Archive for the ‘Just Saying’ Category

03/05/2026 1960’s Trivia   Leave a comment

The 60’s were an interesting and drug filled decade. I lived through it and thoroughly enjoyed almost all of it, How much do you know or remember? Put on your bell bottoms and crappy sandals, drop some acid, and go for a walk on the street to chat with strangers. I dare you!

Lets step back into the 1960’s. As always the answers are listed below.

  • What was the name of the “doorway” between the divided Berlins?
  • In what city was the 1968 Democratic Convention held?
  • Name of the Rockefeller that never returned from New Guinea?
  • Who were the first astronauts to fly the two-occupant Gemini capsule?
  • What was the first Apollo mission to carry a color TV camera to the moon?

  • In what European city was Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassin apprehended?
  • In what area of the Dallas policed station was Lee Harvey Oswald shot by Jack Ruby?
  • What popular tranquilizer was introduced in 1963?
  • In 1968 which nation became the fifth to have “the bomb”?
  • How was the Nazi war criminal Adolph Eichmann put to death?

BONUS QUESTION

What two nations combined to form Tanzania?

👇👇👇

Answers

Checkpoint Charlie, Chicago, Michael, Gus Grissom & John Young, Apollo XII, London, The Garage, Valium, France, He was Hanged, BONUS-Tanganyika & Zanzibar

NEXT UP – THE 1970’S

03/03/2026 1950’s Trivia   Leave a comment

Here is the next installment of more retro trivia facts from the 1950’s. Lets see if you can improve on your score from the 1940’s quiz. As always the answers will be listed below. Have fun!

  • How man presidents were elected in the 1950’s?
  • Name the pope elected in 1958.
  • Who did George Jorgensen become?
  • Name the first atomic submarine.
  • What lamp reached it’s height of popularity in the 1950’s?

  • What British king died in 1952?
  • The Ford Motor Company has never lived down the failure of what car, introduced in the 50’s?
  • Name the political group that was established in 1950 by H.N. Arrowsmith, Jr,
  • Established in 1953, NASA stands for what?
  • What Russian word, popularized in the late 1950’s , means “fellow wayfarer”?

BONUS Question

Where did the unoccupied Soviet spacecraft Lunik journey?

👇👇👇

Answers

One, John XXIII, Christine Jorgensen, The Nautilus, Pole Lamp, King George VI, The Edsel, The American Nazi Party, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Sputnik, BONUS- To the Moon,

THE 1960’S ARE NEXT

02/28/2026 1940″s Trivia   Leave a comment

Todays post will take us on a short time-travel trip to the 1940’s. This will be the first of five trivia posts from past decades from the 1940’s through the 1980’s. These first few questions may be difficult since most readers weren’t alive in the 40’s but if your a fan of history you may learn a few mostly forgotten facts. Let’s get started. As always the answers will be listed below.

  • What important journal was found in Amsterdam following World War II?
  • In what year was Korea split in two?
  • On what day of the week was Pearl Harbor bombed?
  • Who coined the phrase “Iron Curtin”?
  • What newspaper ran the infamous headline “Dewey Defeats Truman”?

  • In what island group is Corregidor, which fell to the Japanese in 1942.
  • From what nation did Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) gain it’s independence in 1948?
  • The body of what World War II leader was hung upside down in public?
  • What world leader in 1943 survived a bomb set by his generals to assassinate him?
  • What was the nickname given the the Nazi general Erwin Rommel?

BONUS Question

What two world leaders met in Casablanca in 1943?

👇👇👇

Answers

The Diary of Ann Frank, 1948, Sunday, Winston Churchill, The Chicago Daily Tribune, The Philippines, Great Britain, Benito Mussolini, Adolph Hitler, The Desert Fox, BONUS-Churchill and Roosevelt

THE 1950’s IS NEXT

02/24/2026 🏈MORE NFL TRIVIA🏈   Leave a comment

Currently there seems to be no lack of interest in all things NFL. Now that the the Combine is approaching the interest level on football is once again skyrocketing. Every fan seems to think they are the absolute experts about all things football thanks to their involvement in the never-ending list of fantasy leagues. Here are a few tidbits of trivia that may interest some of them. Answers will be listed below.

