AKA the swiss cheese theory, blame those fucking swiss
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look in the lunch thread
exactly, and it managed to fall thru the holes in several slices of swiss cheese
Which is why I'm a Gruyere person myself
Look how things are going full circle. I want to point out again that anyone who shoots would know the difference between a live round and a blank. There are obvious differences. And when the live round was loaded into the revolver there had to be breakdowns in safety for someone to fire the weapon thinking it was not there. You would not be able to tell live or blank just looking at the primer side of the cylinder.
As mentioned several times and seen in the press. "live ammo" is a common term on the set for a blank versus a dummy round.
That's the only reason I suggested it could be a blank in the gun others called a live round.. And ya, easy to tell the difference looking at the front of the round whether it is a blank or lead projectile
However Mr Gun Expert. Riddle me this. How do you tell the difference between a DUMMY meant to look like a real bullet looking down the barrel of a wheel gun and a real bullet?? I don't know the answer but I thought someone said there are marks on the back of the shell dictating it as a dummy instead of a real bullet..
There should be markings. But? I would assume that of late everything is reloaded ammo. You could make a round that looks like a blank but really has a lead projectile. It’s obvious that people didn’t spend the time to check. If you knew the gun was being used to fire live ammo. You would really check it when it came back. Right? The open issue is the same. When did the live round go in the gun. Who put it in there? Why How many hands were on that gun before Baldwin fired it.
And everyone in the chain of command is disputing the rumors of the gun being used for target practice after hours. There's no official documentation that any of that happened and everyone who was responsible for securing the gun says no way in hell that happened. So if that didn't happen, how does a real bullet show up.. and I think there were more according to the sheriff's evidence inventory.. If anyone has that documented please share it..
I know one thing for sure--if someone asks me to look down the barrel of a gun to see if there's a real bullet in it, I'll say no, no matter how much they're paying me. And if I were a cameraman being asked to have a gun pointed at me I would personally want to check that either the round has no powder or the gun was permanently incapable of firing.
And on a more general note, given how inured we all are to guns in movies and on TV, how can there still be any thrill factor in the camera looking down the barrel at a bullet? Is the verisimilitude worth the hassle factor, not to mention the danger?
I wonder if the live ammo the sheriff found was in a box that could be traced to dealer and then purchaser.
It always amuses me that Hollywood directors make so much effort to get every period detail right when the whole story they are telling is ridiculous bullshit.
I look at this story as a microcosm of society. It’s not hard to see the parallels.
Notable in the conversation around this very isolated incident, no one is gaslighting the listeners into thinking the whole crew should be armed or given unmitigated access to firearms in order to not be shot themselves.
It’s like a window into the minds of the gun enthusiasts when there’s no artificially hyped threat to “take the guns away.”
Some reasonable thoughts on the lethality of firearms & reasonable approaches to being safe around guns…
Just sort of amazing to see in miniature…
I think the reason for having (old "revolver" type) guns with (dummy) bullets isn't so that a bullet will be visible in the barrel, but so that bullets will be visible in the slots of the chamber that aren't lined up with the barrel.
Which is still a little silly, because only a total gun geek will even notice that. Keeping in mind that hand-to-hand combat scenes in movies routinely range from unrealistic to completely preposterous, maybe that barely perceptible bit of gun realism isn't all that necessary?
Exactly. I did type "looking down the barrel" but meant it in the figurative sense not literally. The shot/angle for that an observant person would be able to see if there are bullets in the wheel or not... looking down the barrel of a gun pointed at you.. Not. IN the barrel...
The next round is visible from the front on that gun, pull the hammer back and the cylinder revolves and the round that was visible on the left moves to the barrel. The dummy rounds should have a hole drilled in the shell to distinguish them from live rounds, they're identical other than that. Somebody didn't do their job, the gun was most likely used for target practice, never unloaded completely then loaded with dummy rounds. Somebody never learned to count.
My money is still on outright sabotage.
kill someone over working conditions really?
Still come down to one person but since it is america there has to be a conspiracy I supose
where the fuck is Columbo, you ever notice he was always late always the last cop on the scene
yeah if they were just sabotaging a gun to prove a point about unsafe conditions they should have used a gun with blanks so nobody got hurt ... oh wait
Can we put a bullet in this thread?
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Wouldn’t we lose aspca approval for this thread?
Apologies is this has been posted
Who let that shit bird back in here?!?!?!?
I dunno. Is said passenger or pilot vocally anti-hang glider? Haha.
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Laughable. Competent armors have done their jobs for years with few incidents.
This could be a hold my beer moment.
https://www.foxnews.com/live-news/al...-shooting-rust
Alec Baldwin calls for mandatory police to monitor weapon safety on sets following 'Rust' shooting
Alec Baldwin took to Instagram to share a tweet he penned on his now-private account that declared his desire to see a police officer on sets to monitor weapon safety.
"Every film/TV set that uses guns, fake or otherwise, should have a police officer on set, hired by the production, to specifically monitor weapons safety,” he wrote Monday.
Baldwin has been at the heart of an ongoing debate in show business about the use of real firearms on sets after a live round discharged from a gun he was holding on the set of "Rust" last month resulting in the death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins.
I'm the first to give props when the police save the day... However, when you have a problem and you invite the police to come help solve the problem.. Sometimes you end up with more problems..
Oldie but a goodie.
https://youtu.be/vfONckOPyaI
Baldwin would be dead if a police officer was present. Officer would observe Baldwin shoot the producer and take out the active shooter.
LOL! And if there was a "good guy with a gun" on set, at least 4 others would be dead.
Pew
Pew
Pew
Not sure Baldwin thought this through very well. Think about the movie set when the party gets started. Everyone is excited, especially the cop.