Archive for the ‘Celebrities’ Category

10/26/2023 ⭐⭐Retro Hollywood Trivia⭐⭐   Leave a comment

Many years ago, I started this blog, and I chose its name very carefully. I fully intended then and still continue now to supply all of you with as much useless information as I can possibly find. Today I’d like to test the trivia knowledge of all of you fans of celebrities and Hollywood. This information was gleaned from a long-lost trivia book I stumbled upon in an old trunk I’ve had in storage for years. The first printing of this book was in February of 1975 at a total cost per copy of $1.25. I consider myself a trivia aficionado but the answers to these retro-Hollywood questions left me clueless. Maybe you’ll have more luck.

  • Name one of the two actresses who starred as the singing and dancing Dolly Sisters in the 1945 movie of that title? Betty Grabel was Jenny and June Haver was Rosie
  • What comedian appears in “Whistling in Brooklyn,” “The Fuller Brush Man,” and “Susan Slept Here”? Red Skelton
  • What does W. C. Fields give away in the comedy film “The Pharmacist”? Large vases.
  • What was cowboy sidekick George (Gabby) Hayes known as when he appeared with Bill Boyd in the Hopalong Cassidy movie series? “Windy”
  • What is Shirley Temple’s middle name? Jane

  • What is the title of the movie in which Charlie Chaplin falls in love with a blind flower girl? “City Lights”
  • Who portrays the “Invisible Man” in the 1933 movie of that title, and what is his occupation? Claude Rains played the role of a mad scientist named Griffin.
  • In the original MGM movie “The Champ” tells the story of an old prizefighter and his young son. Name the actors who played the two roles. Wallace Beery and Jackie Cooper, respectively.
  • During World War I, Humphrey Bogart served in the U.S. Navy. His ship was shelled, and this caused what to happen to him physically? It caused his upper lip to be partially paralyzed, resulting in a tightly set mouth and a lisp.
  • What longtime star, whose career began in 1925, was actually named Billie Cassin and was also known on the stage as Lucile LeSueur? Joan Crawford

⭐⭐⭐

10/10/2023 “Retro Raunch”   1 comment

Once again, it’s time for a small collection of somewhat strange riddles from my favorite raunchy decade the 1980’s. That decade wasn’t near as bad as the 1960’s but it’s a damn close second for raunchiness. Enjoy this short retro trip down mammary lane . . .

  • Why is a virgin like a balloon? One prick and it’s all over!
  • Why was the bisexual prizefighter undefeated? He could lick anyone!
  • Why do girls fart after they pee? They can’t shake it, so they blow it dry!
  • How can you tell if Dolly Parton forgot to wear her bra? There are no wrinkles in her face!
  • What did Adam say when he woke up and was missing a rib? “Something smells fishy around here!”

  • What does the Lone Ranger do in the men’s room after a big meal? Take a dump, take a dump, take a dump dump dump!
  • What do you call oral sex in a national park? Old faceful!
  • What’s a prophylactic? A planned parent hood!
  • What’s the definition of trust? Two cannibals having oral sex!
  • How many lesbians does it take to screw in a light bulb? Four. One to screw it in, and three to discuss how it’s so much more gratifying than with a man!
***CARDI EFFING B***

OMG AND YIKES!

10/10/2023 “SO TRUE . . . SO TRUE.”   Leave a comment

The internet has become famous for anonymous facts claiming to be true as well and out-and-out fake news and scams of all kinds. Here are ten facts that are surprising and amazingly TRUE.

  • More tickets were sold to see the movie Gone With the Wind in theaters than people living in America at its release.
  • John Lennon signed the official paperwork formalizing the split of the Beatles while staying at a Disney World hotel.
  • Yoda from the movie Star Wars, cookie monster from Sesame Street, and Miss Piggy from the Muppet Show were all voiced by the same person.
  • The leading role in the movie Forrest Gump was originally offered to John Travolta.
  • Leonardo DiCaprio didn’t draw the sketch of Kate Winslet in Titanic, but director James Cameron did.

  • Gene Roddenberry originally wanted Patrick Stewart to wear a wig for his iconic Star Trek role as Captain Jean-Luc Picard.
  • Stephen Spielberg submitted Schindler’s List as his final project for film school.
  • Brad Pitt’s first acting gig was dressing up as a giant chicken.
  • The NFL, NBA, and MLB have all had one player win the championship MVP while playing for the losing team.
  • Violet Jessop was the one passenger who was aboard both the Titanic and its sister ship the Britannic when they were sunk.

TIME FLIES WHEN YOU’RE SWEARING

10/07/2023 “PEARLS of WISDOM”   1 comment

As the title suggests here are a few humorous stories and one gratuitous limerick. They’re all pearls of wisdom and I hope they help make you a little wiser. Here goes . . .

