Archive for January 2024

01/30/2024 “POISON PENS”   1 comment

If you’ve read this blog at all you know I consistently use famous quotations from famous people to help make a point. Over the years having all of those quotes available has made my life much easier. Not all quotes are complementary, and I found almost as many nasty and mean quotes as good ones. Here are some quotes that some people probably wish they hadn’t made. You be the judge…

“Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names the streets after them.” Bill Vaughn

“You have set up in New York Harbor a monstrous idol which you call Liberty. The only thing that remains to complete the monument is to put on its pedestal the inscription written by Dante on the gates of Hell: “All hope abandon, ye who enter here.” George Bernard Shaw

“St. Laurent has excellent taste. The more he copies me, the better taste he displays.” Coco Chanel

“Everyone wants to understand painting. Why don’t they try to understand the singing of the birds? People love the night, a flower, everything which surrounds them without trying to understand. But painting – that they must understand.” Pablo Picasso

“There are moments when art attains almost the dignity of manual labor.” Oscar Wilde

This next section concerns a prolific contributor to every subject imaginable: Anonymous. I truly enjoy these mean and nasty unidentified criticizers.

“Critics are the stupid who discuss the wise.”

“An architect is two percent gentleman and ninety-eight percent renegade car salesman.”

“The Eiffel Tower in Paris is the Empire State Building after taxes.”

“A modern artist is one who throws paint on a canvas, wipes it off with a cloth, and sells the cloth.”

“They couldn’t find the artist, so they hung the picture.”

“Poetry is living proof that rhyme doesn’t pay.”

“Dancing is the perpendicular expression of a horizontal desire.”

LIFE SUCKS AND THEN YOU DIE

(ANONYMOUS)


01/27/2024 “Editing”   2 comments

After writing this blog for so many years, I tend to write and read everything six times trying to correct my many mistakes. Unfortunately, it doesn’t seem to be the norm for other people to edit themselves, even those who are magazine and newspaper editors. It’s commonplace in everyday advertisements to see misspelled words, bad grammar and a general lack of concern for accuracy. It appears that our education system may be partially responsible for some of these issues, and it drives me effing crazy. Here are a few examples of “malaprops” collected from grade school, high school, and college examination papers. What do you think?

  • The American colonists won their Revolutionary War and no longer had to pay for taxis.
  • The air is thin high up in the sky, down here, it’s fat.
  • The flood damage was so bad they had to evaporate the city.
  • A horse divided against itself cannot stand.
  • The U.S. Constitution was adopted to secure domestic hostility.

  • Columbus discovered America while cursing about the Atlantic.
  • Brigham Young led the Morons to Utah.
  • Socrates died from taking a poison called wedlock. 
  • The police surrounded the building and threw an accordion around the block.
  • To prevent head colds, use an agonizer to spray medicine into your nose.

Here’s one of my favorites:

Achilles’ mother dipped him in the River Stinks until he became immoral.

***

READIN, WRITIN, & RITHMATIC

01/25/2024 💥💥Limerick Alert💥💥   1 comment

I’m about to do something I promised myself I wouldn’t ever do. Today I’m going to post three truly lewd and disgusting limericks. This is to appease a small number of readers who’ve been begging and bugging me for months to print some filth. It’s not something I want to do but I will do it albeit with a slight twist. As you read these three limericks you may notice a large number of asterisks. It’s part of the twist for you to determine the missing letters. That’s the best I can do for all you pervs out there, so enjoy.

☘️☘️☘️

There was an old man of Corfu

Who fed on c**t-juice and s**w.

When he couldn’t get that,

He ate what he shat –

And bloody good s**t he shat, too.

🌶️🌶️🌶️

There was a young man of Glengarridge,

The fruit of a scrofulous marriage.

He s***ed off his brother

And b***ed his mother,

And ate up his sister’s mis****iage.

☘️☘️☘️

Said an elderly whore named Arlene,

“I prefer a young lad of eighteen.

There’s more cr**m in his larder,

And his p**ker gets h***der,

And he f**ks in a manner obscene.”

