Started By
Message

re: Guns on movie sets: “Unreasonable and unrealistic” to expect actor to check load

Posted on 10/26/21 at 12:22 pm to
Posted by td01241
Savannah
Member since Nov 2012
22943 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 12:22 pm to
Your rambling is inconsequential. It is incumbent upon anyone holding a firearm to ensure its status for themselves. It’s not only the first rule in gun safety is basic common sense.
This post was edited on 10/26/21 at 12:22 pm
Posted by troyt37
Member since Mar 2008
13355 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 12:23 pm to
quote:

Baldwin, the actor, is not at fault here. The armorer and the AD are supposed to be the two sets of eyes.


In what scenario is an actor pointing a gun at people who are not actors, and pulling the trigger? Baldwin, the actor, knows full well that there are safeguards in place against this very thing, which places production people out of danger.
Posted by Mid Iowa Tiger
Undisclosed Secure Location
Member since Feb 2008
18776 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 12:32 pm to
You are trying to excuse something for some unknown reason that should not be excused. It is called personal responsibility.

If you are handed a pill from someone you barely know, and you don't have any idea what that pill is but the person you barely know says it is an aspirin are you going to give that pill to your child without checking it out?

Be honest.

Posted by troyt37
Member since Mar 2008
13355 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 12:35 pm to
quote:

How is a actor with no prior knowledge or experience with firearms that was hired to play a cowboy supposed to know this. Everyone is not from the South and received a .22 rifle for their 6th birthday.


Baldwin has 145 acting credits on imdb, dating back to 1982. I'm not going to do the research, but you and I both know that he probably handles a gun in at least half of those appearances. That's nearly 4 decades of experience with guns, and the correct procedures for handling them on set. Find another excuse.
Posted by Rocky4LSU
Covington
Member since Dec 2007
492 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 2:01 pm to
The last guy to handle the pistol during the break for lunch" target practice", left a bullet or bullets in the weapon. Also negligent.
This post was edited on 10/26/21 at 2:02 pm
Posted by Diamondawg
Mississippi
Member since Oct 2006
32421 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 2:05 pm to
quote:

introduce a requirement that the actor check the magazine (or cylinder)
They would shoot themselves not knowing which end is the lethal end.
Posted by Dawgfanman
Member since Jun 2015
22670 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 2:16 pm to
quote:

He was handed a weapon that according to several accounts was told was “Cold”/ safe, why at that point would he think it was dangerous if he was not a gun owner, had never been instructed in gun safety?


Why is anyone not familiar with gun safety handling firearms?

quote:

I know it is hard for some to believe, but there are millions of people walking around that have never touched or fired a gun, didn’t grow up in a household with guns, and have zero knowledge of firearm safety, and some of them end up being actors in westerns


Then they should be trained, they should take it upon themselves to take training. He pointed a gun at someone and shot them. That’s his fault, period.

quote:

This is why they have armorers on the set. If you were cast in a war movie and given a hand grenade would you show up on set knowing how to distinguish a dummy grenade from one that had a pyrotechnic charge and could actually explode.? To most actors on a movie set a firearm is treated the same as the grenade, it is assumed the professional in charge of it has given them something safe to handle.


This assumption is why someone is dead. Just because Hollywood and actors have been endearing people with their unsafe practices for decades doesn’t make Baldwin any less responsible.
Posted by 1BIGTigerFan
100,000 posts
Member since Jan 2007
49373 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 2:21 pm to
quote:

They would just act like they are checking it.

Well, they are actors.
Posted by SouthEndzoneTiger
Louisiana
Member since Mar 2008
10616 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 2:28 pm to
quote:

In what scenario is an actor pointing a gun at people who are not actors, and pulling the trigger? Baldwin, the actor, knows full well that there are safeguards in place against this very thing, which places production people out of danger.


Look, I think AB is in the wrong. He should have checked the gun. But he isn't wrong for pointing the gun where he did. The scene called for it, for him to point the gun at the camera for cinematic effect. The 2 people shot were standing behind the camera.
Posted by imjustafatkid
Alabama
Member since Dec 2011
50984 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 2:31 pm to
quote:

They say things like they are not trained


Then they are unqualified for the job they've taken and shouldn't be handling guns.

quote:

the additional handling creates an opportunity for loss of control


The people who say this should never talk about guns or gun safety.
Posted by EA6B
TX
Member since Dec 2012
14754 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 4:30 pm to
quote:

Your rambling is inconsequential. It is incumbent upon anyone holding a firearm to ensure its status for themselves. It’s not only the first rule in gun safety is basic common sense.



