“Travis knows way more than I do, he had to completely move out of his house,” Jason Kelce said
Jason Kelce has revealed that his brother Travis Kelce had no option but to move out of his house for “safety reasons” amid his romance with Taylor Swift. “Travis knows way more than I do, he had to completely move out of his house,” he said during an appearance on The Big Podcast With Shaq. “People were just staying by his house.”
“And the first day he moved into the new house … [in] a gated community, somebody knocks on the back window of the house,” he added.
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Jason, an NFL star, said he did not know what fame was before Kelce started dating Swift last year. “We’ve always been big in the football world, Travis especially. The Taylor world and the pop culture world, that’s a whole different level. It’s a new demographic that wasn’t there before,” Jason said.
Page Six reported that last year Kelce bought a $6 million mansion in Kansas City, Missouri. This happened a month after he made his relationship with Swift public.
Kelce began searching for a new home where he realised his previous high-end Briarcliff West neighbourhood house was accessible to everyone. He had bought that house in 2019 for $995,000.
I don’t think Taylor’s schedule is that bad, it’s basically just 3 weeks of touring with him being off 1 of those weeks, she’ll fly home in between, if they can’t handle that then what’s the point of all this.
Then she’s off until he’s done, she could even in theory make the Super Bowl if the Chiefs get that far despite being in Japan the night before.They are two secure midish-thirties adults with careers. They probably don’t need to be around each other all of the time, although I am sure it feels good to do so right now.
Some of the attention will die down eventually. It’s just a really nice love story in a time when there’s a lot of bad stuff in the media. I’ve seen people talk about how it almost makes them feel patriotic. You can’t get much more of a quintessential American romance than the football legend and the pop star, both with strong families, both self-made, both hotter than hell and into each other, treating each other with an almost old school sweetness in public.
It’s Joe DiMaggio and Marilyn Monroe. Its the American David and Victoria Beckham. It’s being idealized to an extreme, I’m sure. New love can be a beautiful, intoxicating thing, even for people just witnessing it.
They look happy. I hope they enjoy it and it works out. I don’t know enough about Swift to know if she is acting different than normal, but I’ve seen a different Kelce over the last few months.
Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift sealed the NFL star’s big win with a kiss!
Kelce and Swift, both 34, shared a sweet kiss on the field as the Kansas City Chiefs celebrated their big win over the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC Championship.
After the game was decided, Swift made her way to the field at M&T Bank Stadium to greet Kelce, who was surrounded by teammates and cameras.
The 12-time Grammy-winning singer planted a kiss on the NFL star as they celebrated the big win. His mother and father, Donna and Ed Kelce, were standing alongside as the couple shared the sweet moment.
Kelce’s speech showed the NFL star’s excitement for his team’s big win. The tight end quoted the Beastie Boys’ lyrics “You’ve got to fight/ for your right/ to party” — the same lyric he repeated last year when they won the 2023 Super Bowl — as he addressed Chiefs friends and family.
Swift was seen laughing as her beau got Chiefs Kingdom hyped for another Super Bowl appearance.
Swift was shown on the broadcast earlier during the Chiefs’ ceremony, as she raised her hands to clap for head coach Andy Reid.
After his speech, Travis greeted his brother, Jason Kelce, on the field. The Philadelphia Eagles center not only pulled out his “Big Yeti” shirt again to cheer for his brother’s Chiefs on Sunday — but he also added an extra layer of clothing over that T-shirt.
In a sequel to his viral shirtless celebration last week, Jason, 36, attended the AFC Championship game, where the Chiefs squared off with the Baltimore Ravens.
Kelce, alongside quarterback Patrick Mahomes, pulled off the AFC Championship win against the Baltimore Ravens 17-7. It will be the second year in a row they’re headed to the big game, after winning the Vince Lombardi Trophy last year.
It was a huge game for Kelce, who officially tied NFL legend Jerry Rice for the most postseason catches in NFL history.
NFL cameras caught Patrick Mahomes’ heartwarming message to head coach Andy Reid following the Kansas City Chiefs’ walk-off victory over the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl 58.
Mahomes threw the game-winning touchdown pass to Mecole Hardman in overtime to walk it off inside Allegiant Stadium. With the victory, the Chiefs cemented themselves as a dynasty and became the first team to win consecutive Super Bowls since the 2003 and ’04 New England Patriots.
“Inside the NFL” cameras caught Mahomes delivering the most wholesome message to coach Reid and his wife, Tammy, during the post-game celebration.
“Can I get in on this? I love y’all,” Mahomes said. “How crazy is that, huh? How crazy is that, huh? Yes sir…what a call huh? What a call. Oh, my gosh. Woo!”
