This Is What I Think.
Saturday, October 31, 2015
Can't Make Up This Stuff, Part 2
http://my.excite.com/tv/prog.jsp?id=EP000186930149&sid=82571&sn=FXXPHD&st=201510311400&cn=618
tv.com
The Simpsons (Repeat)
618 FXXPHD: Saturday, October 31 2:00 PM [ 2:00 PM Saturday 31 October 2015 Pacific Time USA ]
Sitcom, Animated Halloween
Treehouse of Horror VI
Advertising statues attack Springfield; the school janitor terrorizes children in their sleep; Homer creates a black hole.
Cast: Dan Castellaneta, Julie Kavner, Nancy Cartwright, Yeardley Smith, Harry Shearer, Hank Azaria Executive Producer(s): James L. Brooks, Matt Groening, David Mirkin
Original Air Date: Oct 29, 1995
http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/treehouse-of-horror-vi-1419/
tv.com
The Simpsons Season 7 Episode 6
Treehouse of Horror VI
Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Oct 29, 1995 on FOX
AIRED: 10/29/95
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1712564/releaseinfo
IMDb
Rendezvous in Space (1964)
Release Info
USA 10 September 1964
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1712564/plotsummary
IMDb
Rendezvous in Space (1964)
Plot Summary
A futuristic documentary for Martin Marietta Corporation, about America's plans for a space station and space shuttles.
http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=raiders-of-the-lost-ark
Springfield! Springfield!
Raiders Of The Lost Ark (1981)
Get the Ark away from
this place immediately.
Have it put on the truck.
We'll fly it out of Cairo.
And Gobler, I want
plenty of protection.
Jones.
Holy smoke, my friends,
I... I'm so pleased
you're not dead!
Indy, Indy, we have no time.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082971/quotes
IMDb
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Quotes
Sallah: Indy, you have no time. If you still want the ark, it is being loaded onto a truck for Cairo.
Indiana: Truck? What truck?
DSC06544.JPG
DSC06545.JPG
From 11/28/1954 ( Enrico Fermi deceased ) To 11/19/2014 is 21906 days
21906 = 10953 + 10953
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 10/29/1995 ( premiere US TV series episode "The Simpsons"::"Treehouse of Horror VI" ) is 10953 days
From 6/12/1981 ( premiere US film "Raiders of the Lost Ark" ) To 11/19/2014 is 12213 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 4/11/1999 ( premiere US TV series episode "The Simpsons"::"Mom and Pop Art" ) is 12213 days
From 3/16/1991 ( my first successful major test of my ultraspace matter transportation device as Kerry Wayne Burgess the successful Ph.D. graduate Columbia South Carolina ) To 11/19/2014 is 8649 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 7/8/1989 ( premiere US film "Knight & Daye" ) is 8649 days
From 11/29/1956 ( premiere US film "The Teahouse of the August Moon" ) To 11/19/2014 is 21174 days
21174 = 10587 + 10587
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 10/28/1994 ( premiere US film "Stargate" ) is 10587 days
From 7/16/2004 ( premiere US TV series "Stargate: Atlantis" ) To 11/19/2014 is 3778 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 3/7/1976 ( premiere US TV series episode "Nova"::"The Race for the Double Helix" ) is 3778 days
From 9/10/1964 ( premiere US film "Rendezvous in Space" ) To 9/27/2013 is 17914 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 11/19/2014 is 17914 days
http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/treehouse-of-horror-vi-1419/trivia/
tv.com
The Simpsons Season 7 Episode 6
Treehouse of Horror VI
Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Oct 29, 1995 on FOX
Quotes
Kent Brockman: Good morning, everybody. Panic is gripping Springfield as giant advertising mascots rampage through the city. Perhaps it's part of some daring new ad campaign, but what new product could justify such carnage?
http://www.britannica.com/biography/Enrico-Fermi
Encyclopædia Britannica
Enrico Fermi
Italian-American physicist
Enrico Fermi, (born Sept. 29, 1901, Rome, Italy—died Nov. 28, 1954, Chicago, Ill., U.S.), Italian-born American scientist who was one of the chief architects of the nuclear age. He developed the mathematical statistics required to clarify a large class of subatomic phenomena, explored nuclear transformations caused by neutrons, and directed the first controlled chain reaction involving nuclear fission. He was awarded the 1938 Nobel Prize for Physics, and the Enrico Fermi Award of the U.S. Department of Energy is given in his honour. Fermilab, the National Accelerator Laboratory, in Illinois, is named for him, as is fermium, element number 100.
