Huh, I hated Top Gun. Maybe I should give it another try someday. Mostly I don't really like Tom Cruise and that hasn't changed.
I have water again thanks to handyman hubby. This means I must also do laundry.
'Sleeper'
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Huh, I hated Top Gun. Maybe I should give it another try someday. Mostly I don't really like Tom Cruise and that hasn't changed.
I have water again thanks to handyman hubby. This means I must also do laundry.
So I went to a very fun and yummy wine-tasting at a local vineyard this afternoon (we won't mention that it was called Wine Tasting for Dummies) and came home to find Stephen had made paella for dinner. I am a bit tipsy and very full of good food. That's a nice way to be on a Sunday.
They think I'm racist.
Oh. My. God. There are no words for this. {{{Fay}}}
I have water again thanks to handyman hubby.
Yay! for water!
That's one of my favorite movies, too
The cheesy 80s music and Goose (sob) get me every time.
I officially feel like hell.
{{{Teppy}}}
vw, your middle-of-the-night visitor had to be scary! Hello?! Not the time to put up a sign on someone else's fire escape! Geez. {{{vw}}} and {{{Emily}}}
Mostly I don't really like Tom Cruise and that hasn't changed.
That's when I still liked him, baby Cruise. And, Val Kilmer! How much more hot could you ask for?
It always pissed me off just a little that they had to wait until only a couple months after I transferred out of Topgun to make the movie. I would have loved to have gotten to meet all the actors. I always have to laugh whenever I see them holding "class" out in the hangar bay. The actual classrooms were the smallest, dimmest, most institutional looking rooms you could have imagined. And the maintenance departments were in single wide trailers that went by the name of Delta House. Still, it was probably one of the Navy's greatest recruiting tools during the 80's and they didn't have to pay anything for it.
You went to TopGun???
t falls head over heels in love
I wanted to be a fighter pilot or fly with the Blue Angels.
Alas. they don't let you do those things if you have a seizure disorder.
I think the only film I liked with Cruise was Risky Business which was much fun.
I wanted to be a fighter pilot or fly with the Blue Angels.
ME TOO! And it was all because of Top Gun. They didn't let women fly fighter planes when I was applying to schools or I would have applied to the Naval Academy. I was almost an Army helicopter pilot but I let me parents and loser ex-husband talk me out of it. I guess it worked out okay in the end, however, because I would never have met Joe if I had gone that route.
Still, I used to get goosebumps watching the Thunderbirds fly over my house on special Air Force game days.
Yep, living near Miramar definitely has its advantages... I love the jets.
( Though not the Sharks as I have an unusual hate-on for West Side Story. )
Aimee, you have to understand the squadron may have had 35/40 pilot-instructors, but it had a maintenance crew of around 125 to take care of all the airplanes. So, I did not "go" to Topgun, I was part of Topgun for two years as an electronics technician that supported the avionics equipment onboard the aircraft. The class that fighter pilots went to was five weeks long, then we'd be "down" for three weeks getting the planes back into shape for the next class. Sending a graduating class "bye-bye" was always cause for a squadron party, I think we had more of them than any other squadron on base.
Stephanie, you must have just missed the cutoff when it came to women in fighter planes. By the time I got out in '93, it wasn't common, but it was happening. All the carriers had been opened to women, so they had to start letting them into all the various types of squadrons by then. Still, women only make up a little over 10% of the Navy, so you're not going to see a lot of female pilots.
Sail, that's awesomer than going. Still in love.
By the time I got out in '93, it wasn't common, but it was happening.
Yep - I would have started in '92. When they opened it up to women, I briefly considered transferring, but since I had been able to take 2 years of college during high school, going to an academy would have meant starting from scratch after 3 years of college.