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As a human, if you are handed a gun, you check to see if it's loaded and what it's loader with. That is the first thing you do when handed a gun. Anything else is irresponsible.
But... What if I'm an actor who's never seen a gun.. Do i quit or is it too much of an expectation for an expert to be present and why the hell would that gun be real to begin with?
Just my two cents, and I absolutely am not pretending to have any experience with this. I'd assume so long as the actor isn't negligent or grossly irresponsible they're in the clear. Actors are not firearms experts, and training every actor to be Keanu Reeves/John Wick is super expensive. So whomever is the firearms expert, and whomever was involved with the contracting of that expert face liability.
That's why Baldwin the actor isn't responsible, but Baldwin as producer might be. Since as a producer he'd bear responsibility for hiring and contracting.
No idea why you're getting down voted. This is exactly how I feel.
Then you don't get to touch the gun until you've proven to me with airsoft you can follow these four rules. Simple as. Gun safety is to be expected from any single human who touches a real gun regardless of their job description, anything less could lead to, oh, idk, an innocent woman being killed on the set of Rust.
It's interesting to me that in the gun world personal responsibility is paramount, everyone is responsible for safety.
In Hollywood there is no personal responsibility. No one is liable. It's one big oopsie moment.
In the gun world (the real world), I'm my own armorer. I don't have someone on payroll who is supposed to be an ever-present expert to safety check, store, and catalog everything for me. I'm willing to bet that most of these actors may have never even handled a gun off-set... but I'm absolutely not against giving them basic safety training. It would certainly stand to reason.
This seems to be the case. Personally I'm clearly on the side of the gun world, I think it's high time we stop letting actors treat guns as toys, it is so irresponsible and clearly leads to deaths, and it is litterally just this video. Sure, accidents can still happen like Brandon Lee's, but Cooper's Four Rules is an absolute bare minimum standard that they should have to meet before holding a gun capable of firing live rounds (even if there are no live rounds on set, it is an 8 minute video, it really isn't that much.
Every time you go to a new indoor range, they require you to watch a breif safety video like the one above, this is literally the one they make you watch at one of my local ranges. I'm not asking for a dissertation on the mechanical workings of the Krag, I'm asking for the most basic safety precautions.
"Wait, so what do I need to do to uncock it so that I can check it over?"
"Actually, it's weird. You need to pull the trigger halfway, and it releases. But do it carefully."
"...uh..."
"Okay, after nearly shooting my foot off, I've opened the gun, and there appear to be rounds inside!! Stop the shoot!"
"Oh. Those are blanks."
"Wait, how do I know they're blanks?"
"Same way you know how to uncock it."
Not to mention they're literally SUPPOSED to point the gun at people, which is also a big "gun safety" no-no.
Let people who know how guns operate have this debate, ok champ? You clearly don't understand how guns function at a basic level. What you've described is how a total of 0% of guns work. It sounds like you are talking about actually breaking down the gun to clean it, but just to check if it is loaded all you need to be able to do is follow this idiot. If he can do it Baldwin can too, the Armorer should teach them how to do it if they don't know before filming starts, and if they can't grasp it they only get nonfiring replicas because they have not met this minimal standard that I expect from everyone that touches a gun.
The consequences of ignoring safety in the name of job titles is dead people on set, it's worth it to just fucking learn Col. Jeff Cooper's Four Rules instead of kill someone accidentally, whether you can abate your guilty conscience by blaming others and deferring responsibility due to job titles or not.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1LMbEGhll3E
In short: Revolvers, like you, are dumb. They are designed to not allow the hammer to release unless the trigger is pulled. The full release techniques are more intricate than what I jokingly described, but it still involves the trigger.
Calling out a comment you see as being potentially inaccurate can still be done politely without insulting and degrading people. Others have done it for information I've actually gotten wrong elsewhere in this post, and I appreciate their tone.
Ah, so you can call me dumb, but if I insult you back I get reported and my comment gets removed, eh? Logical. Well, while I await response from the mods here regarding sending me that text so I can edit it more palpably for the children in the audience, I'll reconstruct why you're actually the one who posseses the attributes ascribed to both me and revolvers by you above.
Not only did that man not touch the trigger while he did what one would describe as "unload and show clear," this is a video on "decocking," which is an entirely different principle. In the video you sent he actually does it without touching the trigger at around the 32sec mark (there was a link with a time code included in my OG comment, but this time you'll have to put in the work because I have youtube running), when he presses the lever, opens the cylinder, and visually inspects the cylinder to verify the lack of ammunition, in order to make the gun safe for demonstration purposes. Not one time in that process did he touch the trigger (besides waiting 30sec in to do it, note to youtuber: Bad guntuber, that is the first thing you do and you know that, bad guntuber! Feel shame!)
That also wasn't the kind of revolver used in Rust, they were using a Colt SAA, like this one. This is how to unload and check the gun that was in Baldwin's hand when he shot that lady. Notice how the nice man in the video doesn't pull the trigger? Actually, did you hear him specifically say not to touch the trigger? Instead to keep your finger high on the frame? Yeah, who posesses the properties you ascribe to revolvers now, you revolver? (Shucks, I hope I can get away with that one, golly gee.)
Baldwin absolutely should have been expected to know how to do this, not because "everyone should" or some such nonsense as most of this thread purports my side's argument to be, but because he was holding one. Had he not been holding one I wouldn't be saying he needs to learn about it. For instance, you aren't holding one, so you don't have to learn (besides the fact that I'm correcting your misinformation and teaching it to you, so in a sense you do), but if you were going to go buy a Cimmaron or Uberti Colt SAA clone, yes, I would expect that you learn how to use one safely. Hell, if I got one and was showing it to you at my house, I would teach it to you before I even let you touch it.
Baldwin is not absolved of responsibility due to his job title not being related to firearms, I expect every human who touches a gun to know how to do so safely and if they don't, don't touch them. This is the absolute bare minimum expectation, and it is so that innocent people don't needlessly die, it is a good thing not an imposition. He may be legally cleared due to his money and connections, but on a "karmic" level for lack of a better word he is at least as responsible as that armorer, if not more when you throw in all the behind the scenes stuff like "he was also the producer, and much of their gun safety team had walked off citing safety complaints, after they'd already had two noninjurious negligent discharges, and in fact were off set that day, and they chose not only to film, but to pick up that gun and point it at the camera for not a scene but just the lolz."
How's that? I insulted you but only by referrencing your insult, does that squeak past the censors?