Mahomes won his third Super Bowl MVP as well, completing 34 passes for 333 yards, two touchdowns and an interception. He also finished as KC’s leading rusher with 66 yards on nine carries.
Incredibly, all three of Mahomes’ Super Bowl victories ended with a game-winning drive in the fourth quarter or overtime. And in all three of those games, his team trailed by double-digits at some point.
The Chiefs were underdogs for each of their final three playoff games, and they came out on top in a late nailbiter ever single time. Indeed, there is no questioning who the best player in football is right now.
Up next, Mahomes and coach Reid will try to help the Chiefs become the first team ever to win three straight Super Bowl championships.
Travis Kelce got to celebrate a Super Bowl win with Taylor Swift on Sunday night, living up to his end of their deal as he brought some silverware home to match her Grammys.
The Chiefs tight end had a frustrating first half that saw him nearly bowl his head coach over in a fit of rage, yet he managed to ger the job done in the second half to help his team to an overtime win over the 49ers.
Travis met Taylor on the field for a heartwarming embrace after the game and thanked her for support as she told him how unbelievable he was.
“Thank you for coming, thank you for making it halfway across the world,” he was heard saying, “You’re the best baby, the absolute best.”
Then, after showering his girl with praise, Kelce asked Swift, “Was it electric?”
Kelce has since confirmed that he will be returning next season as he wants to be part of the first three-peat in NFL history.
While he did hint at retirement during the season, the three-time champion has designs on a third straight Super Bowl win that would make him a four-time winner with the Chiefs.
Patrick Mahomes’ younger brother, Jackson Mahomes, seemed to have a rough Super Bowl week. It began with him appearing to be denied entry into a VIP section of a Super Bowl party where his sister-in-law, Brittany Mahomes, was located during a Future concert in Las Vegas.
It seemingly continued on Sunday night. Taylor Swift appeared to snub Jackson Mahomes after the Chiefs won the Super Bowl.
After Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick threw the game-winning touchdown to land a third ring, Jackson was on the field trying to get some love from the pop star.
One video shows a slightly cold embrace between the singer and the 23-year-old as Swift got tapped on the shoulder by him and she gave him a quick side-hug before moving on. Immediately after that, she gave someone else a more intimate embrace which spoke volumes.
Swift’s fans hold her to a high standard so they were vocal when warning her not to associate with Jackson, who had a bad reputation because of a high-profile sexual battery case, which was recently dropped.
This interaction comes days after Jackson was spotted getting close to Kelce’s ex-girlfriend. Jackson and Nicole were seen talking at the Aria Resort & Casino’s High Limit Lounge.
Nicole is best known for dating the Kansas City Chiefs tight end before he started romancing Taylor Swift. Because of her relationship with Kelce, Nicole was once close to the Mahomes family but she had to unfollow them all on social media as a way to protect her peace going forward.
HBO’s 2001 miniseries, Band of Brothers, has continued to gain popularity in the decades since its release. This is partly due to later generations having greater access to the series – in particular, via the internet and streaming services. The show was based upon the best-selling book of the same name by Stephen Ambrose, who used the opportunity to focus on a specific aspect of the 101st Airborne Division’s 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment. Here are some facts about East Company, 2nd Battalion.
Ronald Speirs
Ronald Speirs + Matthew Settle as Ronald Speirs in Band of Brothers, 2001. (Photo Credit: 1. US Army / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain 2. jeffw616 / HBO / Dreamworks Pictures / MovieStillsDB)
Ronald Speirs retired from the US military after a career that spanned the better part of three decades. He began pursuing his dream to serve his country in high school by attending military training, which eventually led to him being commissioned as a second lieutenant in the US Army. He followed this up by volunteering to become a paratrooper.
Prior to serving with Easy Company, he was a platoon leader with B Company, 1st Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, before being reassigned to 2nd Platoon, Dog Company, 2nd Battalion, with whom he was shipped to England to begin training for D-Day.
As a result of Band of Brothers and Stephen Ambrose’s book, the majority of people know he played a part in the famous attack on Brécourt Manor on June 6, 1944, which took out German howitzers that had been firing relentlessly on nearby Utah Beach. Teaming up with Easy Company, which had fallen under the command of 1st Lt. Richard Winters, the outnumbered Americans defeated the enemy.
At some point after D-Day, Speirs was transferred to Easy Company, with whom he fought in Operation Market Garden. One of the missions he undertook during this otherwise disastrous time period earned him the Silver Star. After leading a patrol along the Nederrijn, he swam across the water to scout out enemy positions. This allowed other units to conduct similar reconnaissance missions.
