Comments
McKFC OP t1_j78jsks wrote
Per the 1949 report, "once the firing started, imagination created all kinds of targets in the sky and everyone joined in"
The event was the inspiration for Spielberg's third big film, 1941, an uneven but unjustly maligned war satire written by a pre-Back to the Future Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis.
Edit: the scene in question
darga89 t1_j79fl5i wrote
Only took a single F-22 this time
Alexlam24 t1_j7bnak9 wrote
Now that's what I call progress
WlmWilberforce t1_j78zn3u wrote
We don't know the RBE of the bloon.
RoebuckThirtyFour t1_j7b1ocq wrote
In the late 90s two canadian f18s put 1000+ rounds of 20mm into a weather balloon and it continued to drift
[deleted] t1_j78jt2b wrote
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TooMuchPretzels t1_j78kkr5 wrote
Spielbergs documentary about this, β1941,β is pretty informative if you want to learn more.
MagicMushroomFungi t1_j78q82y wrote
America's first known use of a Ferris Wheel in wartime.
All those years of secretly developing and testing Ferris Wheels in the Nevada dessert paid off.
willie_caine t1_j792i3r wrote
Shh! You're not supposed to mention the igbay eelwhay!
IBeTrippin t1_j7a7ow6 wrote
HOWRRYWOOD!!!
beachedwhale1945 t1_j79qtih wrote
An important element behind the Battle of Los Angeles was the submarine I-17. The night before the Battle this Japanese submarine shelled an oil refinery just up the coast, causing little damage but stirring invasion fears. It is critical background for why some anti-aircraft gunners were unusually jumpy the next night.
I-17 had previously been part of an armada of Japanese submarines stationed around Pearl Harbor and then ordered to the West Coast, where she sank the tanker Emidio, the first ship sunk in that operation. She later served on several cargo runs to Guadalcanal, using her pressurized aircraft hangar to transport some of the cargo. She rescued 151 Japanese soldiers and sailors who survived the Battle of the Bismarck Sea, and during the rescue was unsuccessfully attacked by two US PT-boats. She later sank the freighter Stanvac Manila and two of the PT-boats carried aboard as cargo: four other PT-boats floated off the sinking ship and survived. In August 1943 she was ordered to scout US bases in the South Pacific, and after a successful reconnaissance flight by her floatplane on 10 August, she was sunk on 19 August by a New Zealand minesweeper and a group of US floatplanes. HMNZS Tui rescued six survivors, with the remaining 97 crewmen going to the bottom.
McKFC OP t1_j7anuqf wrote
There was a funny (and a bit racist) mythology built up around Ellwood. Not remotely true, but it gained popularity as explanation for the lack of damage, when there was opportunity to seriously disable critical war infrastructure.
The story goes that, before the war, a man named Kozo Nishino had served on an oil tanker that docked near the refinery. He was invited for a courtesy tour. While strolling around the facilities with the other dignitaries, he noticed a patch of cactuses behind a fence - a type of fauna that was novel to him - so he decided he'd climb the fence to clip a piece to take back home. Well, unfortunately, he slipped on the fence, right onto a large cactus. His yelp drew bellowing laughs from his American hosts, and the embarrassment was a source of great shame to him for many years.
Cut to the war, and Nishino is now commander of a submarine, the I-17. As fate would have it, he was once again docked near that oil field. The instructions came in to pick a target for what would be the first attack on the continental United States. Commander Nishino knew what he had to do. He ordered his submarine to Ellwood, weapons armed, and instructed his men, "Aim at that cactus!"
MattMasterChief t1_j78kpz9 wrote
Nointy noin zuft luftbaloon
windsingr t1_j7btuow wrote
Neunundneunzig luftballons.
murderouscow101 t1_j78mbi1 wrote
"Weather baloon" π½
DaveOJ12 t1_j78kma1 wrote
It wasn't a UFO? There was an urban legend about that.
It reminds me of Roswell.
BrokenEye3 t1_j79o19b wrote
Technically it was a UFO, because the gunner didn't know what it was
Not_Buying t1_j79ck0y wrote
Wait til you hear about the time the US Navy tried to shoot down the planet Venus, mistaking it for a spy balloon.
https://www.indy100.com/amp/us-navy-venus-spy-balloon-2659368664
BrokenEye3 t1_j79ofr1 wrote
She's a tricky planet
cheesefondue t1_j78mjhd wrote
San Pedro re-enacts this battle (they did before the pandemic, not sure now) with 1940s style dancers, dressers (not the bedroom bureau kind), and musicians. Itβs a big bash, then all hell breaks loose when the battle starts
Infamous-Anybody-693 t1_j78ju21 wrote
Well played, OP
handbanana9023 t1_j79upng wrote
Fake news! It was UFOs and we all know it. Wake up sheeple!
BrokenEye3 t1_j79nuga wrote
You mean there was actually something up there?
monkeypox_69 t1_j7aczhw wrote
Bullcrap. It was π½πΈ
justgot86d t1_j79eios wrote
The peak of the "West Coast Warscare"
Preceded by the bombardment of the Ellwood oil refinery
The internment of Japanese Americans would be initiated shortly after
HPmoni t1_j79lf16 wrote
According to the government...
renasissanceman6 t1_j7az6rt wrote
They lied that one time so itβs safe to assume they lie every single time.
rink_raptor t1_j79lyli wrote
Gooooodbye Hollywooooooddd
Maybethistimeitllbe t1_j7aef18 wrote
Sounds familiar.
blackmagikmike t1_j7aj1pw wrote
So it's not just a Rage Against The Machine album? π€
SirCarboy t1_j7an0f8 wrote
Wait til you find out us Aussies had a war with Emus!
renasissanceman6 t1_j7az7q6 wrote
Well that one was actually real.
Additional_Repeat_29 t1_j7c1dhl wrote
I read it was a thick fog bank hiding monsters.
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NaweN t1_j7ehhar wrote
Hmmm. What an interesting time to post this
[deleted] t1_j78vik6 wrote
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[deleted] t1_j794tms wrote
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DaveOJ12 t1_j796uas wrote
It's something they learned. Sheesh.
[deleted] t1_j78jmzq wrote
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