Actually a repeating phantasm or "free-repeater" is a class of ghost that repeats the same actions consistently. Sometimes it is difficult to catch the ghost permanently and the 'Buster must get creative to break the cycle or destroy whatever possessed item is binding it to the area.
We have an explicit re-haunting clause but if you'd like to purchase a long term service plan I'll have our admin fax you over some paperwork.
NocrenLt Futz, Back in ActionNorth CarolinaRegistered Userregular
What's the company stance on places with known hauntings? Say someone calls up in San Diego and the local branch there accidently takes down a ghost affiliated with the Whaley House. What happens at that point?
What's the company stance on places with known hauntings? Say someone calls up in San Diego and the local branch there accidently takes down a ghost affiliated with the Whaley House. What happens at that point?
I'm guessing some weird paranormal lawsuit?
Hey, that's between the client and the Whaley House. We just do the job we're paid to do. So long as we have our paperwork in order and we haven't trespassed on private property it ain't our problem!
Librarian's ghostLibrarian, Ghostbuster, and TimSporkRegistered Userregular
We have a pretty hefty lawsuit waiver as well when we first get on site. After that is signed we can pretty much do anything up to leveling a location to capture the spirit. So long at 5.37% of the structure is still standing we are not liable.
All other damage claims and possible tourism damage is handled by the city as written in the initial franchise paperwork as approved by local city council upon franchise formation.
Most cities are happy to have Ghostbusters on hand due to paranormal activity hurting their tourism income.
We have a pretty hefty lawsuit waiver as well when we first get on site. After that is signed we can pretty much do anything up to leveling a location to capture the spirit. So long at 5.37% of the structure is still standing we are not liable.
All other damage claims and possible tourism damage is handled by the city as written in the initial franchise paperwork as approved by local city council upon franchise formation.
Most cities are happy to have Ghostbusters on hand due to paranormal activity hurting their tourism income.
But what about places where paranormal activity encourages tourism? However the activity goes from mostly benign to mostly malignant and of course busting the ghost turns the attraction into just another old house/building?
0
Options
Librarian's ghostLibrarian, Ghostbuster, and TimSporkRegistered Userregular
We have a pretty hefty lawsuit waiver as well when we first get on site. After that is signed we can pretty much do anything up to leveling a location to capture the spirit. So long at 5.37% of the structure is still standing we are not liable.
All other damage claims and possible tourism damage is handled by the city as written in the initial franchise paperwork as approved by local city council upon franchise formation.
Most cities are happy to have Ghostbusters on hand due to paranormal activity hurting their tourism income.
But what about places where paranormal activity encourages tourism? However the activity goes from mostly benign to mostly malignant and of course busting the ghost turns the attraction into just another old house/building?
As Dr. Tank hammer touched upon, that would be up to the location owner. If they want to keep their ghost they won't call us! It's not like we run around busting ghosts pro bono!
We have a pretty hefty lawsuit waiver as well when we first get on site. After that is signed we can pretty much do anything up to leveling a location to capture the spirit. So long at 5.37% of the structure is still standing we are not liable.
All other damage claims and possible tourism damage is handled by the city as written in the initial franchise paperwork as approved by local city council upon franchise formation.
Most cities are happy to have Ghostbusters on hand due to paranormal activity hurting their tourism income.
But what about places where paranormal activity encourages tourism? However the activity goes from mostly benign to mostly malignant and of course busting the ghost turns the attraction into just another old house/building?
As Dr. Tank hammer touched upon, that would be up to the location owner. If they want to keep their ghost they won't call us! It's not like we run around busting ghosts pro bono!
Ahahahahaha
What a crazy thought. Pro bono. Ahahahaha.
Meddlin' MUSHROOMS you ghostbusters better stay outta crystal cove! We're the most haunted town in this great country of ours and it better stay that way!
A good case in point is Savannah, Georgia. We have franchisees in Macon and Atlanta but the last time we tried setting up a shop in Savannah the city council made it hell to clear the permits. They have a bustling tourism industry built around haunted inns and ghost walks so we're effectively being barred from opening near the city.
Of course they still let Zak Baggins and TAPS bungle through there. Tells you a lot right there.
A good case in point is Savannah, Georgia. We have franchisees in Macon and Atlanta but the last time we tried setting up a shop in Savannah the city council made it hell to clear the permits. They have a bustling tourism industry built around haunted inns and ghost walks so we're effectively being barred from opening near the city.
