SlimShady'sSpaceForce Posted June 5, 2017 Posted June 5, 2017 TIL Matt Damon and Ben Affleck originally wrote 'Good Will Hunting' with an oral sex scene between the main character and his shrink to see which film execs had truly read the script. They sold the film rights to Harvey Weinstein of Miramax, the only one to mention the scene was wildly out of place CBF that sounds like the early episodes of Lucifer. Therapy for sex.
row_33 Posted June 5, 2017 Posted June 5, 2017 TIL the meaning of coins at a grave site A penny is left for a fallen service member to pay your respects A nickel is left for a fallen service member by somebody who went thru boot camp with them A dime is left for a fallen service member by somebody who served with them A quarter is left for a fallen service member by somebody who was there when they fell During a visit to Arlington a small Confederate flag was planted in front of a grave, I took a pic and found out that it was a Union soldier's place of rest. Is this a gross desecration to do this to him?
ExiledInIllinois Posted June 5, 2017 Posted June 5, 2017 During a visit to Arlington a small Confederate flag was planted in front of a grave, I took a pic and found out that it was a Union soldier's place of rest. Is this a gross desecration to do this to him? Maybe it was the great-great grand nephew getting back @ Them: "Like my brother above me, who took a rebel stand He was just eighteen, proud and brave, but a Yankee laid him in his grave" ;-)
DC Tom Posted June 5, 2017 Posted June 5, 2017 TIL Matt Damon and Ben Affleck originally wrote 'Good Will Hunting' with an oral sex scene between the main character and his shrink to see which film execs had truly read the script. They sold the film rights to Harvey Weinstein of Miramax, the only one to mention the scene was wildly out of place CBF Well there's an image of Matt Damon and Robin Williams I didn't need...
Canadian Bills Fan Posted June 5, 2017 Author Posted June 5, 2017 Well there's an image of Matt Damon and Robin Williams I didn't need... Your welcome CBF
ExiledInIllinois Posted June 5, 2017 Posted June 5, 2017 Well there's an image of Matt Damon and Robin Williams I didn't need... I didn't read the CBF's link... I was hoping (well wasn't really hoping) it was George Plimpton. Damn you Tom!
/dev/null Posted June 6, 2017 Posted June 6, 2017 Today I learned how to make a robo dialer hang up on you Got a call for one of those free fantastic vacation giveaways. When it got to the part where they start asking questions I changed the subject to Trump. After a few Trump redirects the robo dialer hung up on me
Canadian Bills Fan Posted June 6, 2017 Author Posted June 6, 2017 TIL that after George H.W. Bush, a Naval Aviator, was shot down and rescued by a submarine in WWII, he lived aboard that submarine for a month, assisting in the rescue of other aviators. CBF
/dev/null Posted June 6, 2017 Posted June 6, 2017 (edited) TIL that after George H.W. Bush, a Naval Aviator, was shot down and rescued by a submarine in WWII, he lived aboard that submarine for a month-to-month, assisting in the rescue of other aviators. CBF Now I've got Yellow Submarine running thru my head Edited June 6, 2017 by /dev/null
DC Tom Posted June 6, 2017 Posted June 6, 2017 TIL that after George H.W. Bush, a Naval Aviator, was shot down and rescued by a submarine in WWII, he lived aboard that submarine for a month, assisting in the rescue of other aviators. CBF That was actually common. Submarines were stationed for "lifeguard" duty before major air strikes. I think the record for aviators saved was something like 23 in a single patrol. And given that submarines didn't usually associate with surface ships much (as all surface ships considered submarines "enemy" first - at least one US sub was certainly lost to US Navy depth charges), those aviators usually stayed on board for a month or more until a friendly port was reached. On a related note: aircraft carriers always had a destroyer assigned as "plane guard" during flight operations, to fish air crew out of the ocean after a failed takeoff or landing (which wasn't uncommon). As destroyers were small and thus rather spartan, whereas carriers were comparatively large and luxurious, it was standard practice for destroyers to "ransom" pilots back to the carriers for five gallons of ice cream a head (as carriers had ice cream makers on board). So if you want to know how much a trained Navy fighter pilot was worth in World War 2...about $160 worth of Chunky Monkey and Cherry Garcia, in modern terms. Now you've learned TWO things today.
