Who is involved in a hold up with a gun to their head and doesn't involve the police? especially as the owner of the store would have to call the police and of course they would need to talk to him too. If the owner was to say "I am not going to call the police" then that is highly suspicious plus most people would probably reply "you may not but I do".
I still don't know what to think of the room of smoke scene. Matt didn't just see the others ignoring the smoke, he saw the others not noticing the smoke yet still said nothing. The least he could have done is given a nudge or signal to another person and then see if they did anything if he really didnt want to. At least in the classic case of Genovese mentioned earlier the people who didn't help her all knew that everyone else knew what was happening too. Matt just decided to leave it knowing he was the only one who noticed, in a program about heroes that is pretty funny.
I missed the band bit as I was too busy in a conversation about how ridiculous the show was but another thing I don't believe is that he wouldn't clock the change in light outside between when he stood up to volunteer and the virtual nighttime in the sim. Derren's explanation in the Q&A that it wasn't as dark as it looked doesn't convince me at all. Even if it wasn't as dark as it looked, it was still a hell of alot darker. The light difference was massive, he got up to volunteer and it was light, walked to the cockpit and it was dark. I mean you are landing a plane, one of the most visual based things you can possibly do and the light issue goes unnoticed?
That was Brown's explanation as to how he got away with not paying the taxi or questioning how it was conveniently there for him. I can't see how the thought of breaking into the house made him forget to question who booked, when, for where and why the cabbie is even taking him. What makes me laugh is that even though he is willing to take this "pre paid ride" without question, when he gets to his destination he asked the cabbie to "wait here please" like he wants more "freeness" and the cabbie is like "no problem". It's just odd.
That was his explanation about why Matt thought it was acceptable to enter the policemans home. That's answer seems almost deliberately lazy, like he doesn't mind if people rumble the show. Plus the right thing to do was post them through the letterbox with a little note if he wanted.
The Q&A didn't convince me at all to believe what Brown said happened. So many times I watched Matt's reaction to what was happening around him and I thought "bulls**t". The fact that Matt doesn't question anything around him when even the most unaware and unobservant person in the world would have alarm bells ringing is what makes me so unbelieving and I reckon for alot of people as well.
I agree with what others in this thread have said about how stealing, breaking and entering, touching crocodiles, not reporting an armed robbery to the police (as obviously happened) and unquestionably volunteering to save a plane when you have no experience whatsoever and the responsible thing would be to ask if noone else is a better candidate or at least ask for help, make you a better person?