Until recently the B-2s had to fly all the way from their home base to the Middle East just to complete their sorties. That's a long time to be in a
cockpit and then have to go into combat mode. I bet a lot of people saw them flying overhead on their way to and from the theater. When I was living
in Chicago I would occasionally see a B-52. And this was before we even went to Afghanistan.


I went to an airshow in sothern Wisconsin the year the B-2 was revealed. The guy on the PA said during a lull in the flights that we were going
to get to see a stealth bomber, but we had to keep our eyes peeled. He explained that the B-2 put out sound waves where the waves were perfectly
offset from its engine sound, so no noise was made. It also had a special paint that would take the image opposite of it and project it downward,
essensially making it invisible. The true irony was, as all this was leading to culmination, he said their radar had detected the bombers, and
they were just about to be visible. Then he pointed out where it was, that it just streaked by at low altitude, and asked people to cheer who had seen
it.
) because, first, it has such an unusual
shape, but also because I have an idea of what its capable of. I don't (often), after all, sit and stare in awe of a jet liner, but I'll watch a
personal prop fly overhead. It's unusual, not the norm (I live right next to the busiest airport in the world, so jet liners are very much the norm),
so we stare. Like mj13 alluded to, they're not all that impressive if you see them all the time flying over. If you don't, though, wow!
I was
aware of the air show 
