April 24, 2026

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happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  nighthawks
11 hours ago

Fawn is picky.
Buddy eats rocks.

DancingBuffalo
Reply to  happyhappyhappy
10 hours ago

Maggie ate turds. I’d take rocks over that any day.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
8 hours ago

Once again, the Cliffords prove they are worthy of the Most Lenient Dogparents Award they won at last summer’s Independent Comics Picnic and Honors Ceremony.

Claude doesn’t like the look of it; Clara wears a look of mild concern. But they hold fast to their title by never uttering that cruel word, “No.”

Not even a “Confound it!”, much less a threat of punishment.
They capitulate to the catapult, and give Cleo what she demands.

It’s clearly Claude and Clara who succeeded in obedience school, not Cleo.

Arfside
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Reply to  nighthawks
12 hours ago

Today’s dog haiku:

I am your best friend,
Now, always, and especially
When you are eating.

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  Arfside
11 hours ago

Truth!

DancingBuffalo
Reply to  nighthawks
10 hours ago

Not messin’ with that in a dark alley…

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  DancingBuffalo
9 hours ago

Or a light alley!

Arfside
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Reply to  DancingBuffalo
5 hours ago

Aw, they can be sweethearts! Just socialize them early and often.

Arfside
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Reply to  nighthawks
12 hours ago

What is that gadget down in the bottom right corner?

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  Arfside
9 hours ago

I tried to find out…. Not many talking about it.

Those who did said probably an anvil, but they never saw Macgyver use one.

Everybody was complaining cos there’s no Swiss army knife.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
9 hours ago

Well, no wonder I’m told Macgyver could do so much with duct tape and a paper clip.

I’ve never seen the show, myself, and nobody told me it was giant tape, and a heavy steel paperclip, longer than his foot.

Of course, this isn’t a real product… I saw another version with the same tape, a roll of wire, and some matches, which were on a scale with the paper clip.

Last edited 9 hours ago by SusanSunshine
Arfside
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Reply to  nighthawks
12 hours ago

He got to play a lot of fun parts.

Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  nighthawks
8 hours ago

He was the go-to man if you needed someone to play an eccentric wacko, or an outright loon. For laughs. It helps to have a rubber face and a flexible voice.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
9 hours ago

“A Mickey Mouse” … I guess maybe people called a cartoon the name of character… “I saw a Popeye and a Donald Duck”?

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
10 hours ago

The caption I found has extra names….

Looking further, I discovered that the picture has people cut off on both sides… Not that it really matters, but just so the names line up, l’m attaching the wider version below.

Anyway…. according to Getty Images…

This is….
The Modern Screen awards, 1956 presentation, televised on the Ed Sullivan show, Dec. 2, 1956.

Left to right; Front row; Victoria Shaw, Tony Perkins, Natalie Wood, Doris Day, holding her award and also award she accepted for Frank Sinatra, King Vidor; who accepted the award for Audrey Hepburn.

Left to right, back row: director George Stevens, Debbie Reynolds, Louella Parsons, George Delacorte, publisher of Modern screen, Janet Leigh, Tony Curtis and Kirk Douglas.

BTW… Modern Screen is/was a popular “movie magazine”… At first it was about movie stars, later adding television stars and personalities.

gettyimages-515019536-612x612
Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  nighthawks
8 hours ago

How far gone am I? When looking at the first, cropped photo, I see the gentleman front and center moving his jaw, like in a tense way. I also see his Adam’s apple move up and down. Maybe it’s a hypnotic illusion from the year of my birth, still working its magic after 69 years.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  Liverlips McCracken
8 hours ago

Happens to me all the time when I’m scrolling past, or towards, a photo.

I could swear somebody moved, or the light changed.

Then I stare at it wondering how I saw that, or whether I’m somehow being gaslighted.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
9 hours ago

Gathering all that ash was a big job for the neanderthals in Yellowstone… especially rolling it into a big ball. They were smaller than modern humans.

But the park service probably paid them to get it out of of the way so they could open the.park.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
7 hours ago

Believe it or not, this is a real dress, over 4,000 years old, though the original beads have been restrung on stronger thread, without changing the pattern.