Spiers then participated in the Battle of the Bulge. A little-known fact is that Speirs became Easy Company’s commander during the attack on Foy, which occurred as part of the engagement. It’s a good thing, too, because he replaced a rather inept leader, 1st Lt. Norman Dike.
For those who watched Band of Brothers, but never read the book, Speirs did, indeed, run through enemy fire to coordinate the assault. He also came back the same way: under fire. However, whether he did, in fact, kill a group of German prisoners of war (POWs), as the series suggests, remains subject to speculation.
Speirs remained in the US Army following the Second World War, and was one of only a handful of men to have made combat jumps in both the conflict and Korea. In 1951, he dropped behind a line of retreating North Korean troops in Munsan-ni, as part of Operation Tomahawk. As the commander of a rifle company with the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team, he and his men killed between 40-50 enemy combatants.
One “claim to fame” (and little-known fact) is that the Easy Company veteran served as a liaison officer to the Soviet Army during the mid-1950s. He was also the American governor of Spandau prison. The facility housed the former deputy Führer, who’d been imprisoned there on war crimes.
The commandant of Spandau was a rotating position. Each of the major powers took a turn. In 1958, the decision was made to put Speirs in the role. He’d had to learn Russian following the Korean War, and this was seen as a great advantage to the post.
After the assignment, Speirs served as a US military liaison to the Royal Lao Army, just prior to the American involvement in Southeast Asia growing into the Vietnam War. He retired from service in 1964 as a lieutenant colonel, with his final role having been as a plans officer for the US Department of Defense.
Speirs passed away on April 11, 2007, at the age of 86.
Albert Blithe
Albert Blithe, 1942 + Marc Warren as Albert Blithe in Band of Brothers, 2001. (Photo Credit: 1. US Army / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain 2. mdew / HBO / Dreamworks Pictures / MovieStillsDB)
It’s a little-known fact that Albert Blithe is only mentioned in Stephen Ambrose’s book on three pages: the famous incident in which he lost his eyesight, as well as his taking point during one of Easy Company’s patrols in Normandy. That being said, he definitely had an interesting time in Europe, despite it being a rather short deployment.
Blithe opted to serve as a paratrooper, rather than complete high school. He participated in training at Camp Toccoa, Georgia, after which he was sent to England and, later, jumped into France as part of the D-Day landings. Unfortunately, he and many others had been dropped in the wrong location, and he found himself lost for a time.
Shortly after landing in Normandy, Easy Company took the town of Carentan. While the five-day battle ended in an American victory, the fighting was enough to give him a case of “hysterical blindness.” Luckily, he recovered after only a few days, after which he was sent on a patrol.
During this patrol, Blithe was shot in the collarbone by a German sniper. While this is mentioned in Band of Brothers, the show’s portrayal of what happened next shows a lack of research on the producers’ part. In fact, the episode, titled “Carentan” got the Easy Company veteran’s fate completely wrong! It ends with the audience learning Blithe never recovered from the wound and died in 1948. However, he did survive.
Another matter the producers got wrong about Blithe is that he didn’t have a Southern accent. He was from Philadelphia, just like Edward “Babe” Heffron and William Guarnere.
Blithe spent the remainder of World War II Stateside, recovering from the wound. Following his discharge, he pursued a brief civilian career at Westinghouse Electric, before re-enlisting to serve in Korea. He was deployed overseas with the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team, with whom he received the Bronze and Silver Star, after which he was assigned to the Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) in Taiwan.
While on active duty in Germany in December 1967, Blithe complained on nausea. He was taken to hospital, where he was diagnosed with a perforated ulcer. He died not long after, and was buried at Arlington National Cemetery with full honors.
Edward ‘Babe’ Heffron
Joe Mazzello, William “Wild Bill” Guarnere, Edward “Babe” Heffron and James Badge Dale at a special screening of The Pacific, 2010. (Photo Credit: Jeff Fusco / Getty Images)
Edward “Babe” Heffron and William “Wild Bill” Guarnere were from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The two became fast friends. Following the release of Band of Brothers, they were often seen together, leading tours of the famous battle sites featured in the series. They also appeared as guest speakers at military gatherings, and even wrote a book about their experiences during WWII.
Heffron was working at New York Shipbuilding when he decided to enlist in the newly-formed airborne forces. He subsequently became a member of Easy Company, despite the fact he had a medical condition that locked up his hands and fingers. As with many of his fellow paratroopers, he participated in Operation Overlord, the Battle of the Bulge and Operation Market Garden. He also helped seize the Eagle’s Nest and was part of the liberation of Kaufering concentration camp.
