Picture of the day

R. Lee Ermey has made a sizable pile of dollars (12M of them apparently) working his shtick. While I respect his service, and can't begrudge a fellow from making some money with what he has, I can't help but get tired of seeing his puss on ads for Medeco locks, TruSpec fatigues, Glock, WD40, Geico, Victory motorcycles, plus his own TV show, the back cover of the current edition of Surplus Firearms, that book he wrote...

Dude's flirting with overexposure. And the shouty, uber-tough USMC DI thing gets very old, very fast.

Great looking kid when he was young, though. Coulda been a model.


DAD, I have the greatest respect for all of your posts so far. Not this one though. Did you lose respect for Mr. Rogers? Captain Kangaroo, Lee Marvin, JFK or dozens of other actors and admen??? All were recipients of top file awards for valor. I don't know about Ermey, whether he was awarded any or not. He was popular because so his straight forward, no nonsense demeanor. I for one am happy it paid well.
 
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This old dog won't be far behind. If that was his master the grief will speed things up for a hopeful reunion. All dogs go to heaven. We should be so lucky.

As for the fallen hero, may he rest in peace and thanks for the ultimate sacrifice. If he's lucky that faithful dog will find him.
 
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This old dog won't be far behind. If that was his master the grief will speed things up for a hopeful reunion. All dogs go to heaven. We should be so lucky.

As for the fallen hero, may he rest in peace and thanks for the ultimate sacrifice. If he's lucky that faithful dog will find him.

What a touching picture...
 
Yeah, he was amazing in FMJ. Kubrick really made the right choice. Ermey was Goddamned terrifying in that role. You want verite? Here's your feckin' verite.

Folks really seem to lap it up, it's true. But in a world where DJT can be President, we should be unsurprised when a manufactured persona consisting of bluster, ego, and threats is popular. :)

Ermey was originally brought in as an advisor/coach for the actor who was going to play the DI, but once Kubrick saw him in motion, he realized Ermey himself was a better choice than any actor he could hire.

In the middle of filming, he was "out late" and put his jeep into a ditch and broke all the ribs on his left side. He had his chest taped up, and didn't miss a day on set, although in some scenes you'll notice he never moves his left arm.
 
Ermey was originally brought in as an advisor/coach for the actor who was going to play the DI, but once Kubrick saw him in motion, he realized Ermey himself was a better choice than any actor he could hire.

In the middle of filming, he was "out late" and put his jeep into a ditch and broke all the ribs on his left side. He had his chest taped up, and didn't miss a day on set, although in some scenes you'll notice he never moves his left arm.
Originally, the door gunner in the chopper that was shooting people and yelling "Get some!" was going to be the DI, but they chose Ermey instead. Wise decision....
 
Yeah, he was amazing in FMJ. Kubrick really made the right choice. Ermey was Goddamned terrifying in that role. You want verite? Here's your feckin' verite.

Folks really seem to lap it up, it's true. But in a world where DJT can be President, we should be unsurprised when a manufactured persona consisting of bluster, ego, and threats is popular. :)

Amen.
 
This old dog won't be far behind. If that was his master the grief will speed things up for a hopeful reunion. All dogs go to heaven. We should be so lucky.

As for the fallen hero, may he rest in peace and thanks for the ultimate sacrifice. If he's lucky that faithful dog will find him.

Amen. RIP.
 
African Commonwealth soldier draws a bead on the enemy in the Burmese Jungle in 1944:

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Something tells me this young lad is a Maori, which means he's a New Zealander. The facial features and the mohawk haircut suggest this to me.
 
I took these last March. I had the privilege to chaperone a group of high school kids on their Easter break trip.

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I was fortunate enough to be there in September. It certainly bring home the devastating number lives lost during WW1. I truly think visiting Vimy is a pilgrimage that every Canadian should make.
 
I was fortunate enough to be there in September. It certainly bring home the devastating number lives lost during WW1. I truly think visiting Vimy is a pilgrimage that every Canadian should make.

I completely agree. It was my second time there. The first was when I was in high school, so travelling in Europe with my son and his classmates 30 years later was a real treat.

As odd as it sounds, I love Vimy. It truly is a special place.

We landed in Berlin and departed from Paris. The focus of the tour was "Canada and the World Wars". On the way we visited Ypres, or "Wipers" as my grandfather called it, Nijmegen, Caen, Abbey d'Ardennes, the St. Julien monument, Beaumont Hamel, the cemetaries at Groesbeek and Beny-Sur-Mer and Juno Beach, to name some of the places.

One of the surprises of the tour was Point du Hoc. The devastation that 14" naval guns can wreak on 2 meter thick reinforced concrete is truly impressive, even 70 years later.

The "Brooding Soldier", St. Julien monument

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Abbey d'Ardennes, site of the massacre of 20 soldiers of the North Nova Scotia Highlanders and the Sherbrooke Fusiliers

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Monument at Juno Beach

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Point du Hoc and the result of the love and affection of USS Texas.

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One wonders how training for female Marines differed in the old days. Calling them "Ladies" probably didn't have the same negative connotation.

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"Which one of you friendless, thick ankled, poorly groomed old maids just signed her own death warrant?!"
 
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14 inch shells laid out on the deck of USS New Mexico (BB-40), during replenishment prior to the invasion of Guam, July 1944.
 
At that time my dad, who was a civilian highly-skilled welder, was operating with a team responsible for the repair of those tanks, mostly Canadian as it happened, that could be returned to combat fitness. He was operating a system with the code-name 'starlight', which used an ordinary oxy-acetylene gas-torch set with an additional device. This was a clockwork tape/wire feeder that pushed the material into the flame, where it was atomised and gradually built up the hole left by the passing German shot. The process was improved after the war and used to build up worn-down crankshafts/camshafts/[pistons and so on.

Still in use, I'm told.

tac

That's very interesting. Do you happen to have any photos of the system in your Dad's things?
 
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