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Post by San926f on Apr 5, 2024 6:27:29 GMT
I'm trying to think. When was it made, in the 80's? Late 1970s I believe. TV movie. Hmmm, late 70's disaster TV movie. I have no idea! Let's as Google... Is it this one? www.imdb.com/title/tt0077553/
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Post by ShadowSouL Likes This on Apr 5, 2024 6:32:37 GMT
I'm trying to think. When was it made, in the 80's? Late 1970s I believe. TV movie. It doesn't feature a comet, but in the 1979 Captain America TV movie, Steve Rogers has to stop Steve Forrest from detonating a bomb in Phoenix.
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Post by jimmywynn on Apr 5, 2024 6:32:59 GMT
Yes, that is it. Good disaster movie. Thank you.
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Post by slowcomingwarbird on Apr 5, 2024 6:34:45 GMT
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Post by Orlando City Cat on Apr 5, 2024 6:39:00 GMT
You just know that comet is going to leave one hell of a Chem Trail.
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Post by slowcomingwarbird on Apr 5, 2024 6:49:07 GMT
The arrival of divine judgement from above beginning with the eclipse. There will be no escape anywhere for those who are on the list when the Angels of Death come to collect souls.
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Post by TheGoodMan19 on Apr 5, 2024 6:57:43 GMT
We are due for a great comet. Last one, for the northern hemisphere, was Hale-Bopp in 1997. I can remember the fuss over Kohoutek in 1974. Was supposed to be epic, maybe even visible in daylight. You couldn't have seen it if you were sitting on it. "Kohoutek" was a synonym for a great disappointment for a long time, like the word "Edsel"
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Post by PaulsLaugh on Apr 5, 2024 7:44:03 GMT
We are due for a great comet. Last one, for the northern hemisphere, was Hale-Bopp in 1997. I can remember the fuss over Kohoutek in 1974. Was supposed to be epic, maybe even visible in daylight. You couldn't have seen it if you were sitting on it. "Kohoutek" was a synonym for a great disappointment for a long time, like the word "Edsel" Hale Boop was huge, but it was hard to see. It wasn’t bright seeing it with the naked eye like you’d expect. I remember having to look a bit to the side of it to see it better.
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Post by slowcomingwarbird on Apr 8, 2024 5:18:41 GMT
The sky will be overcast and it will be raining so there is zero chance of seeing anything but the eclipse itself. Never seen a solar eclipse on a cloudy rainy day so this should be interesting.
The last solar eclipse had blue tinged light on the ground, and the one before that cast a sort of copper colored or brown light on the ground.
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