It was during the Battle of the Bulge that Heffron risked his life for a fellow soldier. On New Year’s Day 1945, he was manning his machine gun in a foxhole when someone called out that his friend, John T. Julian, had been hit by enemy fire. While he attempted to retrieve his friend’s body, relentless German action prevented him from doing so. Thankfully, Julian’s squad was able to bring him back.
In Band of Brothers, Heffron was portrayed by Scottish actor, Robin Laing, who was acclaimed for his portrayal of the Easy Company veteran (a rather fun fact). The real-life Heffron can also be seen in the series. He has a cameo as an older Dutchman drinking wine and waving a small flag during the liberation of Eindhoven by US and British troops.
Following the Second World War, Heffron returned to civilian life, working for Publicker Industries, after which he worked on Philadelphia’s waterfront. He passed away on December 1, 2013, at the age of 90. Two years later, a statue of the Easy Company veteran was unveiled in South Philadelphia, where he used to live.
Herbert Sobel
Herbert Sobel + David Schwimmer as Herbert Sobel in Band of Brothers, 2001. (Photo Credit: 1. US Army / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain 2. mdew / HBO / Dreamworks Pictures / MovieStillsDB)
Herbert Sobel was portrayed by Friends (1994-2004) star, David Schwimmer, in Band of Brothers. A fun fact about this is that the majority of those who’d served with Easy Company agreed that the actor nailed his portrayal of the veteran.
Sobel volunteered to serve as a paratrooper in the US Army in March 1941, and was commissioned as a second lieutenant. He was quickly promoted to first lieutenant and put in charge of training Easy Company at Camp Toccoa. He was so effective in this role that he received yet another promotion, this time to the rank of captain.
Sobel was thoroughly hated by those with whom he served in Easy Company – and they had reason to feel this way. The part in Band of Brothers about the spaghetti was true. He waited until the men had chowed down on immense quantities of pasta before ordering them to climb Mount Currahee. Just like in the series, they puked their guts out. On top of this, Sobel actually yelled, “Hi-yo Silver!” He also revoked passes, fined men, and pitted them against one another and other companies.
Despite all that, many of the men credit Sobel’s training regimen with keeping them alive during their first days in combat; in fact, Easy Company’s recruits were so physically fit that they were allowed to skip the physical training portion of Jump School. While they referred to Sobel as “Him,” due to their dislike of saying his name, they gave him credit for toughening them up.
Sobel wasn’t a combat officer. He couldn’t navigate and his men hated him, making a real possibility of an “accident” on the front. He was assigned to a training battalion and then became a supply officer. After WWII, he settled down and started a family. He was also briefly recalled for service during the Korean War.
However, Sobel couldn’t seem to shake what he saw as the disgrace of being kept from combat; he had to tell people that he’d served with the famed 101st Airborne Division, but had never seen combat. In 1970, he attempted to take his own life. While he failed, he did lose his sight as a result.
Sobel was subsequently sent to a VA facility in Illinois, where he lived out the rest of his days until he died from malnutrition in 1987. He was given no funeral.
‘Why We Fight’
Band of Brothers, 2001. (Photo Credit: jeffw616 / HBO / Dreamworks Pictures / MovieStillsDB)
“Why We Fight” is the title of the ninth episode of Band of Brothers. Much of it concerns the liberation of a small concentration camp that the men of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment discovery while on patrol in Germany. Entering the site, they find the SS has abandoned the site, killing many of the prisoners. Those who remain are starving and ill.
Richard Winters, portrayed by Damian Lewis, orders that medical care, food and water are given to the inmates. However, with the arrival of the battalion commander and medical staff, the men of Easy Company have to return the prisoners to the camp, so they didn’t wander and spread disease. It’s also so they can receive proper care. Later in the episode, German civilians are forced to bury the victims, so they can see with their own eyes the true nature of the Führer‘s regime.
There is one major problem with this, and it’s an important fact to note: Easy Company never liberated a concentration camp. This is stated by Donald Malarkey in his autobiography, Easy Company Soldier: The Legendary Battles of a Sergeant from World War II’s “Band of Brothers”.
The reason for why this extra scene was included was because the producers wanted to convey the horror of the war in Europe, not just Easy Company’s experiences. To do this, they incorporated experiences from other units, especially scenes involving the liberation of camps, in an attempt to convey to the audience the real horrors soldiers and civilians encountered almost daily.
Forced apart by war, newlyweds and expectant parents Richard and Jean Porritt celebrated Valentine’s Day the only way they could: through greeting cards and love letters.
