On 12 Feb, 03:01, wdst...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(William December Starr) wrote:
> In article
<6e4048a4-5c3f-457f-9b9f-aba7115ae...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> Robert Carnegie <rja.carne...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> said:
>
> > On 8 Feb, 21:39, wdst...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(William December Starr) wrote:
> >> Robert Carnegie <rja.carne...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> said:
>
> >>> Oh, and the _U.F.O._ series is set in a film studio with a
> >>> secret base rather pointlessly underneath it. The secret
> >>> commander poses as, / is/, the studio head, and presumably is
> >>> involved with scripts as well as everything else.
>
> >> It wasn't pointless -- it was a "hide in plain sight" operation in
> >> which they could move uniformed/spacesuited/whatever personnel,
> >> bizarre equipment, weaponry and vehicles, and even pieces of alien
> >> spacecraft around in the open without anyone noticing.
>
> > Hmm, is this actually explained?
>
> I _think_ so. =A0Mind you, it's been a few decades since I saw the show.
I am now looking out for an expository scene where Straker says
something like, "You know - he's the bonehead who had the brilliant
idea to put our secret base under a film studio. He retired on
medical grounds after that." "And he's been taken by the Aliens?"
"Oh, it could be worse, Alec. They could bring hm back."
(Yes, that's swiped from _Red Dwarf_.)
> > I think a studio that launched actual submarines and moon rockets
> > would be conspicuous even in far-future 1980, and it's not as
> > though there aren't real military sites around with a secret
> > status.
>
> I don't think they did any launches from the studio grounds.
Then the point was? ... oh, I'll just watch the show. The girls are
terrific, except for the wigs.


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