you get terribly and painfully electricuted and hello louise you get terribly and painfully electricuted and hello louise you get terribly and painfully electricuted and hello louise
because
Benjamin Franklin did his experiment with a key on a kite in 1752.
Benjamin Franklin put his kite to the sky on a stormy day, he saw that there were loose threads standing up from the string. When he thought the kite was struck already, he touched the key with his knuckles and felt the shock.
Benjamin Franklin tied a key to a kite to see if lightning was electricity.
Yes. He tied a key to the end of a kite string and flew the kite during a lightning storm. The water form the rain covered the string. The electricity from the lightning made the key electrically charged.
put the flashing red thingy(1) on the kite then put it up on the mountin.
Your answer is the same place as where you put a kite in real life. HINT: NOT UNDER GROUND!
for the key on the kite
He used a kite in a storm with a key tied to it's string.
He flew his kite during a storm and the metal key picked up the electricity from the lightning.
Benjamin Franklin was brave enough to put a magnetic key on a kite to test the electric shocks on a stormy day.
That electricity can pass through metal. There was a key on the kite.