Keelandson
Porn Star
But in a hydrogen-bomb attack, you could put the top up.From the back, that always looked like a smashed car to me.
I'm all for nudlear wars. I'd die happy.If there was a nudlear war, we would have all died anyway
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But in a hydrogen-bomb attack, you could put the top up.From the back, that always looked like a smashed car to me.
I'm all for nudlear wars. I'd die happy.If there was a nudlear war, we would have all died anyway
We did "duck and cover" drills when I was in Kindergarten.
As if hiding under a desk would protect you from a nuclear blast.
And I remember these tall yellow air raid sirens in every neighborhood.
Here's a great site: http://civildefensemuseum.com/
These were a common sight when I was a kid; there was one in every neighborhood. Once in a while they would do a test of them and they were really loud. They were usually at the top of a yellow pole as tall as a telephone pole. I wonder what happened to all of them.
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I forgot about that. We were in an extreme fringe area of a U.S. TV station, and when the whimsical atmospheric gods were generous I could fiddle with the rabbit ears and get something other than yet another boring hockey game or other dreck on a Saturday night.I also remember they used to test the sirens and even on radio and television there were frequent testings of the Emergency Broadcast System with an annoying tone and test pattern. I don't miss those days.
Huh. I'd completely forgotten about that. I can't even remember the last time I saw/heard that annoying test.I forgot about that. We were in an extreme fringe area of a U.S. TV station, and when the whimsical atmospheric gods were generous I could fiddle with the rabbit ears and get something other than yet another boring hockey game or other dreck on a Saturday night.
Once in a while they'd broadcast that test shriek, then annouce "This was a test of the Emergency Broadcast System," and go on about tuning your radio or switching the channel.
I couldn't decide which was worse, dying in ignorance in a nuclear blast or switching the channel back to the hockey game.
Huh. I'd completely forgotten about that. I can't even remember the last time I saw/heard that annoying test.
These were a common sight when I was a kid; there was one in every neighborhood. Once in a while they would do a test of them and they were really loud. They were usually at the top of a yellow pole as tall as a telephone pole. I wonder what happened to all of them.
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It's because they changed it. It's called now EAS emergency alert system. It's doesn't play as a stand alone spot anymore. It's that crawl you'll see once a week over the programming. Starts with 3 short tones, announcer says: "this is a test of the emergency alert system...." then ends with same 3 tones.
Depending on the station it can be more annoying the old system, because it mutes the audio of the programming under it. We always tried to run it during openings and credits where it would be the least annoying. Lots of stations are bury it in their late night programming.
