
Speaking with Insider for their How Real Is It? YouTube series, Martinez revealed how one detail in a scene from Chicago Fire made him angry.
Starting at 5:45, the firefighter details how the roof rope rescue depicted in the show includes the characters not properly securing the rope and not having a proper approach to dealing with trouble arising during the mission. However, he still gives it a decently high score of 7 out of 10 due to everything else about the scene being accurate. Check out what Martinez had to say below:
I was actually very furious with this clip, because we drill on roof rope rescues a lot with my department. So when I saw him put the ax in and use the rope around a vent pipe, that’s a big no-no, because that is not substantial enough to hold the weight. We look for anything that would be substantial, a bulkhead maybe, or even if we had to, worst-case scenario, we would even cut a part of the roof and actually tie off to the actual structure of the roof to repel down. They had a portable saw right there that they could have used to actually cut a decent enough hole to actually tie off on a proper structure.
The chances of the window actually exploding like that, it’s very difficult to say, because a lot of these windows are tempered glass, and it’s not as easy to break as you would think. When the window actually does explode and you see the glass shatter, you see everybody actually look down. That’s actually correct. The minute you hear any glass shatter, you always want to go and look down. The last thing you want is glass in your eyes.
He did give correct advice as far as cutting the cable and trying to loosen it from the mechanism. However, you can actually see two instances where she almost lifts herself up. Those are the no-nos, because the minute you go and take your weight off that rope, it has the potential to loosen up the hook or wherever it’s tied off to, and you have a potential for a fall. But as far as like the realism goes, they could have did a little better, but I would still give it a 7, because the techniques are still there.