I always wondered how they selected the more basic personnel for the Stargate program.
All the top scientists are obviously the vest in their field, but how did they select say... the janitors or the toilet cleaners? Were they the best janitors and toilet cleaners in the world?
And among the military personnel you had people of low rank like Airman and Private
The cheapest
>>82604236
Sounds like cheap people would be bad at keeping secrets.
maybe the privates did it
but then again, how would a private get into a sevret base
>>82605072
>join Marines
>Black suit comes in
>Asks about "going interesting places"
>Pass security tests
>No pot, no alcohol, perfect biography
>Can't wait to get into CIA secret black ops stuff
>Clean toilets in Antarctica for whole contract time.
Never saw this show, can someone tell me if it's worth watching?
>>82606612
Watch it, it's great, season 1/2 has some crap episodes tho, so force yourself through it.
>>82605632
kek
but they should have some advancing possibility tho
>>82604189
Probably hire relatives of the scientists or some shit
>>82606612
It takes about a season and a half to find it's bearings (Shanks and Anderson are practically doing impressions of the movie characters until they get the freedom to explore the role) but there are enough gems to make them worth watching.
People throw around the word "comfy" a lot but SG1 is genuinely an entertaining show.
It's got it's your usual rubber-mask shenanigans but there's also a few politics based episodes (both Earth, other planets, and interplanetary) and the cast has good chemistry.
It's also fun tracking Shanks and Judge's behind the scenes friendship. Shanks gets totally jacked
>>82604189
You just tell the cleaning teams, absolutely fucking nothing.
>vet them
>only use ones with years of experience
>from some ex forces company
Or they make the lower ranks do it, again keeping compartmentalising (spelling) so all they think is its any other nuclear bunker they are cleaning.
Just kidnap mexicans that don't understand english to do all the literal dirty work, like what they did with the manhattan project.
>>82604189
All non scientist staff are from the military. There might be a few private contractors like electrians or janitors with adequate security clearing because of long trustfull previous contracts.
But you can be pretty sure that most work around sensible installations like the gate room for example will be done by military personel.
Not everyone in the army is a frontline grunt. There are enough clercs cooks electrians and what not.
>>82604189
Conscript the taxi drivers and pilots that brought the important personnel to the location. Viola, secrecy preserved.
Of course, they must work in seclusion under threat of violence until they die.
>>82606612
Watch it! Best sci fi show of the late 90's early 00's. I remember watching it every week with my dad back then. Those were fun times.
I rewatched them with my gf last year. Even those "bad" last seasons are more fun than most modern sci fi shows. Atlantis is good too. Universe is the only truly shit one.
>>82604189
I dated a chick that worked in a janitorial service that did contract work for an army depot. She said they had to sign waivers and wear special id whenever they worked there. There was one time though when the President was in town and he was scheduled for a visit, she said even though he wasn't going to be there til hours after they left, everyone on the crew had a personal watcher assigned to them. She said it was creepy as hell having a guy with a rifle watching you work.
Anywho, I don't know how similar the Air Force would be, but I wouldn't be surprised if they just didn't use private contractors as well. Apparently those contracts are fucking huge and are reason enough to make anyone loyal enough to scrub a toilet.