Late 60s I was a field service engineer… I arrived at a site in Wembley… Pickets wouldn’t let me in… Early mobile-phone call to my boss… He phoned their HR… Messenger ran down to the pickets… I received personal escort to the computer that printed their wage cheques…
If they forgot their weapons, how come they’re still alive? Did the other side figure they could take them out later, so take out the ones with weapons, now?
jasonsnakelover 11 months ago
They’re using Brewster Rockit as their role model.
pschearer Premium Member 11 months ago
Who writes the picket signs during a writers’ strike?
Doug K 11 months ago
They’d forget something else, too, if it wasn’t attached.
A Common 'tator 11 months ago
Late 60s I was a field service engineer… I arrived at a site in Wembley… Pickets wouldn’t let me in… Early mobile-phone call to my boss… He phoned their HR… Messenger ran down to the pickets… I received personal escort to the computer that printed their wage cheques…
naplllp 11 months ago
Obviously, “Heeeeere’s your sign” doesn’t apply here.
paulprobujr 11 months ago
If they forgot their weapons, how come they’re still alive? Did the other side figure they could take them out later, so take out the ones with weapons, now?
gantech 11 months ago
Ok Dirk, but who hired them in the first place?
DaBump Premium Member 11 months ago
Soldiers who forgot to bring their weapons to a battle? Just be glad you’re still around to get a pay cut!
ChessPirate 11 months ago
Ironically, they were more accurate without their weapons… ☺
Radish the wordsmith 11 months ago
The Actors/writers strike has reached 100 days.
Bilan 11 months ago
Dirk: “But I just gave you a raise. Don’t you remember?”
“You did? OH. Then never mind.”
cuzinron47 11 months ago
I can imagine what their recruitment poster say ‘Join the storm troopers, no intelligence required’.