During World War II, the simple act of sending a valentine assumed a tremendous significance. Servicemen fighting overseas wrestled with homesickness as they endured dreadful conditions and faced constant danger, while stateside sweethearts and family members agonized over the fate of loved ones in the Armed Forces. Correspondence dramatically boosted morale and composing letters eased anxieties both on the Home Front and abroad.
So, when Valentine’s Day arrived, partners, friends, and family felt more compelled than ever to deliver heartwarming sentiments of love and affection to their significant others, children, relatives, and pals. This was often in the form of mass-produced greeting cards with handwritten notes inside. A large number, specifically designed with military personnel and objectives in mind, featured patriotic color schemes and combat-related puns.
A varied collection of service-related valentines. The National WWII Museum, Gift of Pamela and Marshall Lacey, 2013.354.
The Museum possesses an extensive array of wartime Valentine’s Day letters. One particularly moving collection of correspondence highlights just how much lovers relied on cards and letters to maintain contact, provide solace and support, strengthen emotional bonds, and foster love. Hundreds of exchanges between a newlywed couple over the course of a single year tell the intimate story of their unrelenting passion, dreams and desires, fears and failings, and growth—both personal and shared.
A Train Cabin Crush
Richard Porritt Sr. and Jean Wadsten (“Dick” and “Jeannie” in their correspondence) met in June 1944 aboard a westbound train headed for San Francisco. Ensign Porritt, commissioned in September the year prior, had orders to report to the USS Tazewell (APA-209), while Jean accompanied her visiting sister and four year old niece on their return journey home to the West Coast. Neither anticipated falling in love.
Richard first saw Jean, alongside her niece, during a stopover in Chicago. He found her extraordinarily beautiful but presumed that she was married. Back in the compartment Richard shared with two friends, he told of the stunning woman he sighted on the platform, and they proposed investigating her marital status further. Family lore claims that the men flipped a coin to decide who would break the ice and, as fate would have it, Richard won the honors of approaching Jean at the next terminal.
Upon discovering that she was unwed and Janet her niece, the guys became regular guests in her cabin. Jean considered them an amusing and convivial bunch but especially enjoyed Richard’s company, sharing laughs and good conversation with him for the remainder of the journey.
The two formed an unlikely bond—Jean, part of a close-knit family and the product of strict Lutheran rearing, and Richard, an impetuous child of divorced parents who spoke coarsely and acted without constraint. Yet, despite their wildly different upbringings and personalities, the two fell fast in love.
A Summer Courtship
Whenever time permitted, Richard arranged dates across San Francisco. He and Jean dined and danced their way through the city, often stopping to amble about in local parks. With each departure, their fondness for each other grew stronger, and before the summer’s end, Richard knew he wanted to get married. He proposed in a movie theater shortly thereafter, and Jean responded with an emphatic “Yes!”
The bride and groom tied the knot in September 1944 and honeymooned briefly in San Francisco. They explored the metropolis and enjoyed the varied entertainment it afforded, passing their evenings in classy restaurants and the nights in stylish hotels. Before long, the USS Tazewell was officially commissioned and ordered to Seattle, Washington, to load men and supplies before departing for Hawaii to embark garrison troops and join a convoy bound for the Philippines. That meant an extended period of separation.
Love Letters at Sea
Writing letters was the only recourse the pair had for an imminent and painful parting. The correspondence started at the beginning of December 1944 and continued through to the following November.
Out at sea, Richard begged for letters, as many as Jean was willing to write. He explained,
“You see, darling, mail is a fellow’s whole life out here and it’s the greatest morale builder there is.”
Richard Porritt Sr.
Jean did her best to oblige. In one of her earliest letters right before Christmas, she informed Richard that—if her suspicions were correct—he could plan to be a father. Though his absence pained him, the news filled him with unbridled excitement. Jean also kept her husband apprised of family affairs and current events at home. In return, he told Jean what he could reveal of his adventures and detailed his efforts to cut back on gambling and pick up a Bible. Ironically, he even vowed to get rid of his “sailor’s mouth.”
Wartime Valentines
The Porritt’s routinely professed their love for one another, but Valentine’s Day was a special occasion to show affection in a purposeful and meaningful way. Apparently, Jean could not restrict her boundless love to a single card and, instead, articulated her feelings in a series of romantic and uplifting Valentine’s Day letters.
The first she sent was in January, well in advance of the holiday. Inside of an illustrated fold-out card, complete with a self-deprecating poem, she wrote in her characteristic, teal-toned ink a short phrase that would become a common feature in her letters: “Love—guess who!” Below she doodled an arrow as if to instruct, “Flip to reveal the answer.” On the reverse, she wrote of how desperately she yearned for Richard’s return—as well as his touch—and how eagerly she awaited feeling the baby’s first kicks.
