Let's start a new word-use fad. We'll call it "Fadeaways". You select some occupation, then make up some hopefully humorous way people in that profession "fade away". For example: Cowboys. Old cowboys never die.They just get de-ranged! Or, alternately, old cowboys never die.They just lose their range!
Old quarterbacks never die. They just pass away. (Craig Fleishman)
Old fishermen never die.They just smell that way. (Anon) Or...
Old fishermen never die. They just wade away. (Seryl L. Webb)
Old poultrymen never die.They just chicken out. (Al Bernstein)
Old accountants never die. They just lose their balance. (Charles Shaw)
Old anesthesiologists never die. They just run out of gas. (Sheria K. Martin)
Old insurance agents never die. It's against their policy. (Marian S. Schwartz)
Old procrastinators never die. They just keep putting it off. (C.P. Miscavish)
Old lawyers never die. They just lose their appeal. (Bob Talbert in Detroit Free Press)
Old actors never die. They just lose their parts. (Graffiti)
Old librarians never die. They just get renewed. (Agnes Halsey)
Old quilters never die. They just mend the pieces. (Marie Radeck)
Old psychiatrists never die. They just shrink away. (Jim Fiebig)
Old philosophers never die. They Kant. (Janet L. Kragen)
Old welders never die. They just pass the torch. (Nan Kemp)
Old truckers never die. They just semi-re-tire. (Arthur J. George)
Old daredevils never die, they just get dis-couraged. (Anon)
Old comedians never die. They just go to the 'old jokes' home. (Shelley Friedman)
and, of course, Old plagiarists never die. They just steal away. (Mary Ann Herman)
Monday, July 29, 2013
Thursday, July 25, 2013
JOB WISE
A go-getter is someone who follows you into a revolving door and comes out ahead of you. So it is with people who go into the same business situation everyone else does but comes up with that little something extra that gives them a bigger share of that market. or a better relationship with customers, which usually amounts to the same thing. Consider these examples.
*CLOTHES MAKE THE GARBAGEMAN - Ray Valine, a Sacramento garbage collector, wore an ear-flapping bunny costume a week before Easter and passed out candy from an Easter basket to hundreds of children along his collection route. The week before Christmas he wore a Santa suit. Fellow collectors thought him a bit nuts. But his customers loved him. And the garbage he picked up was always neater than on others' routes.
*DURESS DRESS ENGINEER - John T. Molloy of New York was calling himself a "clothing engineer". "Most American women dress to fail," he bluntly reported. "They think they have to be attractive, appealing, kittenish all the time, but sometimes those characteristics can be distinct drawbacks in business success." Molloy successfully dressed politicians, foreign government representatives, and corporate VIPs for 16 years. Then he turned his attention toward engineering the dressage of women customers seeking corporate success. His success followed.
*STAND-IN ABSENTEES - Two Los Angeles area artists, Yuri Schwebler and Laurie Le Clair, began a firm called Dirty Works, Inc. It started when Yuri got paid for flying to D.C. from L.A. to stand in for a friend who was obligated - but didn't want to go - to a dinner there. So the two figured there must be a lot of people who, similarly, would pay NOT to have to do things they were obligated to do. Their first job had Laurie breaking someone's engagement for him.
*PERFECT TIMING - When Rose Shade and her husband stopped for lunch, while traveling through California, they noted a meter maid busily writing parking citations on a row of autos. Right behind her was a young man placing small cards beside each ticket on the windshields, which read: "Maybe your watch was slow. Bring it in to us for repair and we will pay your parking ticket".
*MAN-IKIN - Chuck Carl's best advertising, conversely, was doing nothing. In fact, that was what he was doing for a living. He was billing himself as "The Mechanical Robot" and touring the country posing. One specialty was modeling male fashions at trade shows, as a robotized "mime" manikin.
