14336492:T.L. said:He absolutely should have known better. If someone hands you any sort of projectile based weapon, whether its a nerfgun, propgun, potato gun, or a AR, you check to see if it's loaded. That's day one firearms safety shit and he's been handling prop guns on set for literally decades. If he can't make a distinction between a blank and a live round, maybe he's just as bad at his job as his armorer was.
14336493:steeze_louise said:Its clear to me that you know nothing at all about guns, you do not need a license to own a gun. Yes, it would be legal negligence for the production company to rely on the actors to make sure the guns are safe. I never said that it should be up to the actors. What I said clearly was that when handed a real firearm it is up to you to make sure it is unloaded. ESPECIALLY if you are going to point it at someone and pull the trigger. I do not give a fuck if 100 people have made sure it was unloaded before you. It is up to the person holding the weapon to open the chamber and check. The number one rule when holding a gun is always treat it as if it is loaded no matter what, this has been drilled into my brain since I was a very little kid and it same with literally every responsible gun owner. If Alec Baldwin had any sort of gun training whatsoever and was not some anti gun moron, I guarantee this would have never have happened. He pointed a real gun at someone and pulled the trigger, therefore his responsibility. Its one thing if it was a prop gun, but it was not. It was a real firearm shooting blanks. When you do not treat lethal weapons with respect you will pay the price. The kind of attitude/reasoning that you have about this is literally the same exact reason why he shot some one in the first place. Pretty much all gun accidents are due to negligence, Alec Baldwin is a prime example. The only reason you should point a gun at a living being at all is if you intend on killing it.
Will Smith would agree
=Racer88
14336495:theabortionator said:If anything that works against your argument. He's been handling prop guns for years and the production team has done things safely.
Idk, it's weird that y'all are saying his fault and how much differently you would have done it. Obviously hindsight, and the future I see it.
Idk, I'm out of this thread. Blame whoever you want.
14336497:theabortionator said:It's weird how giddy some people are about this. Some of the gun people seem pretty happy about this. Even the thread title is like "LOOK SEE! ha!"
Idk, have a bunch of guns, do whatever. Not sure why somebody dying has people so hyped.
14336531:qazwsxedc34 said:How the hell does that even happen? They don't use live rounds on set, did someone change the prop out for live rounds? Twas it a conspiracy to pin baldwin?
My theory is the special effects studio did it because they want everything to be simulated by a computer now. The 80's and 90's effects look more realistic than half the stuff coming out of hollywood now. It is highly likely that someone slipped in live rounds as a conspiracy to increase funding for special effects department.
I'm just kidding, idk
14336493:steeze_louise said:Its clear to me that you know nothing at all about guns, you do not need a license to own a gun. Yes, it would be legal negligence for the production company to rely on the actors to make sure the guns are safe. I never said that it should be up to the actors. What I said clearly was that when handed a real firearm it is up to you to make sure it is unloaded. ESPECIALLY if you are going to point it at someone and pull the trigger. I do not give a fuck if 100 people have made sure it was unloaded before you. It is up to the person holding the weapon to open the chamber and check. The number one rule when holding a gun is always treat it as if it is loaded no matter what, this has been drilled into my brain since I was a very little kid and it same with literally every responsible gun owner. If Alec Baldwin had any sort of gun training whatsoever and was not some anti gun moron, I guarantee this would have never have happened. He pointed a real gun at someone and pulled the trigger, therefore his responsibility. Its one thing if it was a prop gun, but it was not. It was a real firearm shooting blanks. When you do not treat lethal weapons with respect you will pay the price. The kind of attitude/reasoning that you have about this is literally the same exact reason why he shot some one in the first place. Pretty much all gun accidents are due to negligence, Alec Baldwin is a prime example. The only reason you should point a gun at a living being at all is if you intend on killing it.