(It)” comes from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, where archaeologists reconstructed a beadnet dress discovered in 1927 in a tomb at Giza. The garment belonged to a woman who lived during the reign of King Khufu (c. 2551–2528 BCE). Although the original linen threads had decayed, approximately 7,000 faience beads remained in place, allowing experts to carefully rebuild the dress. According to the MFA Boston, the beads were originally vibrant shades of blue and green, designed to imitate precious stones like lapis lazuli and turquoise.”

It’s not the only one… I saw pictures of several while searching for info. There’s apparently a bit of debate about how they were worn. Because lapis and turquoise were sacred, some archeologists think they were created as burial garments.

But the edges are fringed with little shells, which make a pleasant sound striking each other, and sometimes have little bits of stone or metal placed inside to make them rattle. This makes other archeologists think they were made for sacred dances.

Most think they were actually worn over other garments, so they’re not as slinky as we imagine… But no one knows for sure. The design and workmanship could give movie costumes a run for their money!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
9 hours ago

For a moment I thought

it might be…
Jeff Goldblum, but not with that golden blonde hair. And Goldblum is much more exaggerated looking, if that makes sense.

Then before I looked at the later picture…

I unintentionally…
scrolled down a couple of posts and saw another picture of him, and realized this was also Gene Wilder.

Last edited 8 hours ago by SusanSunshine
SusanSunshine
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
7 hours ago

Actually I think i was picturing the face of the actor that Liverlips guessed, not the one I said.

It was wrong anyway… But on top of that I was mixed up.
Not that such a thing ever happens to me.

Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  nighthawks
8 hours ago

My immediate reaction on seeing the “early” photo was

that is
Nicholas Cage.
Now we’ll take a look at the “after” photo.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  Liverlips McCracken
8 hours ago

Looks a bit like him too.

Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  Liverlips McCracken
8 hours ago

👎

Tigressy
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Reply to  nighthawks
6 hours ago

Recognized him instantly.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
8 hours ago

“I didn’t know this train had a dining car!”

Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  nighthawks
8 hours ago

When opportunity knocks, you should always answer.

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  nighthawks
11 hours ago

“My father’s work was Doo Doo !!!”

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
8 hours ago

Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  nighthawks
8 hours ago

“Class dismissed.”

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
8 hours ago

Going by this chart, I’ve got one foot in the 60s and one in the 90s…

But my decades weren’t like these, so I can’t compare.

It’s funny, when people talk about “the 60s”, cos the actual 1960s were split into two parts.

The first half was more like the 50s, and the 2nd half, which is the half that’s pictured, extended well into the 70s.

1965 was a big dividing point for a lot of people.
And that 1970s disco stuff was at the end of that decade.

We want everything to match convenient charts and timelines, but real history is messier that that.

More_Cats_Than_Sense
Member
7 hours ago

The Sagrada Família in Barcelona, Spain, photographed during construction in 1905.

The-Sagrada-Familia-in-Barcelona-Spain-photographed-during-construction-in-1905
SusanSunshine
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Reply to  More_Cats_Than_Sense
7 hours ago

By Antoni Gaudi, one of my favorite architects ever.

It’s unfinished… But I read somewhere that they plan to finish it this year, 100 years after Gaudi died. By “they” I mean I can’t remember who’s doing it, but it’s a World Heritage site.

I’ll try to look it up tomorrow… Right now zzzzzzzzzzz..

More_Cats_Than_Sense
Member
7 hours ago

Male Spotted Towhee in breeding attire with white tail spots.

Male-Spotted-Towhee-in-breeding-attire-with-white-tail-spots
SusanSunshine
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Reply to  More_Cats_Than_Sense
7 hours ago

Very spiffy.

Did he have to rent the outfit, or do they have their own, and bring it out every year?

More_Cats_Than_Sense
Reply to  SusanSunshine
2 hours ago

Looks too sharp to be a rental 😉

Tigressy
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Reply to  More_Cats_Than_Sense
2 hours ago

Yes indeed…
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