Of course they still let Zak Baggins and TAPS bungle through there. Tells you a lot right there.
Literally the only way I would watch one of those shows. :P
So what kind of training course/certification is involved?
I mean you do just hand someone that walks off the street an unlicensed nuclear accelerator/positron collider do you?
:bigfrown:
Do you? :wonk:
Well there is a battery of questions an applicant will go through. Most of this is to weed out skeptics or crazies we get off the street.
However, if they want to do the work we get them strapped into a pack asap!
There is an official training video but Dr. Venkman somehow taped over half of the master copy with an episode of the X-files. After all these years, either no one has noticed, none of the franchises have bothered to report the problem, or HQ just doesn't care.
This does go to explain why every every Ghostbuster since the founder all seem to know about the Flukeman.
So what kind of training course/certification is involved?
I mean you do just hand someone that walks off the street an unlicensed nuclear accelerator/positron collider do you?
:bigfrown:
Do you? :wonk:
Well there is a battery of questions an applicant will go through. Most of this is to weed out skeptics or crazies we get off the street.
However, if they want to do the work we get them strapped into a pack asap!
There is an official training video but Dr. Venkman somehow taped over half of the master copy with an episode of the X-files. After all these years, either no one has noticed, none of the franchises have bothered to report the problem, or HQ just doesn't care.
This does go to explain why every every Ghostbuster since the founder all seem to know about the Flukeman.
Protip for answering said questions. If asked for "Number of ghosts you're afraid of", answer "zero".
0
Options
Librarian's ghostLibrarian, Ghostbuster, and TimSporkRegistered Userregular
So what kind of training course/certification is involved?
I mean you do just hand someone that walks off the street an unlicensed nuclear accelerator/positron collider do you?
:bigfrown:
Do you? :wonk:
Well there is a battery of questions an applicant will go through. Most of this is to weed out skeptics or crazies we get off the street.
However, if they want to do the work we get them strapped into a pack asap!
There is an official training video but Dr. Venkman somehow taped over half of the master copy with an episode of the X-files. After all these years, either no one has noticed, none of the franchises have bothered to report the problem, or HQ just doesn't care.
This does go to explain why every every Ghostbuster since the founder all seem to know about the Flukeman.
Protip for answering said questions. If asked for "Number of ghosts you're afraid of", answer "zero".
You are allowed one. However it must be very described in great detail on application form 22/c and you must be prepared to be ridiculed mercilessly if we find it funny at all.
Also note, that any "Fill in the blank" options for multiple choice answers should be carefully regarded as a potential trap.
I almost answered that "Bustin' makes me feel:" question with "A deep and existential terror as the universe reveals to my unprepared mind things that mankind was not meant to know".
Dodged a bullet there.
0
Options
Librarian's ghostLibrarian, Ghostbuster, and TimSporkRegistered Userregular
Also note, that any "Fill in the blank" options for multiple choice answers should be carefully regarded as a potential trap.
I almost answered that "Bustin' makes me feel:" question with "A deep and existential terror as the universe reveals to my unprepared mind things that mankind was not meant to know".
Ghostbusters International Inc. is known for operating some of the most interesting company vehicles around. Several are specialized for specific tasks or terrain.
The Ecto-1
The original vehicle of the Ghostbusters, is a 1959 Cadillac Miller Meteor Futura model ambulance/hearse. It was in a state of disrepair, needing suspension work, shocks, brakes, brake pads, lining, a new steering box, transmission, rear-end, o-rings, muffler and a little wiring among other repairs.
Dr. Ray Stantz did most of the mechanical work on the vehicle himself, adding lights and sirens and a roof rack full of sensory equipment that would help the team track down paranormal threats. Originally the car was supposed to remain black but since the team operates largely at night it was impractical and hazardous so the high-visibility of the white and red color scheme was adopted which persists in many company vehicles to this day.
For the movie, Dan Aykroyd originally wanted the Ectomobile to be outfitted with futuristic technology and have it’s own sentience. It could even cloak itself to escape authorities. One cut scene would have had it vaporize a parking ticket left on the window by a traffic cop.
