You know there are YT channels dedicated to people watching stuff and reacting to it? Inside that there's a subset specific to black people reacting to stuff. And if you drill down deeper, there's another subset of videos of black people reacting to Ram Jam's "Black Betty."
They had pictures of him at the funeral, and his wife was like "My husband's a fighter pilot, you know?" It was the saddest part about the whole thing, she couldn't even understand she was at his funeral.
But then there was a barbecue and those people sure were happy.
Some time in the 80s he disappeared, turned out, he started a second family. Just went to work one day and never came back.
I went to his funeral and there was a man and woman there with a barbecue grill and an ice chest full of beer, and I walked up to the woman and said, "Your name is Cherry, why do I know that?"
She was like, "Ax? I used to bounce you on my knees at--" "Grandma Clemens' house in Corning, Kansas!" "You remember that?"
Yeah, it's pronounced giji-ko, right?. Apparently to non-English speakers, "diarrhea" is the most beautiful English word...
In any case because they are farm tools you can get licensing pretty young, the idea being that if you're in a rural area they won't send out a bus and you have to be able to drive at least to and from school.
They're low-altitude low-speed aircraft that people use on farms, or just for fun. Usually gas-powered 2-strokes, with steel tube frames, polymer sheeting for wings, and fixed landing gear.
I really wanted an ultralight when I was a kid, because it was a means to get your drivers license at 14, not 16, but then they literally changed the law when I hit 14.