*MUTILANT ART - Artist Christopher Burden, at age 29 was dubbed "the Evil Knievel of art" by Oui Magazine because he was using his body to make his living too. In his words, he "made himself the subject of his performances". But his art was like no other. For instance, he was paid $725 by the University of Maryland-Balrimore County to perform what he called "a body work" in its then-new fine arts dance studio, until a campus conflict arose over it. Administrators heard about some of his other body works and claimed there were moral issues involved. In recent years Burden had: 1) crawled stark naked through broken glass strewn on a Los Angeles street, 2) had an assistant shoot him in the arm with a .22 calibre handgun, 3) attempted to electrocute himself (non-fatally), and 4) been purposely kicked down concrete stairs in front of an audience.
COUNTER-FETE-ING - John Stark of New Orleans had to combat public controversy to practice his profession, too. He was selling $1,000,000 bills. He had to beat a counterfeiting rap to continue selling his double-sized novelty greenbacks. He claimed to be the "largest" money maker in the USA.
Making money, thus, is shown to be an individual matter. But, if a person has the ingenuity to make a job, that job may well end up making him, too.
*CLOTHES MAKE THE GARBAGEMAN - Ray Valine, a Sacramento garbage collector, wore an ear-flapping bunny costume a week before Easter and passed out candy from an Easter basket to hundreds of children along his collection route. The week before Christmas he wore a Santa suit. Fellow collectors thought him a bit nuts. But his customers loved him. And the garbage he picked up was always neater than on others' routes.
*DURESS DRESS ENGINEER - John T. Molloy of New York was calling himself a "clothing engineer". "Most American women dress to fail," he bluntly reported. "They think they have to be attractive, appealing, kittenish all the time, but sometimes those characteristics can be distinct drawbacks in business success." Molloy successfully dressed politicians, foreign government representatives, and corporate VIPs for 16 years. Then he turned his attention toward engineering the dressage of women customers seeking corporate success. His success followed.
*STAND-IN ABSENTEES - Two Los Angeles area artists, Yuri Schwebler and Laurie Le Clair, began a firm called Dirty Works, Inc. It started when Yuri got paid for flying to D.C. from L.A. to stand in for a friend who was obligated - but didn't want to go - to a dinner there. So the two figured there must be a lot of people who, similarly, would pay NOT to have to do things they were obligated to do. Their first job had Laurie breaking someone's engagement for him.
*PERFECT TIMING - When Rose Shade and her husband stopped for lunch, while traveling through California, they noted a meter maid busily writing parking citations on a row of autos. Right behind her was a young man placing small cards beside each ticket on the windshields, which read: "Maybe your watch was slow. Bring it in to us for repair and we will pay your parking ticket".
*MAN-IKIN - Chuck Carl's best advertising, conversely, was doing nothing. In fact, that was what he was doing for a living. He was billing himself as "The Mechanical Robot" and touring the country posing. One specialty was modeling male fashions at trade shows, as a robotized "mime" manikin.
*MUTILANT ART - Artist Christopher Burden, at age 29 was dubbed "the Evil Knievel of art" by Oui Magazine because he was using his body to make his living too. In his words, he "made himself the subject of his performances". But his art was like no other. For instance, he was paid $725 by the University of Maryland-Balrimore County to perform what he called "a body work" in its then-new fine arts dance studio, until a campus conflict arose over it. Administrators heard about some of his other body works and claimed there were moral issues involved. In recent years Burden had: 1) crawled stark naked through broken glass strewn on a Los Angeles street, 2) had an assistant shoot him in the arm with a .22 calibre handgun, 3) attempted to electrocute himself (non-fatally), and 4) been purposely kicked down concrete stairs in front of an audience.
COUNTER-FETE-ING - John Stark of New Orleans had to combat public controversy to practice his profession, too. He was selling $1,000,000 bills. He had to beat a counterfeiting rap to continue selling his double-sized novelty greenbacks. He claimed to be the "largest" money maker in the USA.
Making money, thus, is shown to be an individual matter. But, if a person has the ingenuity to make a job, that job may well end up making him, too.
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
Re-run Fun
After months of serious study, and much reported merriment, 100,000 Londoners voted - in December 2001 - the world's funniest joke.