💩💩💩

01/23/2024 “So-Called Experts”   Leave a comment

It’s a cold and miserable day here in New England and my motivations have evaporated. I’ve been surfing the web for an hour, and something occurred to me. Regardless of how well you explain something, you’re wrong. There are just so many freaking so-called experts on every topic, who knew? That last statement was as sarcastic as I can make it without losing my mind. Never let it be said that Americans don’t have a high opinion of themselves as well as an innate ability to criticize new ideas at every turn. Social media is fine but it’s a double-edged sword. You can get your ideas out there whether they are well thought out or just plain stupid and then the backlash comes. I never really understood just how stupid I was until all of these so-called experts came out of the woodwork to explain things to me. I ‘ve always felt in my heart that many of our fellow citizens are idiots filled with misinformation and conspiracy theories but thanks to social media they now have the freedom to send their bullshit to the world and to further verify what idiots they are.

It’s nothing new because know-it-all’s have always been in the background spewing their thoughts and nonsense to the world. Here are a few samples from our illustrious past.

“Drill for oil? You mean drill into the ground to try and find oil? You’re crazy.” – from workers whom Edwin L. Drake tried to hire on his project to drill for oil in Titusville, Pennsylvania in 1859

“The concept is interesting and well formed, but in order to earn better than a “C”, the idea must be feasible.” – stated a professor of Management at Yale University, commenting on the term paper by Fred Smith which earned only a “C”. The paper outlined a plan for a reliable overnight delivery service. Smith went on to create the Federal Express company in 1973.

“A cookie store is a bad idea. Besides, the market research reports say America likes crispy cookies, not soft and chewy cookies like you make.” – an unidentified response to Debbi Field’s plan to start Mrs. Field’s Cookies.

“If I had thought about it, I wouldn’t have done the experiment. The literature was full of examples that say you can’t do this.” – a statement from Spencer Silver on the work that led to the adhesives for the 3M Post-It notepads.

“We’ve got to pause and ask ourselves: How much clean air do we need?” – a statement from Lee Iacocca, former chairman, Ford Motor Company

“Everything that can be invented has been invented.” – a statement made by Charles H. Duell, commissioner, U.S. Office of Patents, 1899

AND WE THOUGHT WE HAD ALL THE ANSWERS

01/20/2024 😵‍💫Scary Facts😮   2 comments

I love finding odd facts. Her are a collection of fifteen interesting and somewhat puzzling tidbits.

  • 60% of sports related injuries occur during practice.
  • Golf may be considered a benign sport, but can carry a risk of injury and death, most often from lightning, power lines, heart attack, and heatstroke.
  • Experts estimate that more than 21 billion diapers are dumped into US landfills each year.
  • Adolf Hitler suffered from chronic flatulence.
  • Omorashi is a fetish subculture in Japan dedicated to arousal from the feeling of having a full bladder.

  • The average human will spend three years on the toilet during his lifetime.
  • The most germ laden place on the toilet isn’t the seat or even the bowl: it’s the handle.
  • Feces in the water supply causes 10% of the world’s communicable diseases.
  • Women are up to five times more likely than men to have urinary incontinence problems, primarily due to the trauma the body experiences during pregnancy and childbirth.
  • More Americans choke on toothpicks than any other object. Toothpicks injure approximately 9000 people every year.

  • Thanks to the technology like TV screens in grocery stores and airports, cell phone videos, and digital movie libraries, the average American sees 61 minutes of ads and promotions each day.
  • A bezoar is a ball of swallowed fiber or hair that gathers in the stomach and get stuck in the intestines.
  • Ancient Romans used human urine as an ingredient in their toothpaste.
  • A mummified hand has been on display in City Hall in Munster, Germany for 400 years. It belonged to a notary who falsely certified a document, and had his hand chopped off as punishment, then displayed as a warning. 
  • The world’s oceans contain enough salt to cover every continent to a depth of approximately 500 feet.

AND YOU THOUGHT YOU KNEW EVERYTHING

01/18/2024 🏈Post Football B.S.   Leave a comment

Now that the NFL season has come to a close for me, I can mourn for a few months until the baseball season starts. Then I’ll have yet another team that will tease me and disappoint me like they’ve done for 20 years and offering nothing in return. After the letdown of the Steeler loss, I decided that posting today would be a real crap shoot. Since I’m something of a science nerd, let me lay some interesting facts out for you that you may have not heard of before. No more sports postings for the foreseeable future. Let’s get started…

  • 7% of licensed drivers in the United States are 16 and 17-year-olds, and they are responsible for 30% of all automobiles fatalities.
  • The driest place on Earth is Calama, in the Atacama Desert in Chile. Not a drop of rain has ever been seen there.
  • Using cesium atoms, the clock at the National Bureau of Standards in Washington, D.C., will gain or lose only one second in 300 years.
  • The lowest point that a person can get on this planet, unless he/she descends in a submarine, is where the Jordan River enters the Dead Sea – 1298 below sea level.
  • In terms of the resources he will use in his lifetime and the pollution he will cause; one citizen of the United States is the equivalent of approximately 80 citizens of India.

