November 18, 2021

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DennisinSeattle
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Reply to  StelBel
3 years ago

I loved this!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  StelBel
3 years ago

Who knew Danny Kaye had that in him!

DennisinSeattle
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Reply to  StelBel
3 years ago

I haven’t either, but at least you got to kiss some cute women along the way.

Alexikakos
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Reply to  StelBel
3 years ago

 
Me being me:
The “White Castle” burger (if it is the same one) has only gone up 3.0588235294117647058823529411765 ¢ per year to $1.29 today from 25¢ in 1987.
 
A bit of   …   “White Castle” history.
 
“Kristine and the Sting” are still around too.
 

nighthawks
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Reply to  Alexikakos
3 years ago

when my younger internal organs could absorb those ‘gut-bombs’ as we used to
call them, they were 11 cents each. Of course, to satisfy a young person’s hunger you had to have at least a half dozen or so.

DennisinSeattle
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Reply to  StelBel
3 years ago

Who did this animation? I love it!

Alexikakos
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Reply to  DennisinSeattle
3 years ago

 
As near as I can tell, this was done by an Italian artist named Mauro Macellari (I can find no definite attribution).
The picture link below leads to more “The New Yorker” magazine animated covers and to a good deal of other work as well.
If I’m wrong about the attribution, at the very least, I think you’ll find the site interesting.
 
 
comment image
 
This edit begun at 11:37 hrs. E.S.T Thursday, November 18, 2021.
  
An artist by the name of Christoph Niemann is behind both the covers, and the animations.

In deference to nighthawks’ desire to post more, himself, I won’t post
a link to the site where I finally found this information.
 
While I’m here, nighthawks, what about Susan’s question yesterday?
 
“Can we do it too, or only you big shot admins?”

Last edited 3 years ago by Alexikakos
DennisinSeattle
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Reply to  Alexikakos
3 years ago

Good find! I enjoyed viewing the other animated New Yorker covers. Thanks.

nighthawks
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Reply to  DennisinSeattle
3 years ago

pretend like you didn’t see them, Dennis! you’ll be seeing them here every now and then

nighthawks
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Reply to  Alexikakos
3 years ago

wow! thanks for posting that. I hope nobody goes there , though.
I’m eager to post these outstanding animated covers from time to time.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  Alexikakos
3 years ago

I was joking in that question, Alexi…

His post with different font colors is just an image…

I was starting to make one to post back to him… with different colors AND fancy fonts… but I fell asleep.

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  StelBel
3 years ago

“Oh. It’s you.”

DennisinSeattle
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3 years ago

The Music Basset looks ready to play! Are you sure that isn’t Cleo, in drag?

DennisinSeattle
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3 years ago

76 beef bones led the basset hounds,

101 corned ribs right behind

Alexikakos
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3 years ago

 
     I finished reading “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.” on Monday.
     I then tried to watch the movie (I did not get that far in); listed as a romantic comedy.
     The statement in the opening credits beginning “Based on…” should be taken seriously.
     First, George Peppard’s character, Paul Varjak, is never named in the novella. Second, “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” is nowhere close to a romantic comedy (in fact, it is one of the saddest stories I have ever read). Third, the novella narrates the story from 1943 and the movie from later than 1956.
     While the acting throughout what I watched is excellent, I just couldn’t shake the “real story.”
     Why sad? Using the novella’s “real time”, who was Holly Golightly? Was she the survivor of Lulamae Barnes, the “going on 14 year-old girl,” who “married” the veterinarian Doctor Golightly in Tulip, Texas in December, 1938 (one of the few things about her a reader can take as fact)? Was she a manipulating woman who “used” her way through life using both her brain and body because she felt she had no other choice; or because she could? Was she an ungrounded combination of the three?
     She was written as acting a scatterbrain, but she was anything but that. Capote’s characterization, through O.J. Berman, was
“She isn’t a phony because she’s a real phony.”
     We never do find out what really happened to her (only a photograph of an apparent carving of her face taken in East Anglia, South Africa on Christmas Day, 1956 may give a clue); just her nameless cat (at least he had a happy ending).
 

Last edited 3 years ago by Alexikakos
Arfside
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3 years ago

Alright you horn players, let’s see you play that dinosaur.

nighthawks
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Reply to  Arfside
3 years ago

maybe Stel could play that on her purple clarinet

perkycat
perkycat
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Reply to  nighthawks
3 years ago

Dorthea posted that picture on The Big Picture in GoComics. Lennie there is a trombone player. I’m sure he will like it.

JP Steve
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Reply to  Arfside
3 years ago

I bet I can make that dinosaur sound just as good as my old trumpet does! (Braaaap!)

Alexikakos
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3 years ago

 
Why I have always liked this song from the human version I can’t say; I just do.
 

 
Here’s Wikipedia on:     Elbert Gary.
 
What do, Opie Taylor, Winthrop Paroo, Steve, and Richie Cunningham all have in common?
 

Tigressy
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3 years ago

Not “Ya Got Kibble”?

SusanSunshine
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3 years ago

 
Can anybody even look at this poster without hearing that memorable music?

“We’ve got trouble with a “T” and that rhymes with “D” and that stands for “DROOL!” ♪ ♫ ♪

“Seventy-SIX Milk Bones” ♫ ♪ …. Er, I mean trombones…I was just hearing it in my mind the way the naughty pups sing it on the playground….

Now I like Dennis’ version too!


 
Of course the beautiful Shirley Bones will end up domesticating that sly old dog, Bobby Basseton…

LOL…. he doesn’t stand a chance!

Poor humans…. in their version they had to use a man.

Nice musical selections… even if they are all human.

