February 21, 2025

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JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

Shoo, fly! (Betcha thought it was a bee, didn’t ya?

Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  JP Steve
1 day ago

I sure did.

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  JP Steve
1 day ago

Looks very waspish. I knew that there were a number of flies that mimic wasps. But i couldn’t tell you what has what in the field.

JP Steve
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
12 hours ago

Syrphid flies have a weird (“spurious”) vein that runs down the middle of the wing. When you see that you know it’s a fly and nothing else!

Syrphid
SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

There’s a picture like this every night when I play NYT Spelling Bee.
I mean, except it’s a bee.

Unless, maybe, they don’t know it’s not a bee.

They should check with Steve.

Last edited 1 day ago by SusanSunshine
SusanSunshine
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
1 day ago

Tonight’s Spelling Bee picture (actually tomorrow’s)….

21bee-forum-articleLarge
JP Steve
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
12 hours ago

That one’s probably okay (although it’s holding it’s antennae at a funny angle…)

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  JP Steve
7 hours ago

The pictures are taken and sent in by fans of the puzzle…

Or maybe just people who want the glory of seeing a photo they took, printed in the New York Times.

It’s a word puzzle, nothing to do with bees…

But the 7 letters you get to use are printed in a hexagon, like a teeny bit of honeycomb, in keeping with the bee theme.

I have no idea whether they have an entomologist or… um… apiologist?… to help select or vet them.

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

That would be one heck of an art insolation.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
1 day ago

Isn’t it one?

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
1 day ago

Gotta be photoshop. 🙂

mr_sherman
mr_sherman
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
20 hours ago

My guess is that it may be real. For instance, there are support cables at the rear of the vehicle. The shopping cart is on a stand. The photo itself has the same degree of detail all through the picture. Most likely the car is minus the engine and transmission to save weight. The two men in the picture are looking at the correct angles to be observing the vehicle. It could be stages, but the equal graininess of the picture throughout is what leads me to believe it’s real.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
15 hours ago

Yes, I also saw a platform and supports, so I thought it was real, and some sort of display.

Besides the cable in the rear, it looks like it’s attached to the ceiling…. And there are signs that we can’t read on the bottom level of the cart, maybe advertising either the car or a finance company..

Didn’t occur to me to say so.

JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

Love the eyes!

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  JP Steve
1 day ago

It was always the antenna of moths that get me.
“The better to smell you with, my deer.”

Tigressy
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
1 day ago

Wrong species…

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
15 hours ago

The problem with having one for a pet is the constant need for brushing all that fur.

JP Steve
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
12 hours ago

No problem! A few brushings and you’ve got a Mexican Hairless Moth…

JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

Snowball fight!

Arfside
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

Take dat, Frankie, we run ya off da road! Don’ mess wid us again!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

What’s hanging from his belt loop?

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
15 hours ago

I thought so too, but then it looks like his belt is buckled around his waist, with the extra bit sticking out in back.

Plus the thing hanging down seems to have metal rings or clips on the ends.

JP Steve
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
12 hours ago

You’ll have to read the story to find out…

Alexikakos
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Reply to  nighthawks
22 hours ago

 
“There’s Two Kinds of Heroes,” by Maurice Beam and illustrated by Peter Helck for the Saturday Evening Post, March 9, 1940.
 
The above comes from      HERE.
 

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

Good job!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

Somebody ‘splain me.

Tigressy
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
1 day ago

The spitfire wire fastens the airplanes.
Similar to this:comment image

Last edited 1 day ago by Tigressy
JP Steve
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Reply to  Tigressy
12 hours ago

Spitfire???

Tigressy
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Reply to  JP Steve
10 hours ago

Missile exhaust fumes. Didn’t sleep well…

mr_sherman
mr_sherman
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
20 hours ago

The support wires to the aircraft at through the missile exhaust plumes.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
15 hours ago

Thank you all…. But I should have been more clear.

I can see the obvious support wires and that it’s a model set up or diorama.

I meant what is it a model OF… since everybody here seems to know more about planes and war scenarios and such than I do.

Happy ³ said “good job.”

I thought maybe I should recognize what’s going on, but I don’t.