Once Yogi Berra, in his younger days, was in a batting slump. The manager felt this was because he was swinging at too many bad pitches. He therefore called Yogi to one side during a slow day in the schedule and gave him an intensive course in judging incoming baseball to determine whether they were outside the strike zone. Yogi’s batting promptly grew even worse, he said “It’s this judging of balls. I just can’t hit and think at the same time.”

And here’s a limerick for all of you aficionados:

To moralists, sex is a sin

Yet Nature suggests we begin.

She arranged it, no doubt,

That a fellow juts out

In the place where a damsel juts in.

🤣🤣🤣

A friend of mine was on a plane. It had achieved a high and steady flight and was set on autopilot. The pilot stretched, yawned, and said, “What I need now is a cup of coffee and a blow job. “What the pilot didn’t know was that the public address system was still on, and his words were heard throughout the plane. A stewardess hurriedly ran forward to the cockpit to tell the pilot to shut off the PA system before he committed any further indiscretions. As she ran by, an elderly female passenger yelled out, “Don’t forget, honey. He wants coffee, too.”

Julius Caesar was once asked what kind of death was the best. He gave the best conceivable answer, for he said, “A sudden one.” Unfortunately for Caesar he was assassinated the next day – suddenly.

An irate woman once told Winston Churchill, when he was a young man and temporarily sporting a small mustache, “Young man, I like neither your politics nor your mustache.” To which Churchill replied, “Madam, you are not likely to come into contact with either.”

😎💩😎

09/14/2023 “SMARTASSES”   3 comments

I have upon occasion been called a sarcastic smartass. Truth be told, I’ve been called that on many occasions by many people and I wear that mantle with pride. It probably will explain this post that concerns two of my all-time favorite people, Oscar Wilde and Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain), two of the most famous smartasses in the world. History calls them humorists, rascals, and intellectuals but that’s just history being kind. They took biting humor and sarcasm to new levels and did it in such a way as to make people love and respect them. Fortunately, I don’t have to worry about that. Here’s a little personal information on Oscar with a collection of his quotes.

Oscar Fingal O’Flaherty Wills Wilde (16 October 1854 – 30 November 1900) was an Irish poet and playwright. After writing in different forms throughout the 1880s, he became one of the most popular playwrights in London in the early 1890s.

  • “Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.”
  • “To live is the rarest thing in the world. Most people exist, that is all.”
  • “Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.”
  • “I am so clever that sometimes I don’t understand a single word of what I am saying.”
  • “We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.”
  • “If one cannot enjoy reading a book over and over again, there is no use in reading it at all.”
  • “It is what you read when you don’t have to that determines what you will be when you can’t help it.”
  • “The truth is rarely pure and never simple.”
  • “You can never be overdressed or overeducated.”
  • “Never love anyone who treats you like you’re ordinary.”

Now for a little taste of Mark Twain. He was a good old down-home boy who had the ability to make politicians shiver in their boots and the rest of us to laugh at his humorous way of seeing things.

Samuel Langhorne Clemens (November 30, 1835 – April 21, 1910), best known by his pen name Mark Twain, was an American writer, humorist, entrepreneur, publisher, and lecturer. He was praised as the “greatest humorist the United States has produced”. Here a a few pearls of wisdom from Mark.

  • “The best way to cheer yourself up is to try to cheer somebody else up.”
  • “A person who won’t read has no advantage over one who can’t read.”
  • “Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect.”
  • “I have never let my schooling interfere with my education.”
  • “The secret of getting ahead is getting started.”
  • “Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear, not absence of fear.”
  • “Humor is mankind’s greatest blessing.”
  • “Success is not the key to happiness. Happiness is the key to success. If you love what you are doing, you will be successful.”

Back in my college days when I thought I knew everything but really didn’t, I had a professor once ask me what person living or dead would I like to sit down and have a meaningful conversation with. I can’t remember my answer but I’m sure it was stupid and meaningless because at that time I was totally clueless. If I could communicate with him now these two gentlemen would be my first and second choices. Better yet, I’d love to have them both sitting with me in a corner of a dark quiet pub sharing a bottle of brandy or bourbon and puffing on a cigar to discuss the state of the world or anything else they’d like to tell me.

As Always

SMARTASSES RULE!

08/22/2023 “Smile Dammit II”   Leave a comment

Since we’re well into the middle of August already, I feel like I’m on another planet. These changes in the weather patterns are just too weird to try and explain. I’ve lived in Maine almost 24 years and I’ve never seen or experienced summer weather that would require using an electric blanket in July. It’s hard at times to celebrate a summer that we haven’t had yet but I’m sure next year will be just as effing great. With that depressing thought in mind, I feel the need to inject a little humor back into our lives. You’re welcome to come along for the ride if you like.

