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(I'm too cheap for a Paid LJ account and respect my readers too much to go for Plus--I'm sure you hate ad banners as much as I do.)

I realized tonight that the logical conclusion to my wargame army building would be a Circle Trigon army with Gear Krieg Walkers for the main force and Crimson Skies planes for Air Support.

And there's precious little point in doing any of it so long as I can't afford to buy all the pieces and have nobody to play against.

FP
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Air Force Rolls Out 15 Ton Conventional Bomb. Now, a mere 15 tons doesn't sound like much. It's still bigger than any conventional warhead ever put into series production...and any plane that can carry a 15 ton bomb can easily carry a nuke instead.
frustratedpilot: (Default)
Hey.

Temptation got the better of me (and my $5) last night, when I was at the hobby store that hosts my monthly IPMS club meeting. Got myself a 1/144th Minicraft B-25 Mitchell (the same type aircraft as in my avatar for this post) as the kit was in the half-off bargain bin. When I finish building it, I'll set it on a "document spindle" I got years ago as a "flying" base. Haven't decided on the paint scheme. I could go with desert camo, woodland camo, mountain camo or Marine Corps patrol bomber.

I'm still working through my Flames of War phase. I'm pretty sure I can't really take it up...I don't have the funds.

The thing about the game is that it walks the tightrope with being historical on one side and being about getting bang-for-buck on the other. It's just weird how both ways both turn me on and turn me off at the same time.

FP
frustratedpilot: (Default)
Hey.

Got to watch it overnight. Since I already knew the story from seeing it on television a couple times, and from the book as well, and from the Cliff's Notes on top of that, I decided to view it with the Commentary audio track on. Director Mike Nichols and Steven Soderbergh talk about how the shots were made and about the actors and how they got along during the production.

It's peculiar how the things that got censored from the TV prints made a lot of the difference. One example: in the sequence when the bomber squadron is about to take off on a mission (right after Yossarian and Doc Daneeka make the first mention of Catch-22 [the regulation]), Colonel Cathcart shows thumbs-up to his men from the control tower, the pilots salute him back with thumbs-up...and Yossarian flips Cathcart a bird. I certainly don't remember this from the TV version.

Paramount spent all sorts of money on this movie, shooting parts in Rome, building an airbase in Mexico and blowing it to pieces in the air raid sequence, assembling a whole squadron of bomber planes, getting a hot director and a top-notch cast...and the finished product was eclipsed (probably rightly so) by M*A*S*H. I guess this is proof that you could do everything right and take all the right risks and still lose.

FP
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After Randy Milholland used a napalm reference in the epigraph of today's "Something*Positive", I'd been itching to go into his feed with a chorus of the Air Force ditty "Chocolate Covered Napalm" and the avatar you see here.

Only his feed is late again and I have unfortunately forgotten where the lyrics are to that song. I know it's probably in a Smithsonian Air&Space, but I have ten years' worth of that magazine and going through it isn't easy. Nobody has the song online anywhere.

Oh well. It's the thought that counts.

FP (who is not going to bother raiding the S*P feed now)
frustratedpilot: (Default)
Hey.

My new icon is a Mitchell bomber above a simulated dose of napalm at an airshow. Dunno where the piccy was taken; I got it via Usenet-Replayer.

FP

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Stephen R Bierce

March 2022

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