Less than a week passed before she dispatched two additional valentines. Even if Jean was exhausted and lacked the requisite energy to “write a real letter,” she could always depend on a greeting card to convey her emotions. In her opinion, a card could communicate “an awful lot of sentiment for a quarter.”
In early February, Jean shipped off what she referred to as Richard’s “real valentine,” her portrait to keep by his bedside to make his solitude a little more bearable. Then, just two days before Valentine’s Day—likely lonelier and more lovesick than usual—she penned one of her more intimate letters. She reminisced about the passionate nights they spent together before the exigencies of war forced them apart. On the final page she left an impression of her kiss in red lipstick and spritzed the stationary with the perfume she wore during the wedding and honeymoon, hoping the scent would evoke pleasant memories.
The final valentine Jean sent a month after the holiday passed. She conveniently had an unused card and appreciated its sentiment, so she simply struck through a few words to transform it into a general-purpose greeting card. Richard thoroughly enjoyed all of his letters, writing to Jean that he loved each one and read them many times. That he saved all her cards and letters is a testament to their significance during his service.
Looking to the Future
The end to hostilities could not come soon enough. Richard worried the war might steal the best years of his life and regularly ruminated about what the future held. He thought briefly about turning his naval stint into a career but detested the thought of any more separations. He also contemplated becoming a teacher but could not see himself as “the professor type.” As to where they would settle, he envisioned living near family along the North Atlantic seaboard or somewhere in California. Jean, on the other hand, did not care about the details—so long as they were together.
As the letters make clear, the one constant in their joint vision of the future was the plan to have a large family. In that regard, they were quite successful. Jean delivered their first child in August 1945, while Richard (then a Lieutenant Junior Grade) was still in the Pacific. They ultimately had four more children, though one sadly died in infancy.
Richard and Jean Porritt were happily married for 64 years and never missed a chance to convey their devotion to one another. The life they shared together, and the letters that kept them close when they were most distant, left an enduring legacy of the power of unconditional love and the importance of expressing it.
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA – FEBRUARY 11: Patrick Mahomes #15 of the Kansas City Chiefs celebrates with is after defeating the San Francisco 49ers 25-22 in overtime during Super Bowl LVIII at Allegiant Stadium on February 11, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)
The Kansas City Chiefs are champions, again. Patrick Mahomes engineered a touchdown drive in overtime, leading the Chiefs to their second straight Super Bowl victory.
Kansas City was down ten points to San Francisco early in the game but found a way back into the contest thanks to several mistakes by the 49ers.
Brittany Mahomes and Taylor Swift were at the game but did not sit in the same suite. The love was still there.
The wife of the Chiefs quarterback could be heard three words to Swift from the podium.
To learn to shoot from a bomber, World War II airmen went to the movies.
The ball turret, like this one on a B-17 in England in 1943, was designed small to reduce drag, so its gunner usually was the shortest man in the crew.
Gunners on World War II bombers had only a microsecond to estimate an attacking fighter’s range, speed, path of attack, and bullet ballistics. During attacks that themselves lasted merely seconds, the gunner had to make those mental calculations, then align his weapons and sights, praying that the guns wouldn’t jam or the barrels melt. To teach bomber crews how to survive these aerial attacks, the Army Air Forces opened schools in isolated locales with favorable flying conditions. The first opened in mid-1941—despite, in the words of an Army report, the “unsatisfactory moral conditions” of the location: Las Vegas.
Before the Army began preparations to enter World War II, aerial gunnery had been taught in more generalized Air Corps schools. But in the fall of 1941, the service opened a second school, near Harlingen, Texas. In the next two years, five more—another in Texas, two in Arizona, and two on Florida’s Gulf coast—followed. At full speed, the seven schools churned out 3,500 graduates a week, and nearly 300,000 by war’s end.
The six-week training course combined classwork in ballistics, range estimation, aircraft recognition, and Morse code with shooting practice. Firing at moving targets progressed from indoor pellet-gun galleries to outdoor skeet shooting with shotguns to, when they were available, .30- and .50-caliber machine gun ranges. The Army Air Forces committed virtually all of its bombers to combat, so students got airborne in the back seats of AT-6 Texan trainers and blasted away at targets towed by other aircraft.
Few AT-6 pilots enjoyed chauffeuring the novice gunners. When guns jammed, instead of landing to swap out the weapon, some pilots ordered their back-seaters to simply jettison ammunition to avoid a prolonged flight, while still giving the student credit for firing the rounds. Once, recalls Dale VanBlair, a former Harlingen student, someone from his barracks experienced an airborne gun jam. “ ‘Throw it over the side,’ ordered his pilot, meaning just the ammunition. But the knucklehead heaved both,” he says.
