What two people or things do you always confuse?

Goofy and Pluto.

[ul]
[li]Jamie Farr and Jim Nabors look similar to me (at least in their heydays) and I’d often confuse the two.[/li][li]I always thought I was the only one who got Dustin Hoffman and Robert DiNiro mixed up.[/li][li]I used to get Vermont and New Hampshire mixed up until I realized that Vermont is vaguely in the shape of a V. I imagine some folks from the eastern U.S. have trouble distinguishing Colorado and Wyoming on an unlabeled map.[/li][li]Ever since Genesis went pop I have trouble distinguishing such songs from the ones that are by Phil Collins as a soloist.[/li][li]An ex-girlfriend who was into all of Stephen Spielberg’s and George Lucas’s movies also collected the soundtracks to these movies, many of which were composed by John Williams. One day she got a John Williams CD that turned out to be acoustical guitar pieces, not the same John Williams at all.[/li][li]When I was a kid I was afraid to mention the name of the Canadian city Regina since I had it confused with the word “vagina”.[/li][/ul]

One way to distinguish the two is that COlorado is one of the states that make up the “Four COrners” region.

This thread is representative of why I try not to date women who’s names begin with an “S” sound! Susan, Cindy, Sarah, whatever!!! All it does is get me into trouble.

Neil Postman and Norman Mailer.

There are a bunch of others, but this one always makes me laugh when I catch myself.

I’m pretty good with geography, but I always mix up Vermont and New Hampshire.

Is there any kind of trick to remembering which is which?

I mean, which one is on the left, and which is on the right…I know Vermont looks sort of like a V.

Johann Strauss I and Johann Strauss II. Johann Strauss I, the dad, is an Austrian composer best known for his waltzes. Johann Strauss II, the son, is an Austrian composer best known for his waltzes. I mean, seriously. (And if that isn’t bad enough, there’s a third one.)

I also used to mix up the first Scipio Africanus, who fought Hannibal in the Second Punic War, and the second Scipio Africanus, his grandkid-by-adoption, who levelled Carthage in the Third Punic War. Getting better at that now, though. Of course, there’s a whole bunch of more Scipios to mix up.

Also, count me in among those who think that Kate Winslet and Cate Blanchett should just be combined into one actress already.

For a long time, I confused them with Penn & Teller. Probably the whole two-guys-doing-shows-in-Vegas thing.

Which reminds me of when I used to always confuse Laurel & Hardy with Abbott & Costello.

I also have been known to confuse Patrick Swayze with Kurt Russell. They should play brothers in a movie some day.

I have always heard references to the Bill Paxton/Pullman confusion, but I have always thought they were very different actors. It has to be the name similarity, because they are so different from each other. Maybe it stands out to me because I like them both, but I do realize that they have a similar dry delivery. For a while, I thought Bill Pullman might have been the guy who played Costner’s dad on Field of Dreams, but that was another guy who looks like him, Dwier Brown.

Yes! I always have to stop and think about all three of them!!

Also Laura Linney and Joan Allen.

I always confuse getting up to go to work and lying in bed like a lazy cunt.

Unfortunately I always go to work.

Hamsters and gerbils. The type with a tail are nasty bitey little bastards, the ones without are not, and one or the other powers the internet, but I’ll be damned if I can remember which is which.

For some reason I got it into my head that Philip Seymour Hoffman played Capote in Infamous. I was amazed at how little he seemed, physically, in this role and had concluded that they must have used giant sized furniture and props in some of the scenes. After all, in Along Came Polly Hoffman’s character seemed to be an oversized lummox. Then there was that Capote lisp, which he amazingly kept up throughout the film.

Gerry Rafferty and Gordon Lightfoot. Oh, and that Edmund Fitzgerald guy, too. :smiley:

George Bush and George Bush.

Hillary Clinton and Medusa.

Maine is next to New Hampshire, so you could imagine a big area named MaiNEwhampshire (as long as you remember that Maine is the part to the right on the map even if it’s on the left of the portmanteau word).

Horseface I and Horseface II…very confusing indeed.
Also, Ben Affleck/Matt Damon. :smack:
And when I was little: Tourist/Terrorist!

Office Depot and OfficeMax. It doesn’t help me at all that the closest ones to me are across the street from each other.

I always confuse Karen Allen and the one that isn’t Karen Allen. If I’m even spelling it right. One of them was in the Indiana Jones movies, I think. Looked a little like Karen Carpenter, who isn’t the one that isn’t Karen Allen. Well, before Carpenter died, I mean. In fact, a while before she died, to be on the safe side. Who was the one who played the female interest in Scrooged? Was that Karen Allen, or the one who isn’t Karen Allen? I know it wasn’t Karen Carpenter, forget I mentioned Karen Carpenter.

>Maine is next to New Hampshire, so you could imagine a big area named MaiNEwhampshire

Did you know they are in an even bigger area named NE?