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Thread: Our anus is a useful thing indeed.

  1. "Question the world man... I know the meaning of everything right now... it's like I can touch god." - bbobb the ggreatt

  2. nope. great cast nonetheless;

    Quote Originally Posted by imdb
    Henry Winkler .... Himself/Arthur 'The Fonz' Fonzarelli
    Dr. Sol Gordon .... Himself (Institute for Family Research and Education)
    Kee MacFarlane .... Herself (Children's Institute International)
    Chris Wallace .... Himself

    John Ritter .... Himself

    Mariette Hartley .... Herself
    Hal Smith .... Animated voice (voice)
    Henry Corden .... Fred Flintstone (voice)
    Lucille Bliss .... Smurfette (voice)
    Danny Goldman .... Animated voice (voice)
    June Foray .... Jokey Smurf (voice)
    Dana Kavin .... Little Girl
    rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    Hannah Mason Hauser .... Title Narrator (voice)
    Don Messick .... Papa Smurf/Scooby-Doo/Scrappy-Doo (voice)




  3. Fuck me! Tremors in the old west!! That's $19.95 sold!
    "Question the world man... I know the meaning of everything right now... it's like I can touch god." - bbobb the ggreatt

  4. "A great deal of effort went into selecting the correct weapons for the people of Rejection Nevada to use in their 1889 struggle against Dirt Dragons."





    Ok, so they have these things called punt guns in T4.

    "In the early 1800's the mass hunting of waterfowl to supply commercial markets with meat became a widely accepted practice. In addition to the market for food, women's fashion in the mid 1800's added a major demand for feathers to adorn hats. To meet the demand, professional hunters developed custom built extremely large shotguns (bore diameters up to 2") for the task. These weapons were so cumbersome that they were most often mounted on long square-ended flat-hulled boats called punts. Hunters would typically use a long pole to quietly push their punt into range of a flock of waterfowl resting on the lake and, POW. A single shot from one of these huge guns could kill as many as 50 birds. To increase efficiency even further, punt hunters would often work in groups of 8-10 boats. By lining up their boats and coordinating the firing of their single shot weapons, entire flocks of birds could be "harvested" with a single volley. It was not unusual for such a band of hunters to acquire as many as 500 birds in a single day. Because of the custom nature of these weapons and the lack of support by the weapons industry, they were often rather crude in design. Most were sturdy hand-built muzzle loaders fired with percussion caps.

    Market waterfowling quickly depleted bird populations in the United States and many states banned the practice by the late 1860's. Public outcry and the persistence of the Audubon Society led to the ratification of the Lacey Act in 1889 which prohibited the shipment of wild game or feathers across state lines. The federal government eventually stepped in with another series of laws to completely outlaw market hunting in 1918."
    Apprently I was never aware of this...



    http://www.thelegendbegins.com/weapons_of_tremors4.html


    ...
    Last edited by Doc Holliday; 22 Jan 2007 at 12:30 AM.
    "Question the world man... I know the meaning of everything right now... it's like I can touch god." - bbobb the ggreatt

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