Gunnery schools made airplane recognition classes part of the coursework. In Bovington, England, in 1943, U.S. pilots learned from their British counterparts how to tell friend from foe.
Outfitted with turret mockups, the motor pool at Florida’s Buckingham Army Airfield gave students a chance to fire their machine guns on the go.
In 1944, airmen with the 401st Bombardment Group in England used the much simpler Jam-Handy trainer to “fire” their .50-caliber machine guns at projected images of attacking enemy aircraft.
With stations for four gunners, the Waller trainer used multiple projectors (at center) to throw pictures of attacking airplanes onto a spherical screen.
An Air Force officer with the Eighth Bomber Command teaches a sergeant how to operate a gun turret mockup at gunnery training in England. The Royal Air Force pioneered the concept of specialized schools for gunnery training.
Fighter pilots needed shooting practice too. A P-38 pilot (above) trains on a fixed target at an air base in Panama.
After their sessions with the mechanical trainers, students typically fired at towed sleeves, and counted the holes (right) later.
The Waller trainer’s projector handled nine rolls of film at a time; five were 35-mm motion picture film, and four were register bands that told students and their instructors when a “shot” hit its mark.
The ball turret, like this one on a B-17 in England in 1943, was designed small to reduce drag, so its gunner usually was the shortest man in the crew.
A turret gunner at the Fort Myers, Florida school refines his aim.
Aerial gunnery training had a make-do, try-anything quality, resulting in the design of 16 types of outdoor ranges. The gunnery schools also experimented with synthetic trainers to simulate aerial gunnery. Britain’s Royal Air Force pioneered the concept, but it was two Stateside entrepreneurs—Fred Waller and Henry Jamieson “Jam” Handy—who gave it an American twist: taking gunnery students to the movies.
A longtime Paramount Pictures special effects producer, Waller had also patented water skis and a remote-control wind direction and velocity indicator. Handy, a former Olympic swimmer, had operated an industrial film business.
Waller was an inveterate experimenter in visual perception and believed that judging distance depended on peripheral vision. He hoped to test his theory with an exhibit he helped plan for the 1939 New York World’s Fair. It was to have used 11 synchronized 16-mm projectors to project a film by the oil industry on an immense spherical wall. The project never came to fruition, but John Caron, Waller’s stepson, recalls being awestruck as an adolescent by the “11-eyed monster” taking form in a Long Island warehouse. A friend of Waller’s who was a senior naval officer also took note, imagining how it could be used to train Navy gunners. (The Army Air Forces eventually bought its Waller trainers through the Navy.)
Made of plywood panels, the Waller gunnery equipment screen was a quarter dome mounted on an I-beam frame. There were just five 35-mm projectors, but gun simulation and scoring features added bulk, as did a bunch of scanners, photocells, amplifiers, levers, and cables.
The unwieldy contraption defies easy description, but Eastman engineer James Reddig tried, and Waller quoted him in a technical paper he wrote for a 1945 conference in New York City: “Take the end off the Triborough Bridge. Put four men on it with their feet dangling in the air. [Add] a console like a church organ…. Then, take the Perisphere from the World’s Fair, cut it into 4 pieces, push the end of the Triborough Bridge into one of the pieces and you have a Waller Gunnery Trainer.”
Each of the four students (with “feet dangling”) sat behind a dummy gun consisting of a pair of handles—the right one equipped with a trigger that activated motor-driven vibrations to simulate recoil. The trigger pulls also recorded a burst on a “burst counter” display on the instructor’s console. The duration of the burst determined the number of fired rounds displayed on a separate bullet counter. A gunner’s “hits” were tracked on a synchronized scoring device linked to the gun. Scores were calculated from the number of rounds a student fired while on target. Real-time feedback came via a high-pitched tone in the students’ earphones, which communicated a hit.
The much simpler “Jam-Handy” trainer was designed originally for the Navy as a portable shipboard device. It used a more conventional screen and just two synchronized projectors, one displaying an attacking aircraft, the other a spot of light representing the ideal targeting point. The student wore polarized glasses to prevent him from seeing the spot, while an instructor coached him to improve his accuracy and scored the results.
For his more sophisticated (and expensive) equipment, Waller made grand claims, writing in his technical paper: “Each trainer…saved many millions of dollars in war cost, plus the more important saving in men and planes, which never can be properly estimated.” The United States and Britain bought a total of 75 Wallers for $5 million. (The cost of the Jam-Handys could not be determined.)