😁😅😂🤣

There was a man who had insomnia so bad he couldn’t even fall asleep when it was time to wake up.

It was an enormous funeral that was winding its way through the streets of the town, and, in every way, no signs of sorrow had been seen. A bystander, who had been away from the neighborhood for a while, nudged a neighbor. “Who died?” he whispered. “Big Angelo’s girlfriend, said the other.” Big Angelo’s girlfriend? But she was so young! What did she die of?” “Gonorrhea!” “Gonorrhea! But that’s impossible. No one dies of gonorrhea.” “You do when you give it to Big Angelo.”

I sat next to the Duchess at Tea.

It was just as I feared it would be.

Her rumblings abdominal

Were truly phenomenal,

And everyone thought it was me.

A man and a woman met on the beach, they fell in love with each other at first glance, and after three days, were married. The wedding night was just as successful as it could be, but when the woman awoke the following morning, she found her husband dressing. She asked, “Where are you going?” “Darling, we married so quickly I didn’t have a chance to tell you I’m addicted to golf. I’m afraid you’ll rarely see me. She nodded and said, “That’s all right, we married so quickly I forgot to tell you I’m a hooker.” The man smiled and said, “That’s nothing darling. Don’t worry about that because it’s easily corrected. You just need to hold the club like this . . . . “

Chemists are known for synthesizing some marvelous chemicals. There is the story that one synthesized an aphrodisiac for men that was so powerful it had to be swallowed very quickly to avoid getting a stiff neck.

And last but not least a short but interesting story about a visitor to the home of Pablo Picasso. The visitor remarked there were no Picasso’s on the walls. “Don’t you like Picasso paintings?” asked the visitor roguishly.” “Of course, I do,” said Picasso. “I just can’t afford them.”

WHY AREN’T YOU SMILING???

08/19/2023 MISH MOSH in the Rain   Leave a comment

Just another gray, cloudy, rainy, miserable, depressing day. I never thought I would wish for snow, but I’m THIS close.

  • Until 1796, there was a state in the United States called Franklin. Today it’s known as Tennessee.
  • In the year 2000, Pope John Paul II was named an honorary Harlem Globetrotter.
  • The Boston Marathon didn’t allow female runners until 1972.
  • Approximately 40% of guests arriving at a party admit to snooping in the hosts medicine cabinet.
  • Catnip is ten times more effective repelling mosquitoes than some of the commercial products containing DEET.

  • Hawaii’s state flag is the only US state flag to feature the Union Jack.
  • The King of Hearts is the only king without a mustache on the deck of standard playing cards.
  • In Tokyo, a bicycle is faster than a car for most trips of less than 50 minutes.
  • Bulletproof vests, fire escapes, dishwashers, and windshield wipers were all invented by women.
  • Water is the thing most often choked upon by Americans.

  • The first product to have a barcode was Wrigley’s gum.
  • The chance that a dollar bill contains remnants of cocaine is approximately 80%.
  • The average life span of a major league baseball is 5 to 7 pitches.
  • From groundbreaking to opening day, the original Disneyland was built in just 365 days.
  • The word Gorilla comes from a Greek word that means a “tribe of hairy women.”

EVERYUSELESSTHING YOU NEEDED TO KNOW

08/01/2023 “Summer Musings”   Leave a comment

An airplane flying from Houston to Chicago had a very close call. For a while it seemed they were doomed to crash to fiery destruction, but at the last minute the pilot got it under control and landed safely. Out of the plane came 200 midgets. An onlooker said, “I never saw so many midgets in my life.” Said another, “Those aren’t midgets. Those are Texans with the shit scared out of them.

In Hollywood, it is not enough for you to succeed; your friends must fail.

As per Yogi, “You can observe a great deal just by watching.”

Who doesn’t like stereotypes? A Texan had just had a baby son, and he was passing out enormous cigars. “Likeliest little varmint you ever saw,” he said proudly. “He weighs twenty-seven pounds.” Two weeks later, the friend met him and said, “How’s the kid?” “Fine,” said the Texan. “The little tyke weighs sixteen pounds.” The friend looked puzzled. “Why, when he was born you said he weighed twenty-seven pounds.” “I know.” said the Texan, “but we had him circumcised.”

There once was a young plumber from Leigh

Who was plumbing a girl by the sea.

Said the maid, “Cease your plumbing,

I think someone’s coming.”

Said the plumber, still plumbing, “It’s me!”

At the zoo, a curious woman said to one of those who tended the animals, “How do you tell a male hippopotamus from a female hippopotamus?” The keeper said, “We don’t really have to, ma’am. The hippopotamuses figure it out for themselves.”

There is a story that Mussolini was once stranded in a small town in Italy when his car broke down, To pass the time, he visited a local movie house. Came the newsreel, and, of course, his own face flashed on the screen.