Will Smith would agree
=Racer88
14336289:MiIfHunter said:you guys aren't asking yourself the right question
where is the smoking gun?
regardless if alec didnt know, he still shot the gun.
its second degree manslaughter at the very least
you just cant keep passing the buck bcuz once you go down that road personal liability becomes an endless circle
14336538:skeirman said:It looks like they are saying the crew used the gun for target practice nearby the set with live rounds, and then stored the unused live ammo in the same area as the blanks that were supposed to be used for the scene.
14336497:theabortionator said:It's weird how giddy some people are about this. Some of the gun people seem pretty happy about this. Even the thread title is like "LOOK SEE! ha!"
Idk, have a bunch of guns, do whatever. Not sure why somebody dying has people so hyped.
14336549:TOAST. said:Was the guy that killed Brandon Lee charged? No he wasn't.
14336497:theabortionator said:It's weird how giddy some people are about this. Some of the gun people seem pretty happy about this. Even the thread title is like "LOOK SEE! ha!"
Idk, have a bunch of guns, do whatever. Not sure why somebody dying has people so hyped.
14336493:steeze_louise said:Its clear to me that you know nothing at all about guns, you do not need a license to own a gun. Yes, it would be legal negligence for the production company to rely on the actors to make sure the guns are safe. I never said that it should be up to the actors. What I said clearly was that when handed a real firearm it is up to you to make sure it is unloaded. ESPECIALLY if you are going to point it at someone and pull the trigger. I do not give a fuck if 100 people have made sure it was unloaded before you. It is up to the person holding the weapon to open the chamber and check. The number one rule when holding a gun is always treat it as if it is loaded no matter what, this has been drilled into my brain since I was a very little kid and it same with literally every responsible gun owner. If Alec Baldwin had any sort of gun training whatsoever and was not some anti gun moron, I guarantee this would have never have happened. He pointed a real gun at someone and pulled the trigger, therefore his responsibility. Its one thing if it was a prop gun, but it was not. It was a real firearm shooting blanks. When you do not treat lethal weapons with respect you will pay the price. The kind of attitude/reasoning that you have about this is literally the same exact reason why he shot some one in the first place. Pretty much all gun accidents are due to negligence, Alec Baldwin is a prime example. The only reason you should point a gun at a living being at all is if you intend on killing it.
Will Smith would agree
=Racer88
14337958:DingoSean said:This whole thing could have been prevented if they had just given everyone a loaded gun on set.
....or at least thats what the NRA believes
14337976:Craw_Daddy said:This whole thing could have been prevented if Alec had done the very first thing they teach you in an NRA gun safety class.
14337958:DingoSean said:This whole thing could have been prevented if they had just given everyone a loaded gun on set.
....or at least thats what the NRA believes
14337976:Craw_Daddy said:This whole thing could have been prevented if Alec had done the very first thing they teach you in an NRA gun safety class.
14337977:DingoSean said:'have a gun'
14336423:Profahoben_212 said:Nahhh I disagree. I don't know much about the situation but it's a movie. In the real world this absolutely checks out....but they are supposed to have multiple barriers so that this situation doesn't happen.
It's like getting pissed at the goalie when you get scored on in soccer. It doesn't make sense because it had to go through every other player to get there.
Sad situation all around though.
14336718:deathcookie said:Quick question: If you are handed a gun that is loaded with blanks, do they look different when loaded than normal bullets?
14336624:AaronO. said:Yeah idk been seeing a lot of people this weekend acting like this is a big win
14337998:Dustin. said:It is absolutely astounding that people think it matters that this happened on a movie set. It's a negligent discharge that killed someone. End of story. It doesn't fucking matter legally or theoretically if he was filming Dumb and Dumber 4 and trusted someone else to do basic firearms checks for him, it's HIS FUCKING FAULT. I'm astonished people are making excuses for such an obvious fault and lack of ownership. You can feel bad, you can shake your head, but only one person is responsible for a negligent discharge: the person who pulls the trigger.
Other people failed at their jobs too, but this is a pistol. Not a fighter jet. It's not a complicated machine. When you take ownership of it you own anything that comes flying out of the barrel. Hollywood needs to treat firearms as firearms and stop calling them bullshit things like "prop guns". Train anyone who is going to touch it how to clear it, like every other person on Earth who handles firearms. It's super simple and fucking idiotic to argue against considering the obviously stupid and avoidable consequences of treating guns as toys.
