Last year, for the Alexandria (Virginia) Scottish Christmas Walk, there was a fuss because they had a new rule. Men in kilts were required to wear underwear. Such a fuss! (and, in too many cases, over too little)
Connor ,'Not Fade Away'
Natter 68: Bork Bork Bork
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
That so needs to be made into a movie.
Right? It was an eight person crew composed of a Magician and a bunch of set directors, designers and other theater tech crew.
Didn't they also work on faking the run-up to the D-Day landing to make the Germans think they were going to go to Calais instead of Normandy? They put Patton in charge of the false Army group and used false tanks, trucks, etc. in Kent to show a build-up there instead of further west, where they were actually building up for Normandy.
I was just watching a "Secrets of WWII" show on the Military Channel that was about the Man Who Never Was, the corpse that they dropped into the sea off of Spain with fake papers indicating an Allied landing in Sardinia instead of Sicily.
And didn't they set up a fake airfield with mock-ups of airplanes as a decoy, while the real planes were camouflaged elsewhere? I think this was in Scotland ....
The misinformation campaign was my favorite part of Blackout/All Clear, by far. Such a fascinating little bit of history.
During WWI, two passenger liners that were armed with guns fought each other in the only passenger liner vs. passenger liner naval battle. Coincidentally, each passenger liner was disguised as the other.
The outdoor shopping mall near my office used to be an airplane factory. Even in Burbank, far away from the war, they took the time to create a huge net to cover all the many acres of it to make it look like innocuous suburban streets from the air. Check it out: [link]
During WWI, two passenger liners that were armed with guns fought each other in the only passenger liner vs. passenger liner naval battle. Coincidentally, each passenger liner was disguised as the other.
So they both blew their own cover? I find that funnier than I ought to since there were probably casualties.
The misinformation campaign was my favorite part of Blackout/All Clear, by far. Such a fascinating little bit of history.
Blackout is on the top of my To Be Read pile, for after I finish my various cross-stitch projects before Christmas. I'm buying All Clear when the paperback is available.
Twitter etiquette question: Is it ok to troll spam ads? I really want to say, "put a shirt on, douchebag."
Is that ok?