GuyX wrote:Man. You’re like an encyclopedia of Ghostbusters info. It’s impressive. How long you been a fan for? Is Ghostbusters your main fandom focus?
It never ceases to amaze me the knowledge fans like you have or the resources you’ve compiled over the years. Some guy whose name I’ve forgotten has a YouTube channel and almost every promotional appearance the GB’s made promoting GB2 in summer ‘89 he recorded on a VCR. Like…what a treasure to have. He had no idea decades later there would be this thing called the internet and a website called YouTube where his foresight recording TV and love of GB could be shared with the world. It’s beautiful in a way.
The internet can be such an ugly awful place but then you see forums like this. Sharing the love and, yes sometimes the not so loved, of Ghostbusters.
Thanks, GuyX, that's kind of you. Hard to say at this point, my main fandoms are pretty tied neck in neck, Ghostbusters and anything DC Comics animation. I've been fan since before I can remember, probably since 1988 then after 1997 off and on and off again but didn't get really 'serious' about GB and go all-in until 2009, 2010.
I reread the Beyond the Marquee interview and rewatched the video interview, P.K.E. Meter didn't come up oddly. But Mr. Dane did reference prop builders in the former while talking about Ecto-1, "Some confusion still exists about the extent of the work I did on the car. Although I did closely supervise the building of the Ecto-1 before it was shipped to New York, I did not physically build or paint any part of it. As I mentioned, it was the studio painters and the prop makers at The Burbank Studios Mill (now under the Warner Brothers name) that put it together. I did the fully detailed plans and elevations of the interior and exterior as well as detailed isometric drawings of the car and roof rack and then oversaw its construction, painting and acquiring of various parts. It was a very hands-on involvement without really touching the car." The Burbank Studios Mill. I wonder if they were also involved with most of the gear, too. There was one auction back in 2010 - 2012ish muddled the origin of who built the packs, implying Boss Films did. Or for that matter, if Modern Props helped build the P.K.E. Meter - what else if anything.
http://beyondthemarquee.com/34980