|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
New CBS TV Series Making Nuclear War Thinkable And Great Fun For Everyone
ravenlynne wrote: What an awesome god! Cthulhu ain't got nuthin' on Jehovah. .. Actually his name is YHWH (typically pronounced Yahweh). Jehovah is the result of a bad translation in the 1800s. .. |
#32
|
|||
|
|||
New CBS TV Series Making Nuclear War Thinkable And Great Fun For Everyone
What this show most sounds like is the science fiction sub-genre wherein a town is cut off from civilization. Examples of this are the creepy "It's A Good Life" by Jerome Bixby, "Island In The Sea Of Time" and its sequels by S. M. Stirling, or "1632" and sequels by Eric Flint (and friends.) The Bixby story was made into a memorable Twilight Zone episode. You forgot"Alas Bab.", and "On the Beach" Carl |
#33
|
|||
|
|||
*SPOILER* New CBS TV Series Making Nuclear War Thinkable And Great Fun For Everyone
"Harold Groot" wrote in message
... So I suspect they are playing fast and loose with real science and are going to have a group of people marooned in unexplained fashion, subjected to various inernal and external stresses - just like on LOST. Just so long as they don't end up being toys at the bottom of a charity bin. |
#34
|
|||
|
|||
New CBS TV Series Making Nuclear War Thinkable And Great FunFor Everyone
In the Year of the Dog, the Great and Powerful Joe Bednorz declared:
Isn't there a classic SF story along the line of the TV show? A small town has to adjust to less outside support. The library becomes the center of learning to be more self-sufficient. I seem to recall it being done on TV (in the 1960s???) but they changed the ending to apathetic despair instead of "Well, we'll get on as best we can." Alas Babylon by Pat Frank. The book ended with the Army showing up to start the rebuilding process, with a rather ironic last line in which a soldier informs the survivors that the US kicked Ruskie ass. There was also a cool AIP cheapie from the same period, in which Ray Milland and his family were headed into the mountains for a vacation when L.A. got nuked. They roll into a town that didn't see the blast and buy up a couple hundred dollars in groceries, then head to the hardware store. But when the hardware owner won't sell him a gun because of a two-day waiting period, Milland takes what he wants by force and heads up to the vacation spot to wait out the war until law 'n' order is restored -- never acknowledging that he himself is part of the problem. -- Sean O'Hara | http://diogenes-sinope.blogspot.com Doctor: Bad laws were made to be broken. -Doctor Who |
#35
|
|||
|
|||
New CBS TV Series Making Nuclear War Thinkable And Great Fun For Everyone
wrote:
Earlier bomb shows were generally a bust. Remember the day after. So sad it was cut dramatically in length and still was a ratings bust. It's stunning how misinformed people allow themselves to be: "Nearly 100 million Americans watched The Day After on its first broadcast, a record audience for a made-for-TV movie." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Day_After The figure of 100 million is probably a quote from: Twardy, Chuck, "'Day After' Scores High in TV Ratings," Lawrence Journal-World, November 21, 1983 From another source: "The Day After was broadcast on November 20, 1983 to an audience of 100 million viewers with the second-highest Nielsen rating ever for a TV movie, outpaced only by Gone With the Wind." http://www.ruminator.com/?p=22 |
#36
|
|||
|
|||
*SPOILER* New CBS TV Series Making Nuclear War Thinkable And Great Fun For Everyone
(1) Whether 2 cities or 200, you wouldn't find the airways dead. Ham
radio people with their own batteries/generators ought to be all over the bands. Foreign broadcast stations as well, and Satellite TV and Radio. Yet the bands were reported as clear. So I suspect they are playing fast and loose with real science and are going to have a group of people marooned in unexplained fashion, subjected to various inernal and external stresses - just like on LOST. When something is successful there are immitators very quickly, and I suspect this will be seen as one of them. EMP electro magnetic pulse will wipe out nearly all solid state electronic devices and fry the power grid too. terrorists who hate the US could decimate our economy by detonating just 2 EMP pulse weapons over the central US..... most Hams today use all soid state nice lightweight, low power consumption. little tube stuff is still around.... the easiest way to detonate some nuclear bombs in the US is export them from another country in a cargo carrier equipped with GPS. ship to 110 main street when it arrives it automatically detonates... if terrorists were serious they would of already crippled our economy by wiping out air travel. SAM shoulder held surface to air missle a few planes at the same time date and nearly no one would ever fly again. the economy would tank. |