14338000:Jems said:why do people make threads like these after random events??? y’all expect karma??

14336289:MiIfHunter said:you guys aren't asking yourself the right question
where is the smoking gun?
regardless if alec didnt know, he still shot the gun.
its second degree manslaughter at the very least
you just cant keep passing the buck bcuz once you go down that road personal liability becomes an endless circle
14336377:T.L. said:Discussing how this allegedly happened isn't shifting blame one direction or another. The blame lies with Alec Baldwin because he's the idiot who trusted other idiots with the safety of people's lives and then pulled the trigger.
14336434:steeze_louise said:This is totally incorrect, the fact of the matter is that he was holding a real gun, that fired blank bullets. If a real bullet is placed in it and capable of killing someone it is clearly in the category of a lethal weapon and not a prop. It does not matter how much safety protocols were in place and who checked it before you. When a gun is handed to you, you check to see if it is loaded, PERIOD. You always treat a firearm as if it is loaded even if you know it is not. Gun safety stems from good gun safety habits. This is 100% Baldwins responsibility, it may have been an accident but it was still his fault, he was the one holding the gun and the one who pulled the trigger.
14336495:theabortionator said:If anything that works against your argument. He's been handling prop guns for years and the production team has done things safely.
14336718:deathcookie said:Quick question: If you are handed a gun that is loaded with blanks, do they look different when loaded than normal bullets?




14338020:skeirman said:Says the guy that doesn't understand how negligence works.
14336437:theabortionator said:When you fully agree with skierman on a post.
It's a movie set. The people who's job it is literally to ensure this happens safety hand you the gun, you do the scene.
14338194:Dustin. said:The only person responsible for ensuring a firearm is safe is the person holding it. It doesn't fucking matter that it's a movie set. If he drove "Prop automobile" through a crowd hammered because it was a movie, it's not the movie mechanics fault that he didn't even try to do his part in ensuring basic safety. Anytime anyone ever hands you a firearm, in any scenario....ever....you clear it yourself.
If they really want to have foolproof, truly 100% safe props, they should use guns that are props and not real firearms they call "prop guns".
14338194:Dustin. said:The only person responsible for ensuring a firearm is safe is the person holding it. It doesn't fucking matter that it's a movie set. If he drove "Prop automobile" through a crowd hammered because it was a movie, it's not the movie mechanics fault that he didn't even try to do his part in ensuring basic safety. Anytime anyone ever hands you a firearm, in any scenario....ever....you clear it yourself.
If they really want to have foolproof, truly 100% safe props, they should use guns that are props and not real firearms they call "prop guns".
14338295:SofaKingSick said:that's not how it works on movie sets and that analogy is not an accurate one in the slightest. some people are really falling over themselves to make this baldwin's fault despite not knowing even the basics of how guns work on movie sets
14338304:r00kie said:But why is it different on a movie set? A firearm is a firearm is a firearm. Doesn't matter it's location. Yeah, clearly some handlers messed up too, but Alec failed to do a personal check as well.
14338318:SofaKingSick said:that's kind of the point here, "a firearm is a firearm is a firearm" isn't exactly true on a movie set-- the entire point of the set is that reality is being fucked with, blurring fake and real, and sometimes that involves the actor taking something that definitely looks like a gun (sometimes even a real gun) and pulling the trigger while aiming at or near somebody. in real life there is never a situation where i point a gun at something i don't intend to damage
so it's entirely different. the actor is not a gun expert and even if they were, their primary jobs would interfere with the gun safety aspect of it. do you want the actor being responsible for safety while also trying to be in character? of course not-- both jobs would suffer. so there are protocols and multiple supposed gun experts whose explicit job is to set things up so that they can hand the gun/prop to some dipshit actor and tell them "COLD GUN!" and the actor takes their word for it. this one was a revolver i think but they aren't always. if i'm an actor and i'm handed a prop beretta, do i unload it, check each round, put them back in the mag, then do the shot? no. it's a division of labor and the gun concerns are delegated explicitly to gun experts. on this set, they fucked up big time
could baldwin be charged in his capacity as a producer? i don't know enough to say. will he be charged in his capacity as an actor? no, not unless it's found that he made a mistake that caused pertinent issues.
