I think you’re confused on what forum you’re in. But I’ll certainly take your opinion into consideration with all the respect and deference I feel it deserves. You don’t know what impact it makes on me, truly.
With that, I bow out of this silly hijack. Toodle-oo.
If Peter Morris is still reading this thread, here’s my rendition of the alphabet song on the left channel and “twinkle twinkle” on the right. I’m using the American version of the former, and since he’s British, he may be referring to a different version.
That reminds me: Olive Oyl. Olive oil (for cooking) is usually labeled “extra virgin”, so I’ve always kind of wondered if the cartoon character’s name was slyly chosen with the idea that neither Popeye nor Brutus could ever get anywhere with her without the other interfering. Essentially, the two sailors created a perpetual cock-blocking loop, leaving Olive “extra virgin”.
(And what the hell does “extra virgin” mean, anyway? Virginity, like pregnancy, is a binary proposition: you are or you’re not. There’s no room for “extra” or “slightly” or any other adjective of degree.)
I recently started collecting culinary mysteries. I was going through the mysteries in my library and I saw one called “Murder on the Vineyard.” “Ah, a wine culinary mystery!” I thought.
Turns out it was one of a series set on Martha’s Vineyard.
I grew up in Boston. I am a wino. I never once thought of Martha’s Vineyard in terms of grapes, wine, or inebrieation. :smack:
For some reason, perhaps the heavy snowfall around here recently, I was thinking about early-90s one hit wonder Snow and looked up the video for “Informer” (said one hit) online. I remember seeing this video back in the day, and when the song information came up on the screen I was thinking “Oh yeah, I remember his album was called 12 Inches of Snow, and it was funny because his name was Snow and there could be like a foot of snow on the ground and…:smack:”
In 1992 I was young enough that I honestly did not see the title 12 Inches of Snow as being anything other than a weather-related joke. It’s immediately obvious to me now that it’s a double-entendre with the primary meaning actually being a boast about the size of Snow’s…icicle…but this never occurred to me while “Informer” was still in the charts and I hadn’t thought about it since.
I had the same issue, but with different people: I thought that Justin Timberlake and Timbaland were either:
The same person, or (more likely),
That “Timbaland” was the name of Timberlake’s production company.
Oops. Oh well.
I’m reminded of the day when my grandfather, in trying to show me how in tune he was with modern society, accurately pointed out the Beatles in a drawing of the Beatles.
Wasn’t it in the early 90s when bands were trying to show how “old school” and “deep” they were by getting vinyl pressings of their albums released in addition to their tapes and CDs?
Just thinking aloud. I remember the Fugees doing that - and thinking how pretentious that seemed to me.
Uh, these days, pretty much everybody but shitty mainstream bands releases their stuff on vinyl. Maybe even some of the shitty mainstream bands, too. I’ve heard that for a lot of music stores (especially small independent ones), vinyl actually sells better than CDs: the hyper-nerds buy vinyl, while the people who used to buy CDs just buy MP3s instead.