In the largest such experiment ever conducted, the British Association for the Advancement of Science, in conjunction with LaughLab, judged 10,000 joke entries and the clear winner was the joke about Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's famous fictional detective Sherlock Holmes and his sidekick Dr. Watson going camping and pitching their tent under the stars.
During the night Holmes wakes Watson and says, "Watson, look up at the stars and tell me what you deduce."
Watson says, "I see a million stars and, if even a few of them have planets, it's quite likely there are some planets like Earth out there, and there might also be life."
Holmes replies,. "Watson, you idiot. Somebody stole our tent."
The joke is not new, but newness was not a consideration in the judging. But it is easy to see that the judges might have been swayed by the famed British characters involved. While the situation is humorous, it probably would not make the top ten in the U.S.
For examples, take some of my favorites at random - all re-run fun, but just as good the second time around.
Eventually the punk becomes conscious of the old man's glare and barks, "What you lookin' at, you old goat? Ain't you never done anything wild when you were young?"
Without missing a beat, the old man replies, "Yep. Back when I was young and in the Navy, I got really drunk one night and had sex with a parrot. I though maybe you might me my son!"
When the CEO returned from the big event he was furious with the employee. "What was the idea writing me an hour-long speech?" he demanded. "Half the audience walked out before I finished."
The employee was baffled. "I wrote you a 20-minute speech," he replied. "I also gave you the two extra copies you asked for." (Courtesy of Edward Phillips, The World's Best Business Jokes, Angus & Robertson, London)
During services the following Sunday, the priest described this situation to the congregation and stated that the following Sunday "we will have a brief pause to allow parishioners to turn to those seated behind them and greet them with friendly hellos".
After the service the complainant turned around to the woman behind him and said, "Good morning."
She looked at him in shocked indignation. "That doesn't start until next Sunday!" she snapped. (J.C.M. in Reader's Digest)
Joe was shocked, but the excruciating pain caused him to go ahead with the operation. When he left the hospital, he was depressed. He tried lifting his spirits by shopping for a new suit.
The salesman eyed him and said, "44 long, right?"
"That's right," Joe agreed. He tried on the suit and it fit perfectly.
"How about a new shirt to go with it?" asked the clerk. "About a 34 sleeve and 16 1/2 neck?"
"Right again," said Joe. "You're amazing."
"While you're here, why not get some new underwear too?" the salesman suggested. He eyed Joe's waist and said, "Size 36."
"No, you finally missed," Joe chuckled. "I wear size 34."
"You couldn't possibly," argued the salesman. "Underwear that tight would create a great deal of pressure against your spine and cause one heckuva headache." (Courtesy Bryan Eldring)
His daughter picked it up, played it on her harp and won a scholarship to a music conservatory!
In the largest such experiment ever conducted, the British Association for the Advancement of Science, in conjunction with LaughLab, judged 10,000 joke entries and the clear winner was the joke about Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's famous fictional detective Sherlock Holmes and his sidekick Dr. Watson going camping and pitching their tent under the stars.
During the night Holmes wakes Watson and says, "Watson, look up at the stars and tell me what you deduce."
Watson says, "I see a million stars and, if even a few of them have planets, it's quite likely there are some planets like Earth out there, and there might also be life."
Holmes replies,. "Watson, you idiot. Somebody stole our tent."
The joke is not new, but newness was not a consideration in the judging. But it is easy to see that the judges might have been swayed by the famed British characters involved. While the situation is humorous, it probably would not make the top ten in the U.S.
For examples, take some of my favorites at random - all re-run fun, but just as good the second time around.
Re-generation
A young "punk' boards the cross-town bus. His hair is spiked in colors of green, purple and orange. His cargo shorts and jacket are tattered mixes of camo cloth. His legs are bare and he is barefoot. His face is riddled with jewelry piercings, complete with big bright feathers as earrings. He plops into the only vacant seat, which is directly across from an old man who glares at him through the next several stops.Eventually the punk becomes conscious of the old man's glare and barks, "What you lookin' at, you old goat? Ain't you never done anything wild when you were young?"