And look! A four-horned tubasaurus!

nighthawks
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
3 years ago

I tried to vote twice, but even as a website god, it wouldn’t let me

nighthawks
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3 years ago

Vichyssoise
comment image

Alexikakos
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Reply to  nighthawks
3 years ago

 
I guess I’m not a gourmet.
The book in general is written in what my late sister (1980, hit by a train) used to call “Pure snob.”
 
From:
“THE GREAT COOKS’ GUIDE TO SOUPS” (The Great Cooks’ Library)
Senior Editors: Wendy Afton Rieder, Kate Slate
Published by: Random House, New York
ISBN: 0-394-73608-7
 
VICHYSSOISE  Credited to: Emanuel and Madeline Greenberg
8 servings
 
A brief history of Vichyssoise from the book.
As every gourmet knows, vichyssoise was originally created by the great French
chef Louis Diat when he reigned in the kitchens of the old Ritz-Carlton Hotel in
New York City. Actually, he took the leek and potato soup of his childhood, dressed
it up, chilled it and named it for a famous spa that was close to his native village
in France.
 
2 TABLESPOONS BUTTER
4 LEEKS, THINLY SLICED (WHITE PART ONLY)
1 MEDIUM-SIZED ONION, CHOPPED
5 MEDIUM-SIZED POTATOES, PEELED AND SLICED
4 CUPS WATER OR CHICKEN STOCK
2 TEASPOONS SALT
1/8 TEASPOON WHITE PEPPER
2 CUPS HALF-AND-HALF (10% milk fat cream)
2 CUPS HEAVY CREAM (cream > 35% milk fat) CHOPPED CHIVES
 
1.  In a large pot, melt the butter. Add the leeks and onions and sauté until they are
softened, but not browned.
2.  Add the potatoes water (or stock), salt and pepper to the pot. Cover and bring
to a boil. Reduce the heat and simmer about 30 minutes, or until the potatoes
are very soft.
3.  Cool the soup slightly, then, 2 cups at a time, purée it in a blender until
smooth.
4.  Return the soup to the heat, add the half-and-half and bring it to a boil. Then
strain the soup into a bowl.
5.  Refrigerate the soup until it is very cold.
6.  Before serving, taste and correct the seasoning and stir in the heavy cream.
Garnish each portion with chopped chives.
Note: For a variation known as vichyssoise à la Ritz, add 1 part chilled
tomato juice to 3 parts of the above soup.
 
Notes from me:
In an embarrassing moment from my 20’s I was served vichyssoise and sent it back to be warmed up. I had no idea that somebody thought cold soup was a good idea.
I still don’t think it is, but others do because it’s survived this long.
 

nighthawks
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Reply to  Alexikakos
3 years ago

nothing like a big bowl of ice cold soup on a cold wintry day……
nope. I’m with you, Alex. besides, I never cared much for Vichy for collaborating
during the occupation, anyway 😉
When you sent that soup back to be warmed, Do you suppose they popped it into a gourmet microwave oven?

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
3 years ago

It’s for summer, of course.. and it’s very good… though something to eat in a restaurant, lacking servants.

I don’t make it cos it’s too much work in hot weather, and I don’t buy heavy cream.

A cold bowl of gazpacho, another chilled soup, is s real treat on a hot day….

And if made with good garden tomatoes, it’s memorable.

JP Steve
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Reply to  Alexikakos
3 years ago

I sent a clubhouse sandwich back once because the chef thought it would be a good idea to serve it chilled for summer…

Tigressy
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Reply to  nighthawks
3 years ago

Memories of “Monkey Island”…

Alexikakos
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Reply to  Tigressy
3 years ago

 
HERE?
 

Tigressy
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Reply to  Alexikakos
3 years ago
nighthawks
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3 years ago

smoke OUT day

giphy-1.gif
Alexikakos
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Reply to  nighthawks
3 years ago

 
As I have said before, any person who has stopped smoking is in the same position as a recovering alcoholic.
If I was stupid enough to smoke even one cigarette today, I’d be back to a pack-and-a-half a day inside a week.
As a side note, I’m sure many of you, like me, have seen street people combing through the ashtrays outside of some office doors, or picking up discarded butts on the street to get their nicotine fix. I completely understand the necessity to fill that addiction.
 

Last edited 3 years ago by Alexikakos
Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  Alexikakos
3 years ago

Sign in a long-ago public restroom:
“PLEASE DO NOT THROW BUTTS IN URINALS.
IT MAKES THEM SOGGY AND HARD TO LIGHT.”

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  Alexikakos
3 years ago

I was 3 packs a day(+) when i quit the 2nd time. There will not be a 3rd time.

JP Steve
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
3 years ago

Anther thing we have in common!

nighthawks
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3 years ago

.

Screen Shot 2021-09-18 at 8.57.39 PM.png
Rotifer MY AVATAR IS BETTY BOOP'S BUTT Thalweg
Reply to  nighthawks
3 years ago

Hey nighhawks, I have a science question for you.

nighthawks
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my science answer is: 186,000 miles a second.

my science question: how fast does the old scalawag’s comments and questions
fly over my head causing a distinctive ‘whoosh’ sound?

Rotifer MY AVATAR IS BETTY BOOP'S BUTT Thalweg
Reply to  nighthawks
3 years ago

My science question was whether or not Claude, Clara and Cleo would be able to see the ‘almost’ total lunar eclipse from that desert island where they are marooned but I see you’ve already answered.

nighthawks
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sure is breezy around here

MontanaLady
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3 years ago

LOVE, LOVE, LOVE The Music Basset!!!! Thanks, Stel. I’ll be humming the show tunes all week! Great poster. The names (as always) are fun.

nighthawks
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3 years ago

comment image

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  nighthawks
3 years ago

Wow! Like. Totally hypnotic man.

nighthawks
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
3 years ago

reminds me of a scene from the movie “Interstellar”

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