Early life and education
Fermi’s father, Alberto Fermi, was a chief inspector of the government railways; his mother was Ida de Gattis, a schoolteacher. In 1918 Enrico Fermi won a scholarship to the University of Pisa’s distinguished Scuola Normale Superiore, where his knowledge of recent physics benefited even the professors. After receiving a doctorate in 1922, Fermi used fellowships from the Italian Ministry of Public Instruction and the Rockefeller Foundation to study in Germany under Max Born, at the University of Göttingen, and in the Netherlands under Paul Ehrenfest, at the State University of Leiden.
European career
Fermi returned home to Italy in 1924 to a position as a lecturer in mathematical physics at the University of Florence. His early research was in general relativity, statistical mechanics, and quantum mechanics. Examples of gas degeneracy (appearance of unexpected phenomena) had been known, and some cases were explained by Bose-Einstein statistics, which describes the behaviour of subatomic particles known as bosons. Between 1926 and 1927, Fermi and the English physicist P.A.M. Dirac independently developed new statistics, now known as Fermi-Dirac statistics, to handle the subatomic particles that obey the Pauli exclusion principle; these particles, which include electrons, protons, neutrons (not yet discovered), and other particles with half-integer spin, are now known as fermions. This was a contribution of exceptional importance to atomic and nuclear physics, particularly in this period when quantum mechanics was first being applied.
This seminal work brought Fermi an invitation in 1926 to become a full professor at the University of Rome. Shortly after Fermi took up his new position in 1927, Franco Rasetti, a friend from Pisa and another superb experimentalist, joined Fermi in Rome, and they began to gather a group of talented students about them. These included Emilio Segrè, Ettore Majorana, Edoardo Amaldi, and Bruno Pontecorvo, all of whom had distinguished careers. Fermi, a charismatic, energetic, and seemingly infallible figure, clearly was the leader—so much so that his colleagues called him “the Pope.”
In 1929 Fermi, as Italy’s first professor of theoretical physics and a rising star in European science, was named by Italian Prime Minister Benito Mussolini to his new Accademia d’Italia, a position that included a substantial salary (much larger than that for any ordinary university position), a uniform, and a title (“Excellency”).
During the late 1920s, quantum mechanics solved problem after problem in atomic physics. Fermi, earlier than most others, recognized that the field was becoming exhausted, however, and he deliberately changed his focus to the more primitively developed field of nuclear physics. Radioactivity had been recognized as a nuclear phenomenon for almost two decades by this time, but puzzles still abounded. In beta decay, or the expulsion of a negative electron from the nucleus, energy and momentum seemed not to be conserved. Fermi made use of the neutrino, an almost undetectable particle that had been postulated a few years earlier by the Austrian-born physicist Wolfgang Pauli, to fashion a theory of beta decay in which balance was restored. This led to recognition that beta decay was a manifestation of the weak force, one of the four known universal forces (the others being gravitation, electromagnetism, and the strong force).
In 1933 the French husband-and-wife team of Frédéric and Irène Joliot-Curie discovered artificial radioactivity caused by alpha particles (helium nuclei). Fermi quickly reasoned that the neutral neutron, found a year earlier by the English physicist James Chadwick, would be an even better projectile with which to bombard charged nuclei in order to initiate such reactions. With his colleagues, Fermi subjected more than 60 elements to neutron bombardment, using a Geiger-Müller counter to detect emissions and conducting chemical analyses to determine the new radioactive isotopes produced. Along the way, they found by chance that neutrons that had been slowed in their velocity often were more effective. When testing uranium they observed several activities, but they could not interpret what occurred. Some scientists thought that they had produced transuranium elements, namely elements higher than uranium at atomic number 92. The issue was not resolved until 1938, when the German chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann experimentally, and the Austrian physicists Lise Meitner and Otto Frisch theoretically, cleared the confusion by revealing that the uranium had split and the several radioactivities detected were from fission fragments.
Fermi was little interested in politics, yet he grew increasingly uncomfortable with the fascist politics of his homeland. When Italy adopted the anti-Semitic policies of its ally, Nazi Germany, a crisis occurred, for Fermi’s wife, Laura, was Jewish. The award of the 1938 Nobel Prize for Physics serendipitously provided the excuse for the family to travel abroad, and the prize money helped to establish them in the United States.
