T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
410.1 | Not original, but a worthy entry... | SUPER::KENAH | Doing laps in the gene pool | Mon Sep 14 1987 14:52 | 9 |
| John Madden -- once coach of the Raiders (a US version football team)
-- used to inspire his team with the following. He has since admitted
that even he has no idea what it means:
"Never mind that the horse is blind, just load the wagon."
andrew
|
410.2 | obscurity or incoherence? | LEZAH::BOBBITT | face piles of trials with smiles | Mon Sep 14 1987 16:14 | 22 |
| From Monty Python - "A nudge is as good as a wink to a blind horse"
I'm not sure if you're looking for obscurity within the words,
or a lack of cohesion between them, but here's obscure
From a book called "a twister of twists, a tangler of tongues"
Do you have the audacity to doubt my veracity and insinuate that
I prevaricate?
(are you saying I lie?)
My gastronomical satiety admonishes me that I have arrived at a
state of deglutition inconsistent with dietetic integrity
(I ate too much)
On a desk sign: I know you think you understand what I just said,
but I am not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I
meant.
-Jody
|
410.3 | Short and sweet | COMICS::KEY | Calling International Rescue... | Tue Sep 15 1987 09:18 | 8 |
| Don't forget IBM's old motto, which used to appear everywhere, even
on the beermats in the social club:
THINK!
Hummm...
Andy
|
410.4 | Getting back to the point... | AYOV18::ISMITH | Ian Smith | Tue Sep 15 1987 11:16 | 14 |
| We seem to be straying slightly from the task in hand. See if you
can invent your own saying which defies analysis but at the same
time sounds profound and inspiring. For example, "Time is but a
contraceptive in the face of doom".
Perhaps I should have a go myself.......
The frying pan of life has no easy chair.
Ian 8^>.
|
410.5 | | GLIVET::RECKARD | | Tue Sep 15 1987 12:45 | 4 |
| To take off from .-1's
> The frying pan of life has no easy chair.
The easy chair of life leads one to the knowledge of higher seats.
|
410.6 | attempt #2 | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | face piles of trials with smiles | Tue Sep 15 1987 13:38 | 16 |
|
Satisfaction is the flight insurance of hummingbirds.
The truth often burns when the bread is stale.
Dreams are but marshmallows in the kitchen of reality.
The school of hard knocks is the condiment of the multitudes.
Memories of childhood are hydrants on the back streets of senility.
better?
-Jody
|
410.7 | An old favorite.. | SKIVT::ROGERS | Lasciate ogni speranza, voi ch'entrate | Tue Sep 15 1987 14:36 | 4 |
| This whole discussion makes me feel more now like I did before than I did
then.
Larry
|
410.8 | Beware of low flying rocks | ERIS::CALLAS | Strange days, indeed. | Tue Sep 15 1987 16:59 | 1 |
|
|
410.9 | Three's company; four's out loud | INK::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Tue Sep 15 1987 17:25 | 13 |
| Strange ways bring stranger days.
A terminal on your desk has no meaning in blank verse.
Never strike a rock with a pancake.
A barking dog rolls few rocks uphill.
Cream cheese is no substitute for a day at the beach.
Lizards bask in the sun, but never does a moose forage for algae.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
410.10 | | LYMPH::LAMBERT | Seems to me it's Chemistry | Tue Sep 15 1987 19:02 | 3 |
| Time flies like an arrow; Fruit flies like a banana.
-- Sam
|
410.11 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Chaise pomme | Wed Sep 16 1987 02:37 | 3 |
| A woman without an aardvark is like a fish without a bicycle.
--- jerry
|
410.12 | Yes yes yes!!! | AYOV18::ISMITH | Ian Smith | Wed Sep 16 1987 04:30 | 15 |
| re .6, .9
Absolutely tremendous!! These are just the sort of things I was
looking for. Well done Jody and Steve, keep them coming. I think
that :
�� Childhood memories are but hydrants on the back streets of senility
is one of the best I have seen so far. It has that elusive quality
that, when you read it, it appears to make perfect sense. That is
until you try to figure out what it really means.
Ian <8^).
|
410.13 | anyone out there remember Krazy Kat? | LEDS::HAMBLEN | | Wed Sep 16 1987 09:21 | 15 |
| re < Note 410.7 >
-< An old favorite.. >-
<This whole discussion makes me feel more now like I did before than I did
<then.
Reminds me of the old Krazy Kat routine...
Ignatz Mouse: The world as it is, my dear "K", is not like it was,
when it used to be.
Krazy Kat: An' wen it gets to be like it was, will it?
Dave
|
410.14 | Using the computer resources at hand... | TLE::SAVAGE | Neil, @Spit Brook | Wed Sep 16 1987 10:49 | 12 |
| On our system, in SYS$GAMES, we have an .EXE file called COOKIE.
Sound familiar? If you execute it, it comes back with one liners,
some of these sound like fortunes ("You will..."), but others stongly
resemble the phrases cited in previous replies. For example:
> Far duller than a serpent's tooth it is to spend a quiet youth
> Satire does not look pretty upon a tombstone.
With a little substitution, one could make these sayings less
meaningful. For example, in the last saying, substitute something like
"party dress" for "tombstone." If you find a version of COOKIE.EXE on
your system, try it out for laughs.
|
410.15 | who said this quote ? | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Wed Sep 16 1987 18:14 | 16 |
| "
As Benjamin Franklin once said:
To gamble is to coapute the gregs of fretrical inaquicies without
the crux of pleganous finality.
But as George Raft said:
What does Benjamin Franklin know ?
"
Trivial question: Who said all of the above ? Big hint: it was on
a TV show hosted by two brothers, but neither said the above.
