A group at the firing range are dressed to the nines,

complete with sky-high stiletto spike heels. Not only do they

look sexy but they’re skilled with their firearms

So. Excellent. I want to be there the next time

they get freaky with those guns


Dana Scully in The X-Files (Gillian Anderson)




That image is so hot!

Women & Guns

The video above is "Girls’ Night Out At The Firing Range." Not only is it great to see women breaking boundaries but it's quite a turn-on too!

Host and writer Samantha Henig is a gun novice who goes to the only gun range in Manhattan, interviews the really interesting proprietor, and then she has her first go with a rifle.

She’s a little bewildered, but what’s great about this video is that Henig somehow managed to visit the range at the same time as a group of women who are there on an outing dressed to the nines, complete with sky-high stiletto spike heels.

Not only do they look sexy but they’re freakishly skilled with their firearms. So. Excellent. I want to be there the next time those women get frisky with the firearms.

Kristine's Got a Gun

My resolution? Go to the shooting range. Why, you may ask. Well, there are numerous reasons. For one, I've always wanted to shoot a gun ever since falling in love with sexy Dana Scully running around with her gun on The X-files.

I even harbored the secret dream of joining the FBI, finding a smoldering partner with an affinity for aliens, and you know...

More recently, I've gotten hooked on the Stephanie Plum series by Janet Evanovich, in which the heroine also gets to run around with a gun.

Or more likely, the gun is stuffed in her cookie jar at home or left accidentally unloaded in her purse, but that's not really the point.

The point is, at the end of the day, I need to know what to do in case I'm ever walking through the grocery store parking lot one night when a kidnapper jumps out from behind a van and grabs me.

I fight like a tiger and manage to kick the gun out of his hands. It slides across the ground and we both look at each other; our eyes meet and we lunge for it at the same time.

I wrap my fingers around the handle seconds before he does and swing around, pointing straight at him. But now what? I need to know what to do with the thing, don't I?

Enter my New Year's resolution and cue Ladies Night at Autrey's Armory. My pals Emily, Renee and Jen were all headed there after work one day and I decided to seize my chance at crossing off this resolution.

Of course, not being prepared in advance, I'm wearing my heels. But I figure, if Stephanie Plum can do it, why can't I? The four of us stroll into the shooting range, all girls and giggles. The men behind the counter are unimpressed.

We are asked what kind of gun we want (how the hell should we know?!) and pick a Glock. We are asked if we know how to use it (do we look like we know how to use it?!) and get the 15 second tutorial on loading and not killing each other.

Emily asks if anyone has ever been hurt at the range. The man tells her she would be the first, a thought not comforting in the slightest.

Then, decked out in our protective ear- and eyewear, we are pointed in the direction of the indoor shooting range and sent on our merry way. Alone. With a gun.

Now this disturbs me slightly. Here we are, four girls, only one of us who has ever shot a gun "a few times" before. Emily is visibly shaking from the thought of facing her fear of guns.

I can't stop giggling (and subsequently blame the nerves). Jen has the minute confidence of having shot her brother's gun (a few times) and Renee is trying to remember what her dad showed her earlier in the backyard about aiming and firing.

Yet we are allowed, alone and with no prior instruction, to take a gun, load it, aim it, and shoot it, all in an enclosed concrete space. Even now, the thought is slightly ludicrous.

Very quickly, we realize this is serious. The sharpshooter in the lane next to us firing round after round of viciously loud pops is enough to convince us of that.

If the insane level of noise isn't enough to unnerve us, his bullet casings are flying all over the place, landing burning hot on our arms and heads. We are so out of our league. I begin to wonder what we think were doing.

Emily has managed to memorize all 15 rules of the range during our five minute check-in and begins quoting them to me.

"The gun misfired?! That's rule eight! Put the gun down and get the instructor! Rule eight! Rule eight!" And it's hot, a stifling heat that adds to my nervous sweat and makes my hands so slippery I have trouble loading the gun.

But we did it. We all managed to load and shoot the gun. After every shot, we'd turn around for the smiles and thumbs ups from our friends.

We even managed to hit the target, a cheerful blue silhouette of a man who got hit far too many times in the nether-regions for comfort.

True, the target was hanging only a few feet away, but we still proudly displayed it on the wall at work, where it serves to intimidate our bothersome co-workers.

We walked away from the range proud of ourselves and hoping to return for some actual lessons one day.

Still, how strange, the thought that I was standing there with a loaded gun in my hands, heavy and hot to the touch. Squeeze the trigger and its over.

The gun has fired before I can even really understand what's happening. It seemed so unreal that many times I had to be reminded not to turn around with the gun still in my hands. Put it down, point it at the ground, those things can kill people.

The moral of the story? That would-be kidnapper in the grocery store parking lot better watch out now. I might not be able to accurately hit him, but at least I know what a gun in my hands feels like now.

I know what will happen if I squeeze the trigger, what the kick-back feels like. Next up, running in my heels while searching for the gun buried in my massive purse while chasing the bad guy I'm trying to arrest... Next year's resolution, perhaps?