American career
Settling first in New York City and then in Leonia, N.J., Fermi began his new life at Columbia University, in New York City. Within weeks of his arrival, news that uranium could fission astounded the physics community. Scientists had known for many years that nuclei could disgorge small chunks, such as alpha particles, beta particles, protons, and neutrons, either in natural radioactivity or upon bombardment by a projectile. However, they had never seen a nucleus split almost in two. The implications were both exciting and ominous, and they were recognized widely. When uranium fissioned, some mass was converted to energy, according to Albert Einstein’s famous formula E = mc2. Uranium also emitted a few neutrons in addition to the larger fragments. If these neutrons could be slowed to maximize their efficiency, they could participate in a controlled chain reaction to produce energy; that is, a nuclear reactor could be built. The same neutrons traveling at their initial high speed could also participate in an uncontrolled chain reaction, liberating an enormous amount of energy through many generations of fission events, all within a fraction of a second; that is, an atomic bomb could be built.
Working primarily with the Hungarian-born physicist Leo Szilard, Fermi constructed experimental arrangements of neutron sources and pieces of uranium. They sought to determine the necessary size of a structure, the best material to use as a moderator to slow neutrons, the necessary purity of all components (so neutrons would not be lost), and the best substance for forming control rods that could absorb neutrons to slow or stop the reaction. Fermi visited Washington, D.C., to alert the U.S. Navy about their research, but his guarded enthusiasm led only to a tiny grant. It was left to Einstein’s letter to U.S. Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt about the potential of an atomic bomb, in the summer of 1939, to initiate continuing government interest, and even that grew slowly.
When the United States entered World War II in December 1941, nuclear research was consolidated to some degree. Fermi had built a series of “piles,” as he called them, at Columbia. Now he moved to the University of Chicago, where he continued to construct piles in a space under the stands of the football field. The final structure, a flattened sphere about 7.5 metres (25 feet) in diameter, contained 380 tons of graphite blocks as the moderator and 6 tons of uranium metal and 40 tons of uranium oxide as the fuel, distributed in a careful pattern. The pile went “critical” on Dec. 2, 1942, proving that a nuclear reaction could be initiated, controlled, and stopped. Chicago Pile-1, as it was called, was the first prototype for several large nuclear reactors constructed at Hanford, Wash., where plutonium, a man-made element heavier than uranium, was produced. Plutonium also could fission and thus was another route to the atomic bomb.
In 1944 Fermi became an American citizen and moved to Los Alamos, N.M., where physicist J. Robert Oppenheimerled the Manhattan Project’s laboratory, whose mission was to fashion weapons out of the rare uranium-235 isotope and plutonium. Fermi was an associate director of the lab and headed one of its divisions. When the first plutonium bomb was tested on July 16, 1945, near Alamogordo, N.M., Fermi ingeniously made a rough calculation of its explosive energy by noting how far slips of paper were blown from the vertical.
After the war ended, Fermi accepted a permanent position at the University of Chicago, where he influenced another distinguished group of physicists, including Harold Agnew, Owen Chamberlin, Geoffrey Chew, James Cronin, Jerome Friedman, Richard Garwin, Murray Gell-Mann, Marvin Goldberger, Tsung-Dao Lee, Jack Steinberger, and Chen Ning Yang. As in Rome, Fermi recognized that his current pursuits, now in nuclear physics, were approaching a condition of maturity. He thus redirected his sights on reactions at higher energies, a field called elementary particle physics, or high-energy physics.
Since the war, science had been recognized in the United States as highly important to national security. Fermi largely avoided politics, but he did agree to serve on the General Advisory Committee (GAC), which counseled the five commissioners of the Atomic Energy Commission. In response to the revelation in September 1949 that the Soviet Union had detonated an atomic bomb, many Americans urged the government to try to construct a thermonuclear bomb, which can be orders of magnitude more powerful. GAC was publicly unanimous in opposing this step, mostly on technical grounds, with Fermi and Isidor Rabi going further by introducing an ethical question into so-called “objective” advice. Such a bomb, they wrote, “becomes a weapon which in practical effect is almost one of genocide…. It is necessarily an evil thing considered in any light.” U.S. Pres. Harry S. Truman decided otherwise, and a loyal Fermi went for a time back to Los Alamos to assist in the development of fusion weapons, however with the hope that they might prove impossible to construct.