Also… and this wasn’t part of my original question… is the fire painted on, or lit up, or burning?

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  nighthawks
12 hours ago

And possibly with a red led under the fluff.

JP Steve
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
12 hours ago

There doesn’t seem to be a lot of detail and the planes have no insignias, So not such a great diorama IMO. Supporting the planes on pipe cleaners is a bit clever. These days the flashes are usually LED lights inside a wisp of cotton

Last edited 12 hours ago by JP Steve
JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

Amen!

Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

“I don’t want his mother to see him like this.”

Tigressy
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

comment image

JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

OMG! Pierre Polievre!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  JP Steve
1 day ago

I don’t think he’d care for that comparison 😁

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

I had no idea he ever looked like that!

I only recognized him in the more current picture….

He’s “only” 60 now, so I’m trying not to say “time has not been kind”….

to …
Stephen Colbert

Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

Clearly named for what it took to construct all those buildings and wagons.

JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

Looked the same in 1980…

JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

“The Mouse and the Pendulum…”

Alexikakos
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 day ago

 
It’s from “The Mad Doctor” 1933.
 

 

happyhappyhappy
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1 day ago

Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
1 day ago

There must be an unwritten rule that all harpists have to be pretty. I have never seen one that wasn’t, and I’ve seen many who were nothing less than beautiful.

Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  Liverlips McCracken
1 day ago

Fiendishly difficult instrument to master. Like the organ, it requires all four limbs to operate independently. Imagine the calluses she must have on her fingers.

JP Steve
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Reply to  Liverlips McCracken
1 day ago

Arthur “Harpo” Marx?

Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  JP Steve
1 day ago

Harpo did, in fact, play the harp, and some of the harp music in their movies is actually him. But in no way is he a master of the instrument as this young lady is. Harpo could not have played in a professional orchestra.
As for his “prettiness,” I do not want to say he is unattractive. Only that he is not my type.

More_Cats_Than_Sense
Reply to  Liverlips McCracken
1 day ago

I understand that Harpo had his harp tuned differently to the standard tune.

Tigressy
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Reply to  More_Cats_Than_Sense
1 day ago

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  More_Cats_Than_Sense
1 day ago

He was self taught.

More_Cats_Than_Sense
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1 day ago

Point Rock, NY – 2025. Looks like they’ve has a bit of snow.

Point-Rock-NY-2025
SusanSunshine
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1 day ago

Falling asleep….

I’d better go.

Just in case anybody needs it….

The full caption on YouTube is…
Studies show that watching a beaver eat cabbage lowers stress by 17%.”

You’re welcome. 😁

Last edited 1 day ago by SusanSunshine
Alexikakos
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
1 day ago

 
I think it might be a bit higher.   😃
 

Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
13 hours ago

Thanks, I’m much calmer now. Of course, it could be due to the Xanax I just took.

SusanSunshine
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1 day ago

I forgot to ask where I can get a teeny Godzilla. They’re adorable!

Do I have to buy a whole new Monopoly set or can I just order one as a “replacement” part?

I know I’d have to build a fireproof cage….

But can you train them not to burn your fingers when you pet them?

Or burn your house down if they get out?

Alexikakos
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1 day ago

@ —comment image    baconboycamper

From yesterday.
My education grades 1 – 3 was in Nicaragua in two of the H.B.M. & S. mining towns there.
Grades 4 – 7 were in Norwalk, Connecticut where the war of 1812 was basically described as a skirmish of little note (Laura Secord? Who’s she?). Grades 8 through graduation were in Vancouver when we moved back home. I still remember my sister coming home one day from her high school outraged that we had never been properly taught about the war and that “The Americans lost!”
 

baconboycamper
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Reply to  Alexikakos
20 hours ago

“Laura Second”?
Isn’t she the one who fed the invaders so much chocolate that they couldn’t/didn’t fight?
([sad] snerk)
Not all history is written by the victors, eh?
And in war, there are really no winners, unfortunately, there are only losers all around, whether combat or tariff…
Wikipedia does have a significant write-up on the War of 1812.

happyhappyhappy
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18 hours ago

Long, but very informative.

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