Late in shooting the then-24-year-old Cadillac broke down on the Brooklyn Bridge and held up traffic until the film crew and NYPD could get it towed off the bridge. The state the car when it is seen in Ghostbusters 2 required no special effects as it really was filthy, backfiring and billowing smoke from being left to rot out on a Columbia backlot after promotional work finished on the first movie. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BS8QAfSDwNE
Ecto-1A
By 1989 the string of lawsuits and restraining orders placed on Ghostbusters Inc had prevented them from operating their business and earning the income required to maintain the Ecto-1 for several years. After having the ban lifted by the New York courts after proving the existence of a psychomagnetheric slime river and saving a judge from an attack by the ghosts of two vengeful convicted murders the team could finally renovate the vehicle.
New additions to the Ecto-1 included more lightbars, electronic signage and a satellite dish among other additions. This also increased the already-considerable weight of the car, making high-speed turns and sudden stops highly dangerous but founder Dr. Peter Venkman most-likely insisted on the garish display to show New Yorkers that they were, indeed, back in business. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XgkhKVpKl_4
The Ecto-1A in the movie is a different Cadillac from the original, as it was more cost-effective to build it anew. It is the same 1959 model with the obvious differences being the license plate and roof rack. Unlike the original movie car, this machine has not been restored and is still in extreme disrepair somewhere on studio property, much to the dismay of fans.
Manhattan is an island. Sometimes the creeps don’t always stay on land. When that happens a team needs to be able to give chase. Dr. Stantz took a similar approach to how he built the original Ecto-1. The boat is built from an old New York City tugboat, possibly several Frankensteined together. It’s seaworthiness is questionable at best but there are rarely other options available. It transported the team to Shandor Island in the Hudson River during the 1991 Thanksgiving incident but was nearly sunk when the island collapsed back into the water. It also served as transport to Hart Island in 1996 when the spirit of Vigo the Carpathian used the ongoing struggle with the god Tiamat to escape his painting again and turn the restless spirits of the island into his personal army. There is no recorded use of the craft since then and it is likely dry-docked.
The Ecto-2 (mobile containment unit)
While the animated series had its own Ecto-2 back in the late 1980s (an auto-gyro with folding wings), the actual Ghostbusters’ Ecto-2 was a converted recreational vehicle used in the mid-90s when the city of New York loaned out Ghostbusters Inc.’s services to other major cities around the country. The vehicle is unique for being built to carry the first mobile ecto-containment unit, a nuclear-powered laser containment grid similar to the one built into the basement of the Ghostbusters New York headquarters and since replicated throughout most of the major franchise branches.
...
(Summoning Colorado franchisee @Bommerjinks to the thread)
Tank, you may want to look into getting your keyboard exorcised, or whatever it is Ghostbusters call it when they leave a building (mostly) intact after they're done busting. Clearly, your hours spent working in such a ghost heavy environment has caused it to develop gremlins, or some other poltergeist like spirit.
Either that, or it was a typo when you tried to summon @Boomerjinks by misspelling his name. Haven't seen him post recently though, don't know how often he comes around these parts anymore.
Call it life imitating art or vice-versa but something about a small, ultra-light helicopter compelled Dr. Ray Stantz to buy yet-another impractical vehicle to bust ghosts from. The Ecto-gyro very clearly is based on the cartoon version of the Ecto-2 though it lack’s the later’s ability to fold-up inside the back of the Ecto-1 (cartoon physics just don’t translate well to actual physical dimensions) it’s just as capable of flying above the city to combat large or high-altitude ghosts. The auto-gyro seats two, one pilot and one passenger to operate the proton pack or other equipment.
Ecto-15
The official vehicle of Brian Welsh’s Chicago Ghostbusters is built from a modified, stretch cab done in the traditional company color scheme and outfitted with the standard array of sensory equipment. It lacks the hatchback storage of the Miller Meteor ambulance but the gull-wing door added to the side allows somewhat-easy access to packs and other equipment.
The design is based on the original Ecto-1 plans before they were altered to fit the 1959 Cadillac ambulance.
...
(Summoning Colorado franchisee @Bommerjinks to the thread)
Tank, you may want to look into getting your keyboard exorcised, or whatever it is Ghostbusters call it when they leave a building (mostly) intact after they're done busting. Clearly, your hours spent working in such a ghost heavy environment has caused it to develop gremlins, or some other poltergeist like spirit.
Either that, or it was a typo when you tried to summon Boomerjinks by misspelling his name. Haven't seen him post recently though, don't know how often he comes around these parts anymore.