/Eric
|
410.16 | not really oriental zen gobble-D-gook | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Wed Sep 16 1987 18:17 | 8 |
|
How Long's a chinaman; So's his brother.
(It makes sense. Reread it, or ask the person in the next cube)
|
410.17 | you always were Mom's favorite | PLDVAX::ZARLENGA | Calvin ... Marty ... Klein | Thu Sep 17 1987 00:51 | 5 |
| A show hosted by 2 brothers??
Either the Smothers or the Hudsons. I'll guess at Tom and Dick.
-mike
|
410.18 | | OILCAN::KEEFE | | Sun Sep 20 1987 02:00 | 5 |
| Re .15
Pat Paulsen. Who also said:
Happiness is a pledganous glog.
|
410.19 | The Pieces | WELSWS::MANNION | Legendary Lancashire Heroes | Mon Sep 21 1987 12:05 | 10 |
| At the impreesionable age of 20 I was a member of a two-man Punk
Rock band called The Pieces. Our philosophy of music was that we
should not perform, and if we did we either wouldn't tell anybody,
or not turn up (Yes, it was a joke Punk Rock band[but then weren't
they all?]). Our main activity was lying on our beds in a pensione
in Florence wishing we were doing something else. Our motto was
"Our anonymity is so great it borders on the immortal."
Phillip
|
410.20 | Yes, GREASEPOT::KEEFE is correct ! | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Mon Sep 21 1987 17:46 | 13 |
| Keefe is correct, it was Pat Paulsen on the Smothers Brothers that
said that meaningless statement.
He used to do these ridiculous editorials, and that one was on gambling.
They'd always post an address at the end for sending for a transcript.
After the one on gambling, we actually sent for it ! It was so funny
that I memorized the entire speech, most of which I've forgotten except
for that double-talk sentence which I continually recite whenever people
are opening fortunes at restuarants. (did I tell that anecdote yet?)
/Eric
|
410.21 | DIGITAL - at the waterfront of technology | COMICS::KEY | A momentary lapse of reason | Fri Sep 25 1987 10:58 | 0 |
410.22 | Extending into jokes ... | RDGE00::BOOTH | Life, don't talk to me about life ... | Tue Oct 06 1987 12:50 | 29 |
|
How about the meaningless jokes that were popular when I was at
college ?
Q: What's the difference between a duck ?
A: One's similar but the other's the same.
Stupid, eh ?
And another :
A man walks into a shop and says 'Have you got any bread ?'
The woman behind the counter says 'They're all blue today'
And the man says 'That's all right, I've got my bike outside.'
The basic idea was that someone in a crowd would be in 'the know' and
at the end of the 'joke' would fall about laughing. It was amusing to
see how many others joined in because they didn't want to look as though
they didn't understand the punch line.
Anybody got any dafter ones ???
John Booth
|
410.23 | A whole day of nonsense | NATASH::AIKEN | Try to relax and enjoy the CRISIS | Tue Oct 06 1987 13:11 | 10 |
| Back in the mid-sixties, a college friend and I rode a greyhound
from Providence to Atlanta. For 26 hours, any conversation between
us pure nonsense:
" Did you get to the beach this Summer?"
" Not usually, I generally prefer a pencil."
After several stops enroute, all the empty seats on a mederately
crowded bus were surrounding ours.
|
410.24 | How's this????? | DELNI::PITARD | Huh? What, me?? | Thu Oct 08 1987 15:04 | 10 |
|
The thoughts I thought today may be the same words as the thought
I thought yesterday, and may be the same thoughts I'll think
tommorow, but they won't be the same thoughts, I think.
/^PiT^\
|
410.25 | be simpler | INK::KALLIS | Make Hallowe'en a National holiday. | Thu Oct 08 1987 17:25 | 12 |
| Re .24:
I think it's too long and convoluted. A meaninglessly impressive
saying should be succinct, like:
An umbrella is no substitute for a book.
or
Reflections on the pond of adversity cause no ripples.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
410.26 | My dear old granny used to say... | HOMSIC::DUDEK | Elegant in her simplicity | Thu Oct 08 1987 17:43 | 2 |
| A pen in the hands of an imposter is like a prune in the paws of
a chipmunk.
|
410.27 | Mmmmmmmmmmmmm ... | RDGE00::BOOTH | Life, don't talk to me about life ... | Fri Oct 09 1987 05:13 | 6 |
|
When trying to wield the unfamiliar, I have been told
"You look like a cow with a gun !"
|
410.28 | Unfortunately all too meaningful | WAYWRD::FONSECA | I heard it through the Grapevine... | Wed Oct 14 1987 14:46 | 5 |
| RE: .27
Reminds me of what I think of the people who work for the
Registry of Motor Vehicles, Commonwealth of Massachusetts:
bureaucrats with guns.
|
410.29 | Winning is half the battle | HPSRAD::ABIDI | It's a WIIIILD world. | Wed Oct 21 1987 10:54 | 6 |
|
It is not what you know, but what you *think* you know, unless,
of course, you don't know it.
--mva
(with apologies to SNL)
|
410.30 | Don't get Mad | THE780::MATUSZAK | | Wed Oct 28 1987 20:52 | 4 |
| What, me worry?
"It's crackers to slip a rozzer the dropsy in snide."
|
410.31 | | IND::BOWERS | Count Zero Interrupt | Thu Oct 29 1987 10:15 | 14 |
| re .30;
If you translate the slang, this actually means something!
crackers = unwise
rozzer = police officer
dropsy = ?
"in snide" = ?
Can anyone fill in the blanks? I'm afraid my memory isn't as good
as I thought it was