Fermi primarily investigated subatomic particles, particularly pi mesons and muons, after returning to Chicago. He was also known as a superb teacher, and many of his lectures are still in print. During his later years he raised a question now known as the Fermi paradox: “Where is everybody?” He was asking why no extraterrestrial civilizations seemed to be around to be detected, despite the great size and age of the universe. He pessimistically thought that the answer might involve nuclear annihilation.
http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/treehouse-of-horror-vi-1419/trivia/
tv.com
The Simpsons Season 7 Episode 6
Treehouse of Horror VI
Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Oct 29, 1995 on FOX
Quotes
Reverend Lovejoy: Do you see a light, Homer?
Homer: (offscreen) Yes...
Reverend Lovejoy: Move into the light, my son.
(A buzzing sound is heard.)
Homer: (offscreen) OOOWWWW!!!
http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/view_episode_scripts.php?tv-show=the-simpsons&episode=s07e06
Springfield! Springfield!
The Simpsons
Treehouse of Horror VI
That does it! I'm going in!
Bart, no!
Cool, man!
I'm gonna be sucked into a black hole! I'm gonna be sucked into oblivion! And what's gonna become of me on the other side? I don't know!
I'll save you, Dad. I can't get any closer. You'll have to jump!
http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/treehouse-of-horror-vi-1419/trivia/
tv.com
The Simpsons Season 7 Episode 6
Treehouse of Horror VI
Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Oct 29, 1995 on FOX
Quotes
Homer: Oh, there's so much I don't know about astrophysics.
http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/treehouse-of-horror-vi-1419/trivia/
tv.com
The Simpsons Season 7 Episode 6
Treehouse of Horror VI
Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Oct 29, 1995 on FOX
Quotes
Paul Anka: (singing) To stop these monsters 1-2-3/ Here's a fresh new way that's trouble free/ It's got Paul Anka's guarantee...
Lisa: (talking) Guarantee void in Tennesee.
Paul Anka / Lisa: (singing) Just don't look! Just don't look! Just don't look! Just don't look!
JOURNAL ARCHIVE: - posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 1:00 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Saturday 19 September 2015 - http://hvom.blogspot.com/2015/09/ask-him-where-it-did-come-from-jim.html
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0945513/releaseinfo
IMDb
Source Code (2011)
Release Info
USA 11 March 2011 (South by Southwest Film Festival)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0945513/fullcredits
IMDb
Source Code (2011)
Full Cast & Crew
Jake Gyllenhaal ... Colter Stevens
Michelle Monaghan ... Christina Warren
[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 19 September 2015 excerpt ends]
JOURNAL ARCHIVE: - posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 1:00 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Saturday 19 September 2015 - http://hvom.blogspot.com/2015/09/ask-him-where-it-did-come-from-jim.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_Airborne_Multi-Purpose_System
Light Airborne Multi-Purpose System
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Light Airborne Multi-Purpose System (LAMPS) is the United States Navy's program that developed manned helicopters that assist the surface fleet in anti-submarine warfare.
The purpose of LAMPS was to scout outside the limits of a fleet's radar and sonar range to detect and track enemy submarines or missile-equipped escort ships and feed the real-time data back to their LAMPS mothership. They also have the capability to directly engage enemy targets with depth charges or torpedoes or indirectly engage the enemy by coordinating fleet assets on site.
SH-2 Seasprite (LAMPS Mk I, retired)
SH-60 Seahawk (LAMPS Mk III)
[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 19 September 2015 excerpt ends]
http://www.tv.com/shows/the-awful-truth/episode-1-237913/
tv.com
The Awful Truth Season 1 Episode 1
Episode 1
Aired Unknown Apr 11, 1999 on Bravo
AIRED: 4/11/99
http://www.tv.com/shows/the-xfiles/trevor-624/
tv.com
The X-Files Season 6 Episode 17
Trevor
Aired Sunday 9:00 PM Apr 11, 1999 on FOX
After a tornado rips through a prison camp, one of the inmates disappears from solitary confinement and the prison warden is killed. As Mulder and Scully track him, he appears to have the power to pass through solid matter while changing its composition.