It's not a gremlin, they leave behind telltale traces of lubricating ectoplasm. It helps with loosening screws and bolts. I will sweep my laptop for PKE valances just to be sure, though. Thank you.
Is it's hard to talk about Ghostbusters as a franchise, because I don't want anyone to break character. :biggrin:
You could talk about the movie they made about the New York crew back in the 80s following the Gozer incident. Zeddemore was a little amused at the casting choices but Venkman was annoyed that Bill Murray didn't look a thing like him.
Or you could talk about the cartoon they made, or the new movies that are supposedly in the works.
Just keep in mind that those things are not real. They're fiction. The real job is much less glamorous.
Posts
We have an explicit re-haunting clause but if you'd like to purchase a long term service plan I'll have our admin fax you over some paperwork.
I'm guessing some weird paranormal lawsuit?
Hey, that's between the client and the Whaley House. We just do the job we're paid to do. So long as we have our paperwork in order and we haven't trespassed on private property it ain't our problem!
All other damage claims and possible tourism damage is handled by the city as written in the initial franchise paperwork as approved by local city council upon franchise formation.
Most cities are happy to have Ghostbusters on hand due to paranormal activity hurting their tourism income.
Looking at you Louisiana.
But what about places where paranormal activity encourages tourism? However the activity goes from mostly benign to mostly malignant and of course busting the ghost turns the attraction into just another old house/building?
As Dr. Tank hammer touched upon, that would be up to the location owner. If they want to keep their ghost they won't call us! It's not like we run around busting ghosts pro bono!
Ahahahahaha
What a crazy thought. Pro bono. Ahahahaha.
Meddlin' MUSHROOMS you ghostbusters better stay outta crystal cove! We're the most haunted town in this great country of ours and it better stay that way!
They seem to have existed for a single day and were then run out of town by an angry mob.
Of course they still let Zak Baggins and TAPS bungle through there. Tells you a lot right there.
@Melding can chime in!
Trust the professionals.
turns out the real free roaming vapour, is man's inhumanity to man.
Literally the only way I would watch one of those shows. :P
I mean you do just hand someone that walks off the street an unlicensed nuclear accelerator/positron collider do you?
:bigfrown:
Do you? :wonk:
That does seem to be exactly what happened in the first movie.
Well there is a battery of questions an applicant will go through. Most of this is to weed out skeptics or crazies we get off the street.
However, if they want to do the work we get them strapped into a pack asap!
There is an official training video but Dr. Venkman somehow taped over half of the master copy with an episode of the X-files. After all these years, either no one has noticed, none of the franchises have bothered to report the problem, or HQ just doesn't care.
This does go to explain why every every Ghostbuster since the founder all seem to know about the Flukeman.
Protip for answering said questions. If asked for "Number of ghosts you're afraid of", answer "zero".
You are allowed one. However it must be very described in great detail on application form 22/c and you must be prepared to be ridiculed mercilessly if we find it funny at all.
Q. Bustin' makes me feel ___________.
A.
I almost answered that "Bustin' makes me feel:" question with "A deep and existential terror as the universe reveals to my unprepared mind things that mankind was not meant to know".
Dodged a bullet there.
Actually that would be half-credit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Naze4G_tubY
(Summoning Colorado franchisee @Boomerjinks to the thread)
Ghostbusters International Inc. is known for operating some of the most interesting company vehicles around. Several are specialized for specific tasks or terrain.
The Ecto-1
The original vehicle of the Ghostbusters, is a 1959 Cadillac Miller Meteor Futura model ambulance/hearse. It was in a state of disrepair, needing suspension work, shocks, brakes, brake pads, lining, a new steering box, transmission, rear-end, o-rings, muffler and a little wiring among other repairs.
Dr. Ray Stantz did most of the mechanical work on the vehicle himself, adding lights and sirens and a roof rack full of sensory equipment that would help the team track down paranormal threats. Originally the car was supposed to remain black but since the team operates largely at night it was impractical and hazardous so the high-visibility of the white and red color scheme was adopted which persists in many company vehicles to this day.
For the movie, Dan Aykroyd originally wanted the Ectomobile to be outfitted with futuristic technology and have it’s own sentience. It could even cloak itself to escape authorities. One cut scene would have had it vaporize a parking ticket left on the window by a traffic cop.