#37
|
|||
|
|||
New CBS TV Series Making Nuclear War Thinkable And Great Fun For Everyone
"Joe Bednorz" wrote in message
... On Fri, 22 Sep 2006 03:13:52 GMT, Scott Golden wrote: wrote: http://letterfromhere.blogspot.com/2...thinkable.html Tuesday, September 19, 2006 Making nuclear war thinkable What's wrong with this picture? To begin with, if it weren't a Hollywood special effects shot, the guy would probably be blind from looking right at the exploding nuke -- he clearly didn't duck and cover. Let's assume that the blast occured in Denver, as speculated. The Kansas border is 140 miles away, and no one said that Jericho is right on the border (I think we can safely assume that it is in western Kansas but that's all). Someone watching the detonation from that far away will "probably be blind" as a result? Don't think so. Not too mention any large energy release will result in a mushroom cloud. Didn't Heinlein cover this in TMiaHM? The Loonies were accused of using nukes because of the mushroom clouds resulting from their strikes on Earth. Manny finally points out that all they made were "big sparks," which naturally result in mushroom clouds (if they occur on the surface, in an atmosphere, etc.) Having just finished a re-read, yes, that's exactly how the book went. "Strike anything hard enough and you'll get a mushroom cloud but radiation? Unlikely" and then he goes on to theorize that you might be able to get X-rays but not gamma radiation. Jason |
#38
|
|||
|
|||
New CBS TV Series Making Nuclear War Thinkable And Great Fun For Everyone
|
#39
|
|||
|
|||
New CBS TV Series Making Nuclear War Thinkable And Great FunFor Everyone
Frank Glover wrote:
The leaders of Iran and North Korea are my biggest concerns on this issue...and I doubt that anything CBS airs or doesn't air will alter their views either way. I seriously doubt Iran or N. Korea wanted nukes before Bush's holy war ("axis of evil"). In fact they had UN inspector and signed treaties against nukes. Bush screwed it up, not Iran, Iraq, or North Korea. -- Pat Impeach Bush http://zzpat.bravehost.com/ Articles of Impeachment Center for Constitutional Rights http://zzpat.bravehost.com/april_200...peachment.html |
#40
|
|||
|
|||
New CBS TV Series Making Nuclear War Thinkable And Great Fun For Everyone
"Sean O'Hara" wrote in message ... In the Year of the Dog, the Great and Powerful Joe Bednorz declared: Isn't there a classic SF story along the line of the TV show? A small town has to adjust to less outside support. The library becomes the center of learning to be more self-sufficient. I seem to recall it being done on TV (in the 1960s???) but they changed the ending to apathetic despair instead of "Well, we'll get on as best we can." Alas Babylon by Pat Frank. The book ended with the Army showing up to start the rebuilding process, with a rather ironic last line in which a soldier informs the survivors that the US kicked Ruskie ass. There was also a cool AIP cheapie from the same period, in which Ray Milland and his family were headed into the mountains for a vacation when L.A. got nuked. They roll into a town that didn't see the blast and buy up a couple hundred dollars in groceries, then head to the hardware store. But when the hardware owner won't sell him a gun because of a two-day waiting period, Milland takes what he wants by force and heads up to the vacation spot to wait out the war until law 'n' order is restored -- never acknowledging that he himself is part of the problem. that gem was Panic in Year Zero... iirc, and yes, the main character was an asshole. Totally part of the problem. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|