Augie Posted June 6, 2017 Posted June 6, 2017 Ohhhh, Cherry Garcia! But I go Fro-Yo. Wait, what else did you mention? I'll maybe check when I get back from the store.....
Canadian Bills Fan Posted June 7, 2017 Author Posted June 7, 2017 TIL in the 13th century, Genghis Khan proposed "friendship and peace" with the fellow nomadic Khwarezmian Empire in Persia. The Khwarezmia shah ordered a Mongol trade delegation killed, prompting Khan to invade the empire, kill 1.25 million, and destroy the Khwarezmian Empire. CBF
DC Tom Posted June 7, 2017 Posted June 7, 2017 TIL in the 13th century, Genghis Khan proposed "friendship and peace" with the fellow nomadic Khwarezmian Empire in Persia. The Khwarezmia shah ordered a Mongol trade delegation killed, prompting Khan to invade the empire, kill 1.25 million, and destroy the Khwarezmian Empire. CBF Are you ever going to learn something I don’t already know? The Mongol eradication of Kwharazm was...frightening. They annihilated an advanced culture that was a couple thousand years old. The region still hasn't recovered from it.
snafu Posted June 8, 2017 Posted June 8, 2017 Are you ever going to learn something I don’t already know? The Mongol eradication of Kwharazm was...frightening. They annihilated an advanced culture that was a couple thousand years old. The region still hasn't recovered from it. Hello? How "advanced" could they be if they couldn't figure out the ramifications of slaughtering a Mongol peace delegation?
DC Tom Posted June 8, 2017 Posted June 8, 2017 Hello? How "advanced" could they be if they couldn't figure out the ramifications of slaughtering a Mongol peace delegation? It's actually a little more complicated, too...Genghis Khan first sent a trade delegation, a caravan full of loot from China. When they got to the first city on the frontier (Otrar), the governor of Otrar - Inalchuq - said "Hey, loot!" and killed the merchants and stole everything. So Genghis, in a display of remarkable patience, sent an embassy to the Shah Mohammed II, asking for Inalchuq's head and the return of the treasure - basically saying "We don't blame you, we're just assuming your underling is being a stupid ****. So take care of him and, hey, no harm, no foul." The Shah Mohammed II responded by beheading two of the envoys, and shaving the head of the third (a grave insult to Mongols of the time) and sending him back with the heads of the other two. To quote a movie: he chose...poorly. Genghis Khan went through Khwarezm like Might Taco and Genny Cream Ale through your intestinal tract. He had Inalchuq killed by pouring molten silver in his eyes and ears - the Mongols never lacked for creative execution ideas. And yes, the Dothraki are modeled on the Mongols. He then destroyed city after city after city in an unbelievable orgy of violence. The region had an irrigation system that was thousands of years old, and supported very large cities (Nishapur, Merv, Balkh, and Herat were easily four of the wealthiest, largest, and most literate cities of the late Middle Ages). After the Mongols were done, that millennia-old irrigation system collapsed literally because there was no one left alive to maintain it. This is considered, by most historians, to mark the invention of the concept of "diplomatic immunity." And the Shah Mohammed II? He basically died of fright while being chased for about a thousand miles by a Mongol army led by Subodai and Jebe.