  • Modern archaeologists have not yet agreed on how large a crowd the Coliseum in Rome could hold in its glory days. One authority estimates 50,000, but about 45,000 is the generally accepted figure.
  • An acre of typical farm soil (to a depth of 6 inches) has a ton of fungi, several tons of bacteria, 200 pounds of protozoa (one celled animals) and 100 pounds of yeast.
  • To provide a modern person with all of life’s necessities and luxuries, at least 20 tons of raw materials must be dug from the earth each year.
  • There are 2,500,000 rivets in the Eiffel Tower.
  • The English astronomer Edmund Halley prepared the first detailed mortality tables, in 1693. Life-and-death could then be studied statistically, and the life insurance business was born.

💗KARMA IS PHYSICS PERSONIFIED💗

01/15/2024 Love Letter from a Steeler Fan   2 comments

Who doesn’t love Buffalo?

🌨️🌨️🌨️

Well, it’s Sunday and the Steeler game has been canceled until Monday due to weather concerns. It’s a little annoying but not all that surprising for anyone who’s ever been in Buffalo during the winter. In my previous life as a regional manager for a national chain I was assigned stores in Buffalo and Niagara Falls. I swear to God that every time I made a trip there during the winter, I ended up getting snowed in and spending an extra day or two in order to give the citizens time to clean up the snow, open the roads, and allow me to fly the hell out of there. Buffalo is a nice town (sarcasm) but not a place I’d like to spend any extra time in. I’ve been to Niagara Falls and unfortunately if you’ve seen one waterfall you’ve seen them all. With that being said and since my day has been interrupted, I thought I’d get a little silly. Everyone seems to love the limericks I post so I offer you a few odd ball limericks today. These are tongue twister limericks written by a gentleman named Lou Brooks in 2009 in a book of the same name. Enjoy . . .

❄️❄️❄️

Nosy Rose got closed in a closet of clothes,

The clothes closet closed on Rose’s red rosy nose,

She tweaked on her beak,

For over a week,

Rose’s nosy red nose now hangs close to her toes.

🌨️🌨️🌨️

Walt walked and talked on his wife’s walkie-talkie,

Walt’s wife’s walkie-talkie made Walt’s talky-talk squawky.

Wide awake while Walt walked,

Was what Walt was while he talked,

While Walt’s wife walked her way to Milwaukee.

Two of these should be sufficient. Trying to get a computer program to type these as I speak is ridiculous. Here’s a description of my day in a nutshell.

☃️💗☃️

MY DAY (so far)

cat in my lap

rain on my brain

binging on weirdness

tales of the grimm

⛷️⛷️⛷️

GO STEELERS

01/13/2024 “Retro Football v. Now”   1 comment

With the playoffs and Superbowl looming in our immediate future and Belichick ending his reign as a Patriot, it seems the right time for a football post. Football has been making numerous mistakes in recent months with questionable NFL officiating and the fiasco with Michigan and coach Jim Harbaugh that was blatantly unfair, biased, and embarrassing. So, let me take you back in time to review a few old time slight-of-hand coaching maneuvers when the game was more fun and not controlled by the almighty dollar and the media’s talking heads.

Johnny Heisman, for whom the Heisman Trophy is named, was one of football’s most inventive coaches. One of his oddest inventions was the old hidden ball trick. One day in 1895, a player asked him if it was illegal to hide the ball during a play. He knew it wasn’t against the rules, but how could it be done?

Two of Heisman’s players at Auburn, Walt Shafer and “Tick” Tichenor, thought the ball could be hidden under a running backs jersey, and they helped devise a play. As the ball was snapped to Tichenor, the rest of the team would drop back and form a circle around him. Then Tichenor would slip the ball under his jersey, and he would drop to one knee. The team would run to the right and the defenders would follow them. Then Tichenor would get up and run the other way. Auburn tried the trick against Vanderbilt soon after and scored a touchdown with it.

Tighter uniforms and faster play have made the hidden ball trick harder and harder to perform. The bizarre play is hardly ever used today, thank God. It would totally befuddle the indecisive officials of this modern era. It would require an immediate replay, a delay of game, and a group discussion by a panel of league officials to get a final decision. What an absolute waste of time and energy. A quick and effective way to take the fun out of the game.

