. . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Cattle Drive"@en . . . . "A common plotline for a Western is the Cattle Drive. Ranches raise cattle, but then they need to get them to market. Usually the target is a town along the railroad, but occasionally the destination is somewhere else. A Western based on a Cattle Drive is more likely to star plain old Working cowboys as the stars, rather than using them as scenery. In Real Life these were among the great risks to a ranch. They need to transport the cattle to make money, but if something goes wrong they could lose everything. Dangers include a stampede, rustlers, snakes, storms, flash floods, drought, ect."@en . . . . "A common plotline for a Western is the Cattle Drive. Ranches raise cattle, but then they need to get them to market. Usually the target is a town along the railroad, but occasionally the destination is somewhere else. A Western based on a Cattle Drive is more likely to star plain old Working cowboys as the stars, rather than using them as scenery. In Real Life these were among the great risks to a ranch. They need to transport the cattle to make money, but if something goes wrong they could lose everything. Dangers include a stampede, rustlers, snakes, storms, flash floods, drought, ect. Often a form of MacGuffin Escort Mission. Examples of Cattle Drive include: \n* The 50's TV series Rawhide, starring a young Clint Eastwood, was about a cattle drive. \n* The first City Slickers movie was set around some city guys temporarily joining a ranch and helping on the cattle drive, facing just about every stereotypical problem on the ways, plus a few others. \n* The novel Centennial by James Michener. It was specifically mentioned how much more hazardous this was than a normal cattle drive, because it was a mixed gender herd for a new ranch, this was late in the season, and they'd have to go through hostile Indian territory. \n* The Cowboys. With all the men in the district gone, Wil Anderson is forced to use high schoolers to take his herd to market. \n* Red River, also starring John Wayne. \n* The novel The Log of a Cowboy by Andy Adams is a fictionalised account of a cattle drive written by a former working cowboy. \n* The characters from The Virginian appear leading one of these in the tele-movie The Gambler Returns: The Luck of Draw which features cameos by cast members of many classic TV westerns. \n* Stan Smith of American Dad dragooned his son and son's friends into a cattle drive through city streets in an effort to make them \"more manly.\" Hilarity Ensues, especially as Stan is more delusional than usual during the event. \n* The novel Lonesome Dove features a cattle drive to Montana, and manages to include the obligatory stampedes, rustlers, snakes, flash floods, storms, wild Indians, etc... and having to eat grasshoppers. \n* The movie Australia features a huge cattle drove across the Outback to Darwin. \n* Classic Australian film The Overlanders, herding cattle halfway across the continent under the threat of Japanese invasion. \n* A minor (and buggy) sidequest from Fallout 2 has the player escorting a cattle drive that can run into anything from bandits and scorpions to Super Mutants with rocket launchers and miniguns. \n* Predictably, the western \"Cattle Drive\" featured one of these. \n* In Broken Trail, rather than cattle, the animals being driven are horses, but apart from that the storyline follows the model of the Cattle Drive. \n* In the book and movie Old Yeller, one of the main plot point is that the father of the family has gone on a cattle drive, leaving his wife and two kids at home."@en . .