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Cake day: July 1st, 2023

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  • Moohamin12@lemm.eetoLinus Tech Tips@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    11 months ago

    Well at this point, it doesn’t really matter what the sub thinks.

    Whatever needs to happen will happen from the investigation.

    Lots of people are just using the time now to do lots of mud slinging and posting 100 times, I am out of the loop please explain and hoping to feed trolls and karma farmers.

    It’s the way of reddit.




  • The comments and votes here baffle me.

    One step. That’s it.

    One step by actors being paid presumably millions. That’s all they need to do. All the steps you mentioned above can and should stay. But an actor can’t take 5 mins out of their oh so busy lives to learn to check clear a weapon? How is more safety a problem? What is wrong with people who disagree on that?

    Industry standards change throughout. Just because something worked before doesn’t mean it always will. Exhibit A is the man who died. Or is his life a statistical anamoly and within acceptable error? Do we wait for more people to die then?

    Does an actor blindly get behind a car and drive not caring if he runs anyone over because it’s the set director’s job to clear the path? Is he absolve of all blame here?




  • Agreed. I am all for accountability of the assigned individual but you hold an item that can literally hurt or kill someone you treat it with respect.

    Check clearing a weapon should be taught to everyone. The man can be an instructor but his word isn’t law. Every instructor knows the moment you hold a weapon you observe decorum that you treatg it as loaded.

    Now is Alec Baldwin innocent, maybe. But we have to use this experience to learn and change things in the industry aka, have actors who are handing weapons learn to check clear them.