Here is another sample of old-time footballers attempting to circumvent and bend the rules a little.

Two of the smartest football coaches of all time were Percy Haughton of Harvard and “Pop” Warner, who coached at Carlisle Institute and later at Stanford. In 1908 Warner’s team from Carlisle was scheduled to play Harvard. The week before the Harvard game, Warner had to use a clever trick to help defeat a strong Syracuse team. Carlisle players had pads sewn to their pants and jerseys. The pads were the same size, shape and color as a football, making it very difficult to tell which player had the football and which one was only pretending. When Carlisle started to practice on Harvard’s field the day before the game, Haughton saw the football-like pads. “That’s not fair,” said Haughton mildly. “It’s not against the rules,” laughed Warner. ”I can put anything I like on my players jerseys.

But Haughton had a few tricks up his sleeve as well. Just before kickoff time, Warner and Haughton met on the field to pick out the game football. Warner reached into the bag of balls Haughton had brought and pulled one out. It was red! Haughton had dyed all of the balls crimson, the color of Harvard’s jerseys. “It’s not against the rules, Haughton smiled, a football doesn’t have to be brown, does it? Warner walked back to the sidelines muttering to himself. Harvard won the game, 17-0. 

And amazingly as far as I can tell nobody was disciplined, fined, or suspended. The game was played, someone won, and someone lost. Truth be told it’s still just that simple even in this day and age of computers and the plethora of alleged football media experts.

OH, FOR A RETURN TO THE GOOD OLD DAYS

Go Steelers!!!

01/11/2024 💥💥The Limerick Returns💥💥   Leave a comment

As I was preparing this post, I decided midsentence to step away from poetry for a day or two and to return to one of my favorite things which are limericks. I have quite the collection of limericks of all types and unfortunately, I have hundreds that I really can’t post on this blog, no matter how much readers continue to request them. I’ve picked out a few random samples from different historical periods and I’ll post them over the next few weeks. Here is my history by limerick . . .

***

World War II

A lady of doubtful nativity

Had an ass of extreme sensitivity.

She could sit on the lap

Of a Nazi or Jap,

And detect Fifth Column activity.

🪖🗽🪖

Don’t dip your prick in a WAC

Don’t ride the breast of a WAVE.

Just sit in the sand

And do it by hand

And buy bonds with the money you save.

🪖🗽🪖

There was a young lady from Beaman,

Who was known as a sexual demon.

“These soldiers,” said she,

“Mean nothing to me,

For what I really like is the semen.”

🪖🗽🪖

A female Nazi from Bredo

Advances her sinister credo,

By displaying her charms

During air raid alarms,

Inflaming the warden’s libido.

***

01/09/2024 “POETRY – Laughter and Pain”   Leave a comment

“The poet is a reporter interviewing his own heart.”

Christopher Morely

***

Poetry at times can be beautiful. It can bring tears to your eyes and joy to your heart but as with anything it also has the ability to become something dark and disturbing. I try to make a point of reading samples of poetry from as many poets as I can. Some of the most touching poems are not about happy moments running through fields of flowers with birds flying around, but of deep sadness and pain.

On a regular basis I make purchases from thrift bookstores on eBay. A book arrived at my home recently and I knew reading it was going to be extremely difficult. It’s a selection of poetry written by young people who have had to deal with divorcing parents. The book is titled “broken hearts… healing”, Young Poets Speaking Out, compiled and edited by Tom Worthen, Ph.D. I just finished reading the first half of that book and it forced me to deal with the pain I caused to my own son. Many years ago, I ended a twenty-year marriage and caused a great deal of pain to a young man that we adopted (at age twelve) from a number of state-run foster homes. He deserved better than we were able to give him at the time, and this book brought it all back with a vengeance. Here are two poems that brought tears to my eyes.

TUG OF WAR

Nobody has the life I have,

I can’t imagine if the whole world did.

My parents don’t even talk,

They get to ask who wants us and when.

It is like me and my two sisters are in the middle of everything.

So I hope you don’t have the life I have,

And if you do I’m sorry.

by Beth, Age 11

***

WHERE IS MY DAD?

He comes around like he cares,

but when I was young he was not there.

He has a new family and a wife to love dear,

when I was around he made me feel weird.

When I was alone crying in my bed,

was he there, no, it was mom instead.

When I look at my friends with their moms and dads,

I think if he didn’t mess it up,

Oh, what I could have had!

by Dana, Age 13

***