Young John Caron, who would serve in the Marines during the Korean War, was among the first to try out an operational Waller during its installation at Buckingham Army Airfield near Fort Myers, Florida. “I felt like a little prince playing the most incredible game ever,” he says.
The Waller went on to impress many gunnery students, including Bill Martinez, a gunner interviewed for the 2002 documentary Cinerama Adventure. “You started firing the guns and they’re going bluh, bluh, bluh, bluh…. Planes come in from here and here and here,” he told the interviewer. “I mean, you’re flying, you’re fighting…. You’re there.”
Jack Rotzien, a gunnery instructor at England’s Wendling Field, says that combat crews were enthusiastic about the device: “It was real fun for them—a change of pace, not the usual pain-in-the-butt training. They got really competitive with it.”
Other veterans I spoke with, though, have more measured memories of the Waller and Jam-Handy. Bob Davis trained at Buckingham Field in the summer of 1943 before flying 23 European missions as a B-24 radio-gunner (and enduring a year as a German POW). He had a handful of Waller sessions interspersed with his AT-6 flights. Although his earphones streamed flight and battle background sounds, he didn’t recall hearing audio feedback. “But maybe I wasn’t hitting anything,” he says. “I didn’t fire a real machine gun until I flew in the AT-6.”
Marion Hoffman, a B-17G tail gunner with 25 missions and six months as a POW, trained at Kingman in early 1944. While Hoffman had a dozen half-hour Jam-Handy sessions, more meaningful for him was firing from the waist of older B-17s as they soared over Nevada’s Yucca Flat. “We knew we’d be flying the new B-17Gs,” he recalls, “so firing from an actual airborne B-17 made me feel good—better prepared.” Hoffman and Davis both say that what made them feel ready for combat was the cumulative effect of many types of training.
Hal Bolce, who originally trained for B-17 ball turrets at Kingman in mid-1944, first experienced the Waller in early 1945 while being schooled as a B-29 tail gunner at Harlingen. “It was very realistic,” he says. “You could even see the fighter planes taking off from their runway and climb to your altitude.”
For Bolce, however, the real excitement came from firing bullets that were frangible—designed to break apart on impact—from a B-24 at a specially armored P-63 Kingcobra, called the Pinball Machine (see “Just Shoot Me,” Oct./Nov. 2010). The B-24 had been retrofitted with B-29 turrets, which had the most sophisticated gun control system of the war. “The B-29 gunnery system was quite accurate…. Bullets were hitting home,” he says. “The P-63 broke off after one pass and descended rapidly.” The frangible bullets may have entered screens placed in the wing root to keep the ammunition from crippling the engine. “We picked up a ‘May Day’ and learned that the Pinball made a forced belly landing—the only plane I shot down in the war,” says Bolce.
Just how did other Waller and Handy “gamers” do in shooting down the actual enemy? The December 2002 issue of Cinema Technology magazine published one estimate, very questionable and unsubstantiated, stating that the first Waller trainees “hit 80 percent of their combat targets and suffered no losses.” The real answer seems to be: Nobody knows. Army psychologists tasked with measuring the effectiveness of gunnery training argued that scores in real combat could not be used because of too many extraneous factors and too little available data. (Records for Pacific-based B-29 bombing groups in 1945, for example, show that roughly 14 percent of aerial skirmishes resulted in the B-29 gunner destroying or damaging his opponent, with an average expenditure of about 1,500 rounds per skirmish.)
The best anyone could do was determine increased proficiency within the bounds of training itself. And despite Waller’s extravagant claims, Army psychologists were underwhelmed. While one 1943 study found that Waller practice increased trainee firing proficiency significantly, the equipment was judged to lack realism and to create too much uncontrolled scoring variation among its gun stations. The Jam-Handy fared just as poorly: The projected images were model airplanes “flying” against a painted background, and the psychologists concluded that the trainer’s scoring was highly subjective.
Hal Bolce believes the Waller on which he trained was Harlingen’s first, but at the time he trained, another was under construction. Sensing war’s end, Bolce asked the Waller workers why they were still installing the equipment. “They had two contracts: one to put it together, the other to take it apart,” he says. “They had to finish installing before dismantling.”
Apparently not a scrap of the Jam-Handy or Waller trainers survived demobilization, but the two entrepreneurs’ careers did. Handy, who is estimated to have produced more than 7,000 films for the armed services during World War II, continued making industrial films (many of them for General Motors) showing salesmen how to push products, and consumers how to use what they’d bought. Waller, meanwhile, parlayed his gunnery trainer into a three-projector system with vastly enhanced sound and a wrap-around screen and called it Cinerama—the 1950s precursor of today’s IMAX.