• @uberkalden@lemmy.world
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        611 months ago

        So he needs to take the bullet out, inspect and reload? Is there additional risk making an actor do that? Honestly asking

        • @soupspoon@lemmy.world
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          211 months ago

          Not sure how there would be any additional risk as long as the actor keeps their finger off the trigger until they’re ready to shoot

      • @Fawxhox@lemmy.world
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        511 months ago

        Even if he took the bullet out he would have seen it was indeed a blank. He would have had to take the bullet out and hold the barrel up to the light with the chamber open to see a previous bullet was stuck in the barrel.

    • @ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      111 months ago

      Yes. Any layman with 15min of instruction (with THAT firearm, not even another of the same kind, THAT ONE) should be able to unload and show clear, OR they don’t get greenlit to hold a real gun, nonfiring replicas only.

      We’re only giving him a pass because he’s an “actor,” I used to be a pizza driver and showed my boss my carry one night, before I passed it to him I gave him a basic run down on how to make sure it was safe, handed it to him and he reproduced it instantly. You’re telling me, that I can expect a Jordanian man who has never held a gun, who is just an owner-operator of a local pizza spot, to check if the gun is safe, but not Alec Baldwin who was Jack Ryan in The Hunt for Red October (had gun), a cop in The Departed (had gun), 30 Rock (one episode he had gun), was in Miami Blues (with a gun), The Getaway (with a gun), The Juror (had a gun), The Edge (gun), Pixie (guns), and he can’t be bothered to learn how to use them safely? Fuck that.