like, say if it was a shot where he had blanks in his gun and he was supposed to shoot in the general direction of a far-off target, but instead ran over and shot from point blank and there was damage done, yeah he's obviously going to be in the hot seat. but if he just did his job as agreed to... it is not on him. these accidents are relatively rare and it's not because actors have been putting in effective performances as gun pros lol, it's because protocols are followed by professionals
14338194:Dustin. said:The only person responsible for ensuring a firearm is safe is the person holding it. It doesn't fucking matter that it's a movie set. If he drove "Prop automobile" through a crowd hammered because it was a movie, it's not the movie mechanics fault that he didn't even try to do his part in ensuring basic safety. Anytime anyone ever hands you a firearm, in any scenario....ever....you clear it yourself.
If they really want to have foolproof, truly 100% safe props, they should use guns that are props and not real firearms they call "prop guns".
14338341:r00kie said:Thars a wordy way to say that cause he's an actor he shouldn't be expected to know how to handle a weapon while handling a weapon. The fact that it's being pointed at other people is even more reason to be extra cautious and do a check before shooting. Let's put this in skiing terms. If someone hands me a beacon, I'm going to check it myself even if the guy who engineered it handed it to me and told me its good to go. Why? Becuase my life or someone else's may depend on it. Same thing here.
	14338542:SofaKingSick said:no, i directly addressed what you asked and you're just going back to the same riff (also i'm worried about y'all's understanding of analogies)
i think you guys just prefer your initial reactionary take rather than learning why you might be wrong, so have at it i guess. if any of you bozos* want to bet me that baldwin will be found responsible for the incident for not checking the weapon, be my guest and name the wager
*![]()
14338545:r00kie said:I'd bet he gets cleared too cause he's wealthy, famous, and can divert blame to the prop people like you're doing. Doesn't mean every single gun safety instructur isn't going to use this as an example of why you should personally clear a gun when it's handed to you.
14338552:SofaKingSick said:i'm wasting my time cause it's clear you'd never admit you're wrong on this regardless, but from what we know here the most analogous situation was brandon lee's death while filming The Crow. do you also think Michael Massee, the dude who pulled the trigger, "diverted blame" through wealth and fame?
14338295:SofaKingSick said:that's not how it works on movie sets and that analogy is not an accurate one in the slightest. some people are really falling over themselves to make this baldwin's fault despite not knowing even the basics of how guns work on movie sets
14338452:theabortionator said:Yes, really good example there. If he fires a prop gun handed to him by the team he's basically driving a car hammered through a closed off street of food trucks or something. Seems legit
Cool analogy jpeg
14338258:SuspiciousFish said:I agree with you to a degree but movies sets are unique in that they are the only environment where you are told to point an actual firearm at someone or toward people which you would never do in real life. If this was a Colt SAA and was on a table and the actor was told it was full of blanks and to pick it up and fire it at the camera then it is up to the professional armorer to ensure the proper blanks ammo etc was used. Colt SAA revolvers are not like newer revolvers where you can flip out the revolving chamber and inspect the rounds. They need to be pushed out through the gate one by one.
What basically happened was the idiot crew used a prop gun to plink shots with live rounds between takes and forgot to unload it when they brought it back to the set which is beyond stupid and criminal IMO. Live rounds were left in the gun and the armorer didn't do her job to ensure it was safe and the actor followed directions and shot someone.
I hold Alec Baldwin more responsible as the producer than the shooter in that half the crew walked out days prior due to unsafe conditions and he allowed the situation to happen despite multiple warning signs. It was his responsibility to not allow target shooting between takes, to ensure the professionals knew what they were doing and to account for safe conditions including not using real guns for these kind of shots.