Once again, how is the actor off the street that never touched a gun supposed to know the first rule of gun safety? Common sense says if I am hired to do a job that involves hazardous equipment that I know nothing about I trust the trained professional that tells me it is safe to use.
Posted by EA6B
TX
Member since Dec 2012
14754 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 4:43 pm to
quote:

This assumption is why someone is dead. Just because Hollywood and actors have been endearing people with their unsafe practices for decades doesn’t make Baldwin any less responsible.


Far more people have been killed or injured on movie sets doing scenes with cars, motorcycles, pyrotechnics, explosives, trains, helicopters, fall arrest rigging, animals. than guns. As far as I can find it stands at two deaths in the last 40 years. In all tother instances involving potentially hazardous situations it was the responsibility of trained professionals to assure everyone was safe, not the actor, why would a gun on a set be any different.
Posted by Dawgfanman
Member since Jun 2015
22670 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 4:49 pm to
quote:

Far more people have been killed or injured on movie sets doing scenes with cars, motorcycles, pyrotechnics, explosives, trains, helicopters, fall arrest rigging, animals. than guns. As far as I can find it stands at two deaths in the last 40 years. In all tother instances involving potentially hazardous situations it was the responsibility of trained professionals to assure everyone was safe, not the actor, why would a gun on a set be any different


So you outline how similar practices with other potential hazards have led to a multitude of deaths, and offer that as a defense of a clearly flawed method of dealing with gun safety? Anyone handling firearms should be trained in gun safety. Luck isn’t proof that you had a good plan, especially in the face of evidence that “how they always done it” didn’t work.

Baldwin doesnt know shite about guns, that’s why he shouldn’t be handling them and why he shouldn’t be running his mouth about laws regarding them.
Posted by EA6B
TX
Member since Dec 2012
14754 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 4:53 pm to
quote:

If you are handed a pill from someone you barely know, and you don't have any idea what that pill is but the person you barely know says it is an aspirin are you going to give that pill to your child without checking it out?


That would be quite different than a professional armorer trained to assure firearms used on a movie set handing me a firearm and saying it is safe.
Posted by Rocky4LSU
Covington
Member since Dec 2007
492 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 5:05 pm to
If one is handed a fake wooden sword and told to begin making sweeping arcs in a crowded area for a scene, would he not check to see where people were before beginning? Why? Easy. Common sense.

Also, name a DUI caused death(to another)that went without charges to the driver.
This post was edited on 10/26/21 at 5:08 pm
Posted by troyt37
Member since Mar 2008
13355 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 5:21 pm to
quote:

Look, I think AB is in the wrong. He should have checked the gun. But he isn't wrong for pointing the gun where he did. The scene called for it, for him to point the gun at the camera for cinematic effect. The 2 people shot were standing behind the camera.


But that isn’t how it works. How it normally works is the people who would normally be behind the camera are in another place entirely, watching monitors when a firearm is involved in the scene. Baldwin, having 40 years of experience would know this, both as an actor and a producer. Now what?
Posted by Trumansfangs
Town & Country
Member since Sep 2018
6903 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 5:34 pm to
quote:

They would just act like they are checking it.


Posted by Mid Iowa Tiger
Undisclosed Secure Location
Member since Feb 2008
18776 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 5:39 pm to
I believe you are putting way more faith in an underpaid, low budget, overworked "armorer" than you should.

Even in my military days at the range when a Red Hat handed me a weapon my responsibility was to check for myself what the status of the weapon was, not take his word for it.
Posted by Indefatigable
Member since Jan 2019
26824 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 5:41 pm to
quote:

how is the actor off the street that never touched a gun supposed to know the first rule of gun safety


When are you going to stop pretending that Baldwin has never touched a gun?
Posted by AndyCBR
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Nov 2012
7567 posts
Posted on 10/26/21 at 8:07 pm to
quote:


This was a negligent discharge and not an accidental discharge.


Eh, this is semantics and in the gun biz it's all an AD (accidental discharge). Save that shite for the lawyers.

If an armorer/gun wrangler gives an actor a gun and says it's cold then that's it. Now, if the AD did that without the armorer making that determination, it's a frick up.

That's the whole purpose of an armorer.

This was a huge frick up and again I think Alec Baldwin is a prick. But if the armorer says it's cold, it's done. You don't want people who don't even know how to handle guns manipulating them and fricking with them trying to verify whether they are clear or not., they don;t have the expertise in the first place. On the set, it's not their job.

If the expert hired by the production, with AB's oversight, is proven to be incompetent, and there was evidence of that prior to this incident, then that is a whole separate set of negligent acts by the production staff. Based on some of the reporting of several people on the set prior to this incident it appears there was definitely a problem with armorer's and procedures.

This post was edited on 10/26/21 at 8:08 pm
first pageprev pagePage 4 of 5Next pagelast page

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram