeps viewers gripped enough to sit through the ad."