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dadaist 05-16-2003 10:46 AM

#760

dadaist 05-16-2003 10:46 AM

#761

dadaist 05-16-2003 10:47 AM

#762

I think 10 in a row is enough.

LixyChick 05-16-2003 10:48 AM

#763

I never get to play Trivial Pursuit either. People round here don't like knowing shit....but I just tell them anyway. Like, what "the whole nine yards means".....*I read Uncle Johns Bathroom Reader"! TeeHee!

Can I play too?

dadaist 05-16-2003 10:50 AM

You could always get one of those handheld Trivial Pursuit games. If Hasbro still makes them.

#764

LixyChick 05-16-2003 10:57 AM

#765

I have a lot of handheld things dadaist.....I don't want to clog my hands with games! LOL!

IAKaraokeGirl 05-16-2003 10:57 AM

Quote:
Originally posted by dadaist
#753

I'd really like to know who started the thing (apparently due to imdb) about Mel Blanc being allergic to carrots. He wasn't. Next person who says so I'm going to hit over the head with a copy of his autobiography.

Sorry to sound anal, but I just can't stand the spreading of misinformation.


#766

...which goes to prove, dadaist, that you can't believe everything you read, or everything on the internet. Now go get some coffee and put a smile on your face. :D

LixyChick 05-16-2003 11:01 AM

#767

Change your number IAKG! Oops!

IAKaraokeGirl 05-16-2003 11:06 AM

#768~Thanks, Lixy! Sometimes I can't keep up with this. :D

dicksbro 05-16-2003 11:07 AM

#769 ... fine!

dadaist 05-16-2003 11:33 AM

#770

Okay. But I'm still going to prove it.
Quoting from page 87, That's Not All Folks, paperback edition (December 1989, after his death), by Mel Blanc and Philip Bashe:

Quote:
"What's up Doc?" became the most famous ad-lib of my career. It was incomplete, however, without the sound of the rabbit nibbling on a carrot, which presented problems. First of all, I don't especially like carrots, at least not raw. And second, I found it impossible to chew, swallow, and be ready to say my next line. We tried substituting other vegetables, including apples and celery, but with unsatisfactory results. The solution was to stop recording so that I could spit out the carrot into a wastebasket and then proceed with the script. In the course of a recording session I usually went through enough carrots to fill several.
Bugs Bunny did for carrots what Popeye the Sailor did for spinach. How many lip-locked, head-swiveling children were coerced into eating their carrots by mothers cooing, "...but Bugs Bunny eats his carrots." If only they had known.

dadaist 05-16-2003 11:34 AM

#771

LixyChick 05-16-2003 11:50 AM

#772

NP IAKG....I rarely keep up either! LOL!

dadaist 05-16-2003 11:51 AM

#773

dicksbro 05-16-2003 12:10 PM

#774

dicksbro 05-16-2003 12:10 PM

#775

dadaist 05-16-2003 12:30 PM

#776

dadaist 05-16-2003 12:30 PM

#777

LixyChick 05-16-2003 12:41 PM

#778

Hands dadaist the dice!

dadaist 05-16-2003 01:09 PM

What do I need dice for?
dice.com maybe :P

#779

LixyChick 05-16-2003 01:19 PM

#780

Wonders if that number is significant to anyone?

dadaist 05-16-2003 01:23 PM

#781

WBBM-AM Employees and listeners perhaps. :P

Most of the 3 digit numbers that are of any importance around here are gone, except one.

#224 (overlay)
#630 (DuPage and most of Kane County)
#773 (Chicago outside the Loop area)
#708 (western and southern Cook)
#312 (Chicago Loop)

That leaves

#847 (northwest Cook and Lake)
#815 (surrounding area)

dadaist 05-16-2003 01:35 PM

#782

dadaist 05-16-2003 01:36 PM

#783

Back before they were simply 3 digit "prefixes", 782 and 783 were SUnset-2 and SUnset 3 in Fort Smith, AR.

IAKaraokeGirl 05-16-2003 02:01 PM

#784~In July of '84, I attended my second year of band camp at Morehead State University. ;)

IAKaraokeGirl 05-16-2003 02:05 PM

#785

From the Old Farmer's Almanac, this week:


Full Flower Moon, May 15

On May 15, 1940, women queued up for hours before stores opened, just to be sure of getting their share of a new women's-wear commodity -- nylon stockings. Thanks to public relations fanfare (exaggerated claims that a pair of stockings would "last forever") and limited stock, hosiery departments were stampeded and near-riots broke out. By the end of the year, 36 million pairs of stockings made with the new miracle fiber had been sold. Silk stockings became obsolete, and the term stockings itself fell into disuse. Instead, women called them simply "nylons."

IAKaraokeGirl 05-16-2003 02:06 PM

#786~ Soak mildew stains in lemon juice, and bleach in the sun.

IAKaraokeGirl 05-16-2003 02:06 PM

#787~The flowers of the dandelion and daisy close before rain.

IAKaraokeGirl 05-16-2003 02:07 PM

#788~For May:

New Moon: 1st day, 8th hour, 15th minute
First Quarter: 9th day, 7th hour, 53rd minute
Full Moon: 15th day, 23rd hour, 36th minute
Last Quarter: 22nd day, 20th hour, 31st minute
New Moon: 31st day, 0 hour, 20th minute

Ando3 05-16-2003 02:26 PM

#789

umm.. they are like in order or something?

dicksbro 05-16-2003 03:06 PM

#790

Sugarsprinkles 05-16-2003 03:48 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by Cheyanne
IAG, when we start playing Trivial Pursuit, I want you and SugarSprinkles on my team.... :D



#791

Works for me! I LOVE Trivial Pursuit and no one will play it with me!!!

IAKaraokeGirl 05-16-2003 04:20 PM

OMG--you have to see this
 
#792

I wonder how many amateur meteorologists we'll have now. ;)


http://www.almanac.com/weathercenter/pigspleen.html

IAKaraokeGirl 05-16-2003 04:21 PM

#793~During the Middle Ages, aristocrats often favored silver chopsticks since it was thought that silver would turn color if it came into contact with poison.

IAKaraokeGirl 05-16-2003 04:23 PM

#794~First college in the United States: Harvard, founded 1636 (and tuition has increased ever since)

FussyPucker 05-16-2003 04:24 PM

#795 - If I wanna know what the weather is like I stick my head out the window

IAKaraokeGirl 05-16-2003 04:25 PM

#796~ Some names for Santa around the world:

Belgium~Pere Noel
Brazil~Papai Noel
Chile~Viejo Pascuero (“Old Man Christmas”)
China~Dun Che Lao Ren (“Christmas Old Man”)
France~Pere Noel
Germany~Weihnachtsmann (“Christmas Man”)
Hawaii~Kanakaloka
Hungary~Mikulas (St. Nicholas)
Italy~Babbo Natale
Japan~Hoteiosho (a god or priest who bears gifts)
Norway~Julenissen (“Christmas gnome”)
Poland~Swiety Mikolaj (St. Nicholas)
Russia~Ded Moroz (“Grandfather Frost”)
Sweden~Jultomten (“Christmas brownie”)
United Kingdom~Father Christmas

IAKaraokeGirl 05-16-2003 04:26 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by FussyPucker
#795 - If I wanna know what the weather is like I stick my head out the window


#797~Yep, Fussy, that would be the quick way to do it. :D

Sharni 05-16-2003 04:29 PM

#798

dicksbro 05-16-2003 06:13 PM

#799


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