Baby Blue Airwolf: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
<gallery> | <gallery> | ||
File:Old men send young men to die in wars so children can play with toy guns.jpg|link=Toy Guns|'''Old men send young men to die in wars so children can play with [[Toy Guns|toy guns]]'''. | File:Old men send young men to die in wars so children can play with toy guns.jpg|link=Toy Guns|'''Old men send young men to die in wars so children can play with [[Toy Guns|toy guns]]'''. | ||
Line 14: | Line 12: | ||
* [[Gnomon algorithm]] | * [[Gnomon algorithm]] | ||
* [[Gnomon Chronicles]] | * [[Gnomon Chronicles]] | ||
* [[Toy Guns]] | * [[Toy Guns]] | ||
Revision as of 17:48, 23 February 2023
Baby Blue Airwolf is a 1976 American action-adventure film about a failed Marine helicopter pilot who deceives the staff of a small Colorado airport into treating him as a hero.
In the News
Old men send young men to die in wars so children can play with toy guns.
Fiction cross-reference
Nonfiction cross-reference
External links
- Post @ Twitter (2 February 2023)
- Post @ Twitter (18 August 2022) - YouTube
- Post @ Twitter (9 August 2022)
- Airwolf @ Wikipedia
- Baby Blue Marine @ Wikipedia
- Post @ Twitter (5 November 2022)
- Baby Blue Marine @ YouTube
- Airwolf intro @ YouTube
Categories:
- (nonfiction)
- Fiction (nonfiction)
- Films
- 1970s (nonfiction)
- 1976 (nonfiction)
- Baby Blue Marine (nonfiction)
- Blue (nonfiction)
- Colors (nonfiction)
- Films (nonfiction)
- Leonard Goldberg (nonfiction)
- John D. Hancock (nonfiction)
- Fred Karlin (nonfiction)
- Aaron Spelling (nonfiction)
- Stanford Whitmore (nonfiction)
- Jan-Michael Vincent (nonfiction)
- War (nonfiction)
- World War II (nonfiction)
- 1980s (nonfiction)
- Aviation (nonfiction)
- Donald P. Bellisario (nonfiction)
- Ernest Borgnine (nonfiction)
- Alex Cord (nonfiction)
- Helicopters (nonfiction)
- Sylvester Levay (nonfiction)
- Jean Bruce Scott (nonfiction)
- Television (nonfiction)