Everyone in the movie house stood up, but Mussolini, feeling tired and feeling no compulsion to stand up in his own honor, remained seated. Whereupon the man next to him whispered, “I feel exactly as you do, but take my advice and stand up. It’s safer.”

THANKS ISAAC

07/18/2023 “ISAAC SPEAKS”   1 comment

Isaac Asimov (1920 – 1992)

He was an American writer and professor of biochemistry at Boston University. A prolific writer, he wrote or edited more than 500 books. He also wrote an estimated 90,000 letters and postcards. Best known for his hard science fiction, Asimov also wrote mysteries and fantasy, as well as a great deal of non-fiction.

*****

I’ve been a fan of Isaac Asimov, for as long as I can remember. I’ve tried to read everything of his that I could find and have never regretted it. He’s one of the most prolific writers who’ve ever lived and is well-versed in virtually any topic someone would like to talk about. Over the years I’ve also discovered that he was one of the funniest writers as well and has written books of limericks and stories that were outrageously funny. I recently acquired a book of his from 1992 (the year of his death) titled Azimov Laughs Again. It’s a volume of funny stories from his life as well as some of his favorite jokes and limericks. Here are a couple jokes to help get your day started.

  • Mr. Ginsberg, age 83, went to the doctor for a complete examination head to toe. About halfway through, the doctor was called to the telephone. He said, “Mr. Ginsberg, this will not take more than a few minutes. Here’s a jar. While I am gone, go to the bathroom and place a semen sample in it for examination. Then we’ll continue. “A few minutes later, the doctor indeed returned, and there stood Mr. Ginsberg with the jar- totally empty. “Doctor,” said Mr. Ginsberg. “I did my best. I tried with my right hand, and I tried with my left hand. I even tried with both hands, but nothing happened. The doctor said soothingly, “Now, Mr. Ginsberg, don’t feel embarrassed. At the age of 83, it is quite common to be impotent.” Whereupon Ginsberg said, with towering indignation, “What do you mean, impotent? I couldn’t open the jar.”

  • Old Mr. Anderson and his equally aged wife were filing for divorce. The judge, eyeing them with astonishment, said, “How old are you, Mr. Anderson?” “Ninety-three”, Your Honor. “And your wife?” “Ninety-one”, Your Honor.” “And how long have you been married?” “Sixty-six years.” “Then why do you want to get a divorce now?” “Well, you know how it is, Your Honor.” We were waiting for the children to die.”

He has an interesting sense of humor and I freaking love it. Here’s a small add-on which is one of his favorite limericks.

There was a young couple from Florida

Whose passion grew steadily torrider.

They were planning to sin

In a room in an inn.

Who can wait? So, they screwed in the corridor.

HAVING A HAPPY RAINY TUESDAY

07/13/2023 “FIRSTS”   1 comment

I’m not entirely sure why being “first” is so important to so many of us. Everyone wants to be “first” not just in sporting events, but damn near everything. I was the “first” kid in my family to go to college, and it gave my parents something they used to impress their friends. I was also the “first” in the family to drop out of college and join the Army. I sure didn’t get any kudos for that move. Today I decided to research some “firsts” not just from the United States but worldwide. This is also the “first” time I’ve written about “firsts” on this blog. Let me be the “first” to congratulate myself for that.

  • Barbra Streisand’s first performance was as a chocolate chip cookie.
  • The first song Bruce Springsteen ever learned to play on the guitar was The Rolling Stones, “It’s All Over Now.”
  • The first ready to eat breakfast cereal was Shredded Wheat in 1893 (it beat Kellogg’s Corn Flakes by just five years).
  • The first scientifically planned slimming diet was devised in 1862 by Dr. Harvey, an ear specialist, for an overweight undertaker. At that time dieting was initially something that only men did, and women didn’t start to do it until they stopped wearing figure-altering corsets.
  • The first dry cleaning was done in 1849 by a Monsieur Jolly-Bellin of France, who discovered the process by mistake when he upset a lamp over a newly laundered tablecloth and found that the part that was covered with alcohol from the lamp was cleaner than the rest.

  • Peter Sellers was the first male to ever be featured on the cover of Playboy.
  • Cuba Gooding Jr’s first job was as a dancer for Lionel Richie at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.
  • The world’s first traffic island was installed – at his own expense – by Colonel Pierrepoint outside his London club. It’s also ironic that he was later killed crossing over to it.
  • Courtney Cox was the first person on U.S. TV ever to use the word period in an ad for Tampax.
  • Gustav Mahler composed his first piece of music at the age of four, Sergei Prokofiev composed his first piece of music at age five, and Wolfgang Mozart was just eight when he composed his first symphony.

MAKE A LIST OF YOUR TEN “FIRSTS”