  • Name the kicker who led all NFL scorers in 1998 while making every single field goal and extra point attempt?
  • After suffering a serious knee injury in 2011, which running back made an amazing comeback to lead the NFL with a near-record 2,097 yards rushing and 2,314 yards from scrimmage in 2012?
  • Despite leading the NFL in the number of times sacked, which player posted the highest QB rating during the 2012 season?
  • When he started his 117th consecutive game in 1999, which player did Brett Farvre overtake to become the new NFL “Ironman”?

  • Who was the first QB to win four Superbowl Championships?
  • In 2012 what quarterback broke the Johnny Unitas longstanding record for consecutive games throwing at least one touchdown pass?
  • What was the first team to win five Superbowl championships?
  • Which running back was the first player to rush for 20 touchdowns in a single season?

🏈❤️🏈❤️🏈

Answers
Gary Anderson, Adrian Peterson, Aaron Rodgers, Ron Jaworski, Terry Bradshaw, Drew Brees with 54 games, The San Francisco 49ers, John Riggens

02/21/2026 “UNDENIABLE TRUTHS”   Leave a comment

Most human beings are somewhat intelligent. Of course that doesn’t always guarantee that they’re very smart. Many times in my life I’ve been challenged about something I’ve said or written even when I have irrefutable proof to prove my statements. There are always people who adamantly demand that they are correct regardless of any proof provided. Some folks simply enjoy arguing about everything and others are just simply ignorant. Human nature being what it is, I don’t see any changes in this regard. Todays post will contain a number of items which may seem incorrect to some of you, but they are not. Wrap your heads around these tidbits of truthfulness . The correct answers will be listed below.

❓❓❓

  • What was the first invention to break the sound barrier?
  • What animal are the Canary Islands named after?
  • What do camels store in their humps?
  • What do dolphins drink?
  • How many toes does a two-toed sloth have?

🔆🔆🔆

  • What African mammal kills more humans than any other?
  • Where do most tigers live?
  • Where was the sport of baseball invented?
  • How did Nome, Alaska get it’s name?
  • What do we use to write on a black-board?

❓❓❓

BONUS QUESTION

What was the first animal in space?

❤️❤️❤️

Answers

The Whip, Dogs (Insula Canaria), Fat, Nothing, 6 or 8, The Hippopotamus, The USA in Zoos, England, A Spelling Mistake, Gypsum, BONUS-Fruit Flies

HOW DID YOU DO?

02/14/2026 💥LIMERICK HISTORY CONCLUSION💥   Leave a comment

It’s time to end this series of posts about limericks. It’s been fun writing and researching all of these older limericks and I’ll continue to do so with periodic posts of this type. I became enamored with limericks as a ten year old boy listening at the door of a card game while my father and his friends were playing poker. One of them recited the following limerick and I’ve never forgotten it. It imbodies everything I like in poetry. It’s both a little funny and a little bawdy. Enjoy. . .

☘️

There was a man from Cass

Whose balls were made of brass.

During inclement weather he’d rub them together

And lightning would shoot out of his ass.

☘️☘️

If you aren’t smiling at that one then limericks aren’t for you. Over the years I’ve written many myself and upset both friends and family because I lean to the bawdy side of things. The following ditty was written by me just a few days ago and it reminded just how much fun it is to create one. Here it is . . .

There once was an old man from Maine.

Whose obsession with limericks became

an excuse for the use of words like f**k it,

And he never ever visited Nantucket.

❤️❤️❤️

I HOPE YOU’VE ENJOYED THE SERIES

02/12/2026 💥ISAAC ASIMOV-LIMERICK ALERT💥   Leave a comment

Isaac Asimov (1920-1992)

I’ve always been a huge fan of Asimov even before I learned he was a proficient writer of limericks. I’ve been reading his novels for many years and have always considered him to be fellow lover of science fiction. After reading some of his limericks I discovered his relationship with John Ciardi and their famous limerick wars. For those of you not familiar with Azimov and his works I’d recommend you read his greatest work, The Foundation Series. I love reading long and involved stories and I’d put Asimov right up there with J.R.R Tolkien and J. K Rowling. Here’s a few samples of his well constructed limericks.

