No we were in a group and some smart aleck (not in our group we were USAF cadets after all and being proper) asked if he believed in aliens. Looked at the guy smiled but never said anything.
When I resided in the US I was officially called an alien. You are welcome to believe in me if you want to. I have since left, though.
S
Seriously best not to idealize anyone.
Days are still good![]()
It's hard to express the admiration I hold for Mr B without running out of superlatives.
Oh I completely disagree. Heroes inspire us. It's sad that few can live up to it. But that's not the point. I have my heroes, fictional and real. And although some have let me down, some haven't and won't (will you Drew?). And a large part of the person I am (especially the good parts) are down to trying to emulate my heroes. Whether it's Sam Beckett putting right what once went wrong or my Dad who despite a hard life at times is the role model of a father and if I manage to emulate him even half as well, my boy should turn out all right.
I see your point, but I respectfully disagree.
There is a difference between being inspired by others and taking advice to idealizing others. Perhaps the difference is just scale, but it is an important difference.
perhaps its not a healthy thing to blindly idolize anyone at a grown up age, but boy am i glad that i had my childhood heroes.
Did you like Captain Pugwash too
Drew how do i get access to your book, i was a backer on KS...?
And although some have let me down, some haven't and won't (will you Drew?).
Bah same old rhetoric as the answer you gave me a year ago!I strongly suggest that Frontier pull their finger out and give these talented authors the goahead to write sequels! What possible reason could there be to not allow them?
Can people please name-drop some more, it makes riveting reading
I met a station wall in a Viper and became rather intimate with it. A very hard character; the relationship was very short lived.I met Braben in a Python in the early hours of play this morning.