I do WWII combat-photo reenacting using 1930's and 1940's cameras and black and white film. It *really* makes you appreciate the skill and courage of the original photographers. It's hard enough to get good results in totally non-lethal simulated warfare. How they were able to do it in real...
One of my uncles had a tire store and he would give me sets of tires for free that had patches or other defects such that he couldn't sell them. He said if they went bad I could get out and change the tire and get some exercise.
Usually they would just go flat or come apart gradually, but once...
Agree 100% that the so-called "militarization" of the police is not a recent phenomenon. I have photos from the post-WWI era showing cops with Lewis light machine guns and Army trench shotguns with long bayonets attached. Another photo is of a police motorcycle with a Colt-Marlin...
At the time that the cartoon was made, most people would catch the WWII military references - today, probably not one person in 1000 would - unfortunately.
Here in Nashville we have several drive-in's but they are all part of a chain/franchise. You place your order via speaker from your car and then the car-hops bring your food and pick up the money. I eat at one of those occasionally.
As for diner's, we have one here that is locally famous...
No matter how sympathetic you might be to a hobo's plight, it wouldn't be wise to hire one to cut your grass or chop wood in the modern world. If they cut off a toe they would sue you for a million bucks...
I thought that the janitors were trying to fool the principal into thinking they were doing more work than they actually were by putting down fake dirt and then sweeping it up. I couldn't think of any other reason for doing it.
"I used to think you could buy anything imaginable from Sears."...
"He and his *consultants* believed...''
Now there's the problem: As Dogbert (from "Dilbert") says, "I like to con people and and I like to insult people - I'm going to become a "consultant".
Fred Silverman and the Boys from Marketing missed that one for sure in terms of demographics. Somehow they didn't get the idea that the Baby-Boomers (not-middle-aged!) grew up on "Mad Magazine" and then went on to "National Lampoon", so we were perfect customers for the surrealistic humor in...
LizzieM has this "Green Acres" situation well figured out. My main enjoyment of the show - which was a lot - was the total surrealism of the humor and situations.
If you haven't seen it, think "Twilight Zone" meets "I Love Lucy".
Two of my favorite examples:
1. Oliver comes in to the kitchen...
I rented a new Ford a couple of years ago and was driving down the road and just wanted to turn up the radio volume. I hit the wrong button and it started to recite the satellite radio menu - station by station. I tried to get it to quit but could not.
I pulled over and stopped and starting...
It's not really age-related, but on the subject of acronym misuse you can't beat government science or environmental agencies. I worked for one for a while.
I remember one case in which there was an acronym (ABCD) whose third letter C was the first letter of a second acronym (CGZ) whose last...
I feel the same way about George Lucas and "American Graffiti". He was four years older than me, but since there was ~ 2-4 years of time-lag for the California car-culture to diffuse to the middle part of the country, he was my contemporary in terms of attitudes and activities.
To paraphrase...
I have read on several occasions that Mel Blanc was combining Bronx and Brooklyn accents. To a Southerner, there are no identifiable internal differences in Bugs' speech. Bugs Bunny just talks like a Yankee...
On the other hand, I can name and usually identify at least a dozen regional...
As an amoeba - I have no problem with that definition. (There was even a movie that we Baby-Boomer kids liked that fits that analogy well: "The Blob" (Steve McQueen, 1958))
As for opinions - yours or mine - I have no problem with those, even if they are opposite in nature. However, I will...
"It was the specific desire of broadcasters to narrowcast to Boomer teens in the late fifties and early sixties that really started the transition to rigid "format" radio -- again as I said before, commerce and marketing started that ball rolling."
We (Baby-Boomer teenagers) wanted to listen...
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