☘️

When alone, a young woman named Julia

Had qualities quite peculiar.

And when men were about

(short, tall, lean, or stout)

Her conduct was even unrulier,

☘️☘️

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.

☘️☘️☘️

There was once a great knight named Sir Lancelot

Who placed Queen Guinevere in a trance a lot.

But what bothered the King

Was: he managed the thing

By serenely removing his pants a lot.

☘️☘️☘️☘️

Sex need not be conversational.

Without talking it’s still inspirational,

But mind you’re not burned

For many have learned

The act can be baby-creational.

❤️❤️❤️

IN TWO DAYS -CONCLUSION OF THE LIMERICK SERIES

02/10/2026 💥JOHN CIARDI-LIMERICK ALERT💥   Leave a comment

John Ciardi (1916-1986)

While primarily known as a poet and translator of Dante’s Divine Comedy, he also wrote several volumes of children’s poetry and contributed to the Saturday Review as a columnist and long-time poetry editor. I could continue with all of his accomplishments but they are endless. In 1981 he co-authored a book, LIMERICKS, with his friend Isaac Asimov. It was called a “War of Words (limericks)” and makes for a great read. Two utterly famous men who absolutely loved writing limericks just for fun.

☘️

“What a silly” I said. That’s no sea –

“It’s a sink!” – “A sink it may be,

But I’d sooner I think

Bed at sea in the sink

Than sink in the sea, sir,” said he.

☘️☘️

There was young man from Montrose

Who said to a girl, “I propose

That since time is short

For affairs of this sort

We begin by removing our clothes.”

☘️☘️☘️

There was a young lady named Wright

Who simply could not sleep at night

Because of the ping-

Ping-ping of her spring

And the glare of her little red light.

☘️☘️☘️☘️

Our neighborhood whore is no beauty.

But we’re not the sort to be snooty.

We favor a lass

With a good country ass

And a proper devotion to duty.

❤️❤️❤️

ISAAC ASIMOV IN TWO DAYS

02/07/2026 💥DAVID MCCORD-LIMERICK ALERT💥   Leave a comment

David McCord (1897-1997)

David McCord was a notable American author, best known for his contributions to children’s poetry and also serving as the executive director of the Harvard Fund Council for several decades. His limerick are still somewhat mild as seen in Mr. Lear’s contribution.

☘️

“There was an old man” of whatever

You like, thus the limerick never

Accounts for the young:

You will find them unsung

Whether stupid, wise, foolish, or clever.

☘️☘️

There once was a man in the Moon,

But he got there a little too soon.

Some others came later

And fell down a crater –

When was it? Next August? Last June?

☘️☘️☘️

A man who was fond of his skunk

Thought he smelled pure and pungent as punk.

But his friends cried No, no,

No, no, no, no no, no!

He just stinks, or he stank, or he stunk.

☘️☘️☘️☘️

There was an old man who cried Boo!

Not to me or to he but to you.

He also said scat

To a dog not a cat,

And to Timbuc he added too-too.

❤️❤️❤️

JOHN CIARDI IN THREE DAYS

02/05/2026 💥EDWARD LEAR-LIMERICK ALERT💥   Leave a comment

I’d like to introduce to you Mr. Edward Lear. He was a prolific writer of hundreds of limericks in the early days. They are much milder in content than what we are currently seeing. Enjoy!

Edward Lear (1812-1888)

☘️

There was an old man, who when little

Fell casually into a kettle;

But, growing too stout,

He could never get out,

So he passed all his life in that kettle.

☘️☘️

There was an old lady whose chin

Resembled the head of a pin;

So she had it made sharp,

And purchased a harp,

And played several tunes with her chin.

☘️☘️☘️

There was once an old lady whose folly

Induced her to sit in a holly;

Whereon by a thorn,

Her dress being torn,

She quickly became melancholy.

☘️☘️☘️☘️

There was an old man in a tree,

Who was horribly bored by a bee;

When they said, “Does it buzz?”

He replied, “Yes, it does!

It’s a regular brute of a bee!”

❤️❤️❤️

DAVID MCCORD IN TWO DAYS