AIRED: 4/11/99
http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/mom-and-pop-art-1507/
tv.com
The Simpsons Season 10 Episode 19
Mom and Pop Art
Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Apr 11, 1999 on FOX
AIRED: 4/11/99
http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/mom-and-pop-art-1507/trivia/
tv.com
The Simpsons Season 10 Episode 19
Mom and Pop Art
Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Apr 11, 1999 on FOX
Quotes
Marge: I just can't believe people are paying millions of dollars for something some hillbilly dug out of the trash.
Cletus: Hey, I done studied for years in getting over that junkyard fence! Then I learnt the gate was open.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0701180/quotes
IMDb
The Simpsons (TV Series)
Mom and Pop Art (1999)
Quotes
Bart Simpson: Are you sure this is art, not vandalism?
Homer: That's for the courts to decide, son.
http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/coldplay/talk.html
AZ
COLDPLAY
"Talk"
You can take a picture of something you see
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082971/releaseinfo
IMDb
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Release Info
USA 12 June 1981
http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/Stargate:_The_Movie_Transcript
STARGATE WIKI
Stargate: The Movie (1994)
KAWALSKI
What's he talking about?
O'NEIL
My orders were simple. Track down signs of any possible danger. If I found any, blow up the Stargate. Well, I found some.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0049830/releaseinfo
IMDb
The Teahouse of the August Moon (1956)
Release Info
USA 29 November 1956 (New York City, New York)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0049830/quotes
IMDb
The Teahouse of the August Moon (1956)
Quotes
Col. Wainwright Purdy III: You'll need an interpreter...
Captain Fisby: I can study the language.
Col. Wainwright Purdy III: No need. We won the war.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0111282/releaseinfo
IMDb
Stargate (1994)
Release Info
USA 28 October 1994
http://www.tv.com/shows/stargate-atlantis/rising-1-281227/
tv.com
Stargate Atlantis Season 1 Episode 1
Rising (1)
AIRED: 7/16/04
http://www.gateworld.net/atlantis/s1/transcripts/101.shtml
GateWorld
STARGATE ATLANTIS
RISING, PART 1
EPISODE NUMBER - 101
DVD DISC - Season 1, Disc 1
ORIGINAL U.S. AIR DATE - 07.16.04
LATER. O'Neill is walking through the outpost with Weir.
WEIR: We could be on our way to discovering an entirely new Ancient civilisation. At the best case scenario, we meet actual Ancients who are willing to help us, but if we don't ... (She trails off as she realises that O'Neill isn't paying attention to her.) General, we need him.
O'NEILL: Sorry, Doc. I need Daniel here.
WEIR: I'm talking about Major Sheppard.
O'NEILL: Oh. Don't you have a dozen or so people already who can use the Ancient technology?
WEIR: Yeah, with concentration and training they can make it work, but John Sheppard, he does it naturally.
http://www.tv.com/shows/nova/race-for-the-double-helix-the-464759/
tv.com
NOVA Season 3 Episode 8
Race for the Double Helix (The)
Aired Wednesday 9:00 PM Mar 07, 1976 on PBS
Author Isaac Asimov joins NOVA in the retelling of the remarkable story of the discovery of the structure of DNA. James Watson and his ex-colleague Francis Crick exchange memories of the events which led to their winning the race for the structure of the gene.
AIRED: 3/7/76
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082971/quotes
IMDb
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Quotes
Major Eaton: What exactly is a headpiece to the Staff of Ra?
Indiana: Well, the staff is just a stick. I don't know, about this big. Nobody really knows for sure how high. And it's...
[turns blackboard to blank side]
Indiana: it's, uh... it's capped with an elaborate headpiece in the shape of the sun with a crystal in the center. And what you did was, you take the staff to a special room in Tanis, a map room with a miniature of the city all laid out on the floor. And if you put the staff in a certain place at a certain time of day, the sun shone through here and made beam that came down on the floor here... and gave you the exact location of the Well of the Souls.
Colonel Musgrove: Where the Ark of the Covenant was kept, right?.
http://www.tv.com/shows/knight-and-daye/knight-and-daye-112175/
tv.com
Knight & Daye Season 1 Episode 1
Knight & Daye
Aired Monday 8:00 PM Jul 08, 1989 on NBC
AIRED: 7/8/89
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082971/quotes
IMDb
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Quotes
Belloq: It's a transmitter, a radio for speaking to God.
- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 4:41 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Saturday 31 October 2015