So does cleaning.It violates 3 of the 4 rules...
That's why I practice over the bed or at the very least a carpeted floor.I'd end up dropping my gun
Jerry Lewis was really good too! I found one video of him on YouTube doing his thing with a Colt.Try a search on You Tube for "sammy davis gun" and you'll turn up a lot of old B&W videos of some pretty amazing spinning.
Jerry Lewis was really good too! I found one video of him on YouTube doing his thing with a Colt.
Wasn't that a viral marketing video for the film "Never Back Down"?No, beyond the safety issue, this sums up my thoughts on it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJQ7T2ACDqw
vid description: two guys in an arena, one of them does a bunch of flips and spins showing off for the crowd, ending when he handsprings his face into the one and only punch his opponent throws.
...only with my scoped seven point five inch Blackhawk phorty-phive...Admit it.
It violates 3 of the 4 rules, but you just can't help yourself.
I don't have any incorrect presumptions about how things were "back then". History is my business. In fact, my love of history is the primary reason for my hatred of most Westerns (that and the fact that they're not very good anyway).Many decades ago I had a chance to interview one of two still living Territorial Arizona Rangers. I ask him a lot of questions about how things really were “back then,” and he straightened me out about some popular, but incorrect presumptions. One question I had was, “Did he ever do any gun twirling or other gun-handling tricks?” His short answer was:
“No, and I never knew anyone who did.”
For the record, I don’t either.
I outgrew that when I got old enough to move up to real guns. I let an idiot handle one of my single actions once, and he decided to give it a spin before I could stop him, dropping it on a hard floor, and breaking the hammer.