For making Top Gun, a propaganda movie that doubtless funneled thousands or tens of thousands of kids into the military, Tom Cruise has been honored with the US Navy's highest civilian award
No. He’s a cult leader and foul spirit (he tried the same thing on Scarlet Johannson before he succeeded with Katie PartyOf5) and he wears gender corrective shoes because he’s short & can’t stand it and he PUTS himself in front of cameras, he doesn’t avoid them like normal humans. WE GET TO JUDGE this unattractive old desperate irritating loser.
Honestly, it's a bit of a relief. None of us want to get old, but Hollywood seems to love middle aged men hoping around like they're 20. At a certain point you should be playing older roles.
I agree, but I'm enough out of the loop that I didn't realize how old he looked. I saw the recent (and terrible) mission impossible movie and he didn't look nearly as old. I know movie magic and all, but that picture still surprised me.
It's funny because Air Force recruitment skyrocketed after Top Gun released. Because people wanted to fly planes and they immediately thought of the Air Force. The film didn't help the Navy's recruitment all that much.
I'm saying this as a guy who served in the Air Force for 20 years. We like to poke fun at the Navy for helping us with our recruitment numbers every time a Top Gun film releases.
I had always heard Navy recruitment skyrocketed, but your comment made me curious, so I looked at the Defense Manpower Data Center numbers for the years surrounding Top Gun's release in May of '86 and...
In September of '86 the Navy's manpower increase was nearly double that of the year before or after (10k versus 6k). Meanwhile the air force had a more moderate increase and then numbers fell in '87.
I think the overall gains are probably overstated, but there were definite spikes in the Navy E-1 and O-1 numbers following Top Gun, a trend not seen in the Air Force numbers.
Manpower is misleading because the manpower for each branch is determined every year based on ongoing missions, requirements, and a bunch of other minute details. A jump in manpower doesn't mean we got more recruits applying that year, just that we approved a certain level of manpower and filled those positions.
I was talking about recruitment; the people actually showing up at recruiter's offices trying to join the service. The year that Top Gun and its sequel came to theaters, our Air Force recruiters met their recruitment quotas in a heartbeat. Meanwhile, I'm told, the Navy recruitment was mostly business as usual.
Maybe if the Navy's manpower was much higher that year, they struggled to meet their annual quotas while the Air Force quickly filled up, and that's why it seems like the Air Force was more popular that year.
I'm sure you're making some sort of short joke, but just in case you weren't, the smaller medals are for a more formal evening dress that doesn't get wore very often.