Without missing a beat, the old man replies, "Yep. Back when I was young and in the Navy, I got really drunk one night and had sex with a parrot. I though maybe you might me my son!"
Shorted Sermon
The CEO was scheduled to speak at an important convention, so he asked one of his employees to write him a punchy, 20-minute speech.When the CEO returned from the big event he was furious with the employee. "What was the idea writing me an hour-long speech?" he demanded. "Half the audience walked out before I finished."
The employee was baffled. "I wrote you a 20-minute speech," he replied. "I also gave you the two extra copies you asked for." (Courtesy of Edward Phillips, The World's Best Business Jokes, Angus & Robertson, London)
Poor Timing
One Sunday morning after services one man complained to the priest that he felt there was a lack of friendliness among members of the congregation and that people seemed reluctant to greet one another in church. The priest agreed, but said he had a plan to change things.During services the following Sunday, the priest described this situation to the congregation and stated that the following Sunday "we will have a brief pause to allow parishioners to turn to those seated behind them and greet them with friendly hellos".
After the service the complainant turned around to the woman behind him and said, "Good morning."
She looked at him in shocked indignation. "That doesn't start until next Sunday!" she snapped. (J.C.M. in Reader's Digest)
Suits Him Right
Joe was suffering from terrific headaches. The doctor told him he could cure them, but it would require castration. "You have a rare condition that causes pressure to build up against your spine," the doctor explained. "This, in turn, causes headaches. The only cure is surgery."Joe was shocked, but the excruciating pain caused him to go ahead with the operation. When he left the hospital, he was depressed. He tried lifting his spirits by shopping for a new suit.
The salesman eyed him and said, "44 long, right?"
"That's right," Joe agreed. He tried on the suit and it fit perfectly.
"How about a new shirt to go with it?" asked the clerk. "About a 34 sleeve and 16 1/2 neck?"
"Right again," said Joe. "You're amazing."
"While you're here, why not get some new underwear too?" the salesman suggested. He eyed Joe's waist and said, "Size 36."
"No, you finally missed," Joe chuckled. "I wear size 34."
"You couldn't possibly," argued the salesman. "Underwear that tight would create a great deal of pressure against your spine and cause one heckuva headache." (Courtesy Bryan Eldring)
Perfect Prescription
A printer went to his doctor for a checkup. The doctor wrote him a prescription in his normal handwriting. The printer put it into his wallet, but neglected to have it filled. Instead, every morning for two years he showed it to the conductor as a railway pass. Twice it got him into Radio City Music Hall, once into a baseball park and once into a symphony concert.Then, one day he mislaid it at home.His daughter picked it up, played it on her harp and won a scholarship to a music conservatory!
Eggsact Response
"Sounds good," my wife said as she noted the special $1.99 breakfast menu of two eggs, bacon, hash browns and toast, "But I don't want the eggs."
"Then I will have to charge you $2.49 since you are ordering a la carte," the waitress warned.
"You mean I have to pay for NOT taking the eggs?", my wife asked in surprise. "Then I'll take the special."
"Then how do you want your eggs?" asked the waitress.
"Raw and in the shell," my wife replied. She took the two eggs home. (Courtesy Russ Jenkins)
Counterpoint
Greenbay quarterback Bart Starr came home one day before a big game, yelled at one of his children, spanked another and snapped at Cherry, his wife, for not getting some letters out in the mail.
Finally Cherry asked, "What is wrong with you? I've never seen you so edgy."
"I've got a jillion things to do," Bart shouts back, "and I've got to find time to get to a banquet in Appleton tonight too."
"What kind of a banquet?" asks Cherry.
Still in a foul mood, Bart growls, "Oh, I'm receiving a 'nice guy' award." (Courtesy Jerry Kramer, Instant Replay, Sports Illustrated)
Don''t you agree my choices are funnier?
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