Late in shooting the then-24-year-old Cadillac broke down on the Brooklyn Bridge and held up traffic until the film crew and NYPD could get it towed off the bridge. The state the car when it is seen in Ghostbusters 2 required no special effects as it really was filthy, backfiring and billowing smoke from being left to rot out on a Columbia backlot after promotional work finished on the first movie.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BS8QAfSDwNE
Ecto-1A
By 1989 the string of lawsuits and restraining orders placed on Ghostbusters Inc had prevented them from operating their business and earning the income required to maintain the Ecto-1 for several years. After having the ban lifted by the New York courts after proving the existence of a psychomagnetheric slime river and saving a judge from an attack by the ghosts of two vengeful convicted murders the team could finally renovate the vehicle.
New additions to the Ecto-1 included more lightbars, electronic signage and a satellite dish among other additions. This also increased the already-considerable weight of the car, making high-speed turns and sudden stops highly dangerous but founder Dr. Peter Venkman most-likely insisted on the garish display to show New Yorkers that they were, indeed, back in business.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XgkhKVpKl_4
The Ecto-1A in the movie is a different Cadillac from the original, as it was more cost-effective to build it anew. It is the same 1959 model with the obvious differences being the license plate and roof rack. Unlike the original movie car, this machine has not been restored and is still in extreme disrepair somewhere on studio property, much to the dismay of fans.
The Ecto Marine-8
Manhattan is an island. Sometimes the creeps don’t always stay on land. When that happens a team needs to be able to give chase. Dr. Stantz took a similar approach to how he built the original Ecto-1. The boat is built from an old New York City tugboat, possibly several Frankensteined together. It’s seaworthiness is questionable at best but there are rarely other options available. It transported the team to Shandor Island in the Hudson River during the 1991 Thanksgiving incident but was nearly sunk when the island collapsed back into the water. It also served as transport to Hart Island in 1996 when the spirit of Vigo the Carpathian used the ongoing struggle with the god Tiamat to escape his painting again and turn the restless spirits of the island into his personal army. There is no recorded use of the craft since then and it is likely dry-docked.
The Ecto-2 (mobile containment unit)
While the animated series had its own Ecto-2 back in the late 1980s (an auto-gyro with folding wings), the actual Ghostbusters’ Ecto-2 was a converted recreational vehicle used in the mid-90s when the city of New York loaned out Ghostbusters Inc.’s services to other major cities around the country. The vehicle is unique for being built to carry the first mobile ecto-containment unit, a nuclear-powered laser containment grid similar to the one built into the basement of the Ghostbusters New York headquarters and since replicated throughout most of the major franchise branches.
Either that, or it was a typo when you tried to summon @Boomerjinks by misspelling his name. Haven't seen him post recently though, don't know how often he comes around these parts anymore.
Ecto-Gyro
Call it life imitating art or vice-versa but something about a small, ultra-light helicopter compelled Dr. Ray Stantz to buy yet-another impractical vehicle to bust ghosts from. The Ecto-gyro very clearly is based on the cartoon version of the Ecto-2 though it lack’s the later’s ability to fold-up inside the back of the Ecto-1 (cartoon physics just don’t translate well to actual physical dimensions) it’s just as capable of flying above the city to combat large or high-altitude ghosts. The auto-gyro seats two, one pilot and one passenger to operate the proton pack or other equipment.
Ecto-15
The official vehicle of Brian Welsh’s Chicago Ghostbusters is built from a modified, stretch cab done in the traditional company color scheme and outfitted with the standard array of sensory equipment. It lacks the hatchback storage of the Miller Meteor ambulance but the gull-wing door added to the side allows somewhat-easy access to packs and other equipment.
The design is based on the original Ecto-1 plans before they were altered to fit the 1959 Cadillac ambulance.
It's not a gremlin, they leave behind telltale traces of lubricating ectoplasm. It helps with loosening screws and bolts. I will sweep my laptop for PKE valances just to be sure, though. Thank you.
No, it's just a door.
A reminder of what is not a toy,
Proton Packs.
Yeah, I guess you're right.
My only regret
You could talk about the movie they made about the New York crew back in the 80s following the Gozer incident. Zeddemore was a little amused at the casting choices but Venkman was annoyed that Bill Murray didn't look a thing like him.
Or you could talk about the cartoon they made, or the new movies that are supposedly in the works.
Just keep in mind that those things are not real. They're fiction. The real job is much less glamorous.
{Twitter, Everybody's doing it. }{Writing and Story Blog}