Augie Posted June 8, 2017 Posted June 8, 2017 It's actually a little more complicated, too...Genghis Khan first sent a trade delegation, a caravan full of loot from China. When they got to the first city on the frontier (Otrar), the governor of Otrar - Inalchuq - said "Hey, loot!" and killed the merchants and stole everything. So Genghis, in a display of remarkable patience, sent an embassy to the Shah Mohammed II, asking for Inalchuq's head and the return of the treasure - basically saying "We don't blame you, we're just assuming your underling is being a stupid ****. So take care of him and, hey, no harm, no foul." The Shah Mohammed II responded by beheading two of the envoys, and shaving the head of the third (a grave insult to Mongols of the time) and sending him back with the heads of the other two. To quote a movie: he chose...poorly. Genghis Khan went through Khwarezm like Might Taco and Genny Cream Ale through your intestinal tract. He had Inalchuq killed by pouring molten silver in his eyes and ears - the Mongols never lacked for creative execution ideas. And yes, the Dothraki are modeled on the Mongols. He then destroyed city after city after city in an unbelievable orgy of violence. The region had an irrigation system that was thousands of years old, and supported very large cities (Nishapur, Merv, Balkh, and Herat were easily four of the wealthiest, largest, and most literate cities of the late Middle Ages). After the Mongols were done, that millennia-old irrigation system collapsed literally because there was no one left alive to maintain it. This is considered, by most historians, to mark the invention of the concept of "diplomatic immunity." And the Shah Mohammed II? He basically died of fright while being chased for about a thousand miles by a Mongol army led by Subodai and Jebe. So, are you saying this was worse than a 17 year playoff drought by the Bills? I think a lot of people will want to argue that!
DC Tom Posted June 8, 2017 Posted June 8, 2017 So, are you saying this was worse than a 17 year playoff drought by the Bills? I think a lot of people will want to argue that! It really only lasted about 10 years...so I gotta admit, I'm on the fence with this one.
Augie Posted June 8, 2017 Posted June 8, 2017 I'm just glad we don't have to play the Mongols twice a year. Maybe we could trade our 2 Cheaters games for the Browns, and give NE the Mongols. Brady might just retire.
DC Tom Posted June 8, 2017 Posted June 8, 2017 I'm just glad we don't have to play the Mongols twice a year. Maybe we could trade our 2 Cheaters games for the Browns, and give NE the Mongols. Brady might just retire. Now I want to see a football team named after them. The Las Vegas Mongols. That works.
ExiledInIllinois Posted June 8, 2017 Posted June 8, 2017 (edited) That was actually common. Submarines were stationed for "lifeguard" duty before major air strikes. I think the record for aviators saved was something like 23 in a single patrol. And given that submarines didn't usually associate with surface ships much (as all surface ships considered submarines "enemy" first - at least one US sub was certainly lost to US Navy depth charges), those aviators usually stayed on board for a month or more until a friendly port was reached. On a related note: aircraft carriers always had a destroyer assigned as "plane guard" during flight operations, to fish air crew out of the ocean after a failed takeoff or landing (which wasn't uncommon). As destroyers were small and thus rather spartan, whereas carriers were comparatively large and luxurious, it was standard practice for destroyers to "ransom" pilots back to the carriers for five gallons of ice cream a head (as carriers had ice cream makers on board). So if you want to know how much a trained Navy fighter pilot was worth in World War 2...about $160 worth of Chunky Monkey and Cherry Garcia, in modern terms. Now you've learned TWO things today. It was pretty small on the sub and every bunk taken even practicing "hot bunking"... Everybody had a job... What would the tag-a-long aviator do? We camped out a bunch of years ago on the USS Silversides (Gato Class)...Up in Muskegon, Michigan. With a crew of around 80 (if I recall), I could imagine it tight. They said food would be stored everywhere they could put a box, they would eat their way to more walking room. BTW... I think the Siversides holds the distinction for having the first under water surgery. An appendectomy in the galley after diving to avoid a Japanese destroyer. What a bad time time to have appendicitis! The galley was small, I wanna say 12x12 @ most and would serve crew all the time. I can't imagine 80 people crammed on that small boat. Cook got to shower every day, officers every other day and crew every week (I think)... Just imagine hot bunking with the boat's machinist! No room for tall guys either, I am 6'3" & I was banging my head and hanging off the bunks. By the middle of the night I was ready to just go ashore and throw my sleeping bag in snow. The "honeymoon suite" bunk was for the newbs... Right above the torpedo bay. Edited June 8, 2017 by ExiledInIllinois
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