CarlosTheDJ
Antediluvian
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2007
- Messages
- 7,001
- Location
- Pebble Mill
Ok lemme catch up here. So there's six of them? In the Jackson five ?
Ah how I've missed this place.
They were called "The Jacksons" for a while.
Ok lemme catch up here. So there's six of them? In the Jackson five ?
Ah how I've missed this place.
They were called "The Jacksons" for a while.
Fixed that for you.After Michael Jackson wentsoloinsane.
There was another character (the bully) who had a red headband, I seem to recall with my sieve-like memory.I also seem to remember The Karate Kid having a red sun headband but apparently he didn't ..
I don't remember him (the bully) having a red headband .. perhaps there's a red one worn by someone in one of the sequels ?There was another character (the bully) who had a red headband, I seem to recall with my sieve-like memory.
Fixed that for you.
some good real-life examples of Mandela Effect for those who don't believe it...
1. Dolly in the James Bond Moonraker had races, but now if you look at that clip again, her braces are gone.
2. Was there 4 or 6 seats in JFK's car when he was assassinated? There are very old photos and footages showing its 4 seats but there are also other high pixel photos showing its 6 seats.
3. Publishers clearing house says on its website that they never hired Ed Mcmahon, the guy that everyone remembers giving out publishers clearing house checks on TV!
(3:52) is the Ed mcmahon part
You guys must have more, welcome to add to the list.
From my childhood days, fondly remembered as Robbie the Robot.
Seems he never had a name at all.
Robbie the Robot was the robot from the 1950s movie Forbidden Planet.
I thought I had seen somewhere that the turned up wing tips allowed for greater lift with a smaller wingspan. I think it was a "How do they do it?" type program which said that spaces at the terminal concourse are the same size as they have always been yet planes are getting bigger and wider. So they found a way of maintaining wingspan but allowing for greater lifting capacity.This?
The use of vertical / angled wingtip devices to control vortices and / or promote better lift actually dates back over a century.
I first saw them on exotic and experimental aircraft sometime in the 1970's.
I first saw them on commercial airliners in the mid- to late-1980's. It took years for them to become ubiquitous.
If you're talking about the ones with a curved (as opposed to angular) profile from the front / rear, I first encountered those variants starting in the very late 1990's or the 2000 / 2001 timeframe.
The British scientist Matthew Piers Watt Boulton, apparently.We watched a programme about early flight and learned that many fatalities occurred before ailerons were developed. What genius came up with those!
...the turned up wing tips allowed for greater lift with a smaller wingspan.
This?
See, apropos nothing I was looking up Linda Hamilton and was utterly sure she'd died some years ago, but apparently not...weird.
So I gather, which seems like a good thing to me.She did have some serious health problems, but recovered and she'll be in the new Terminator movie (yes, another one).
You have got to be kidding! Amazing!Robbie the Robot was the robot from the 1950s movie Forbidden Planet. The robot from Lost in Space (pictured) didn't have a name, they just called him Robot. To confuse matters, Robbie showed up as a baddie in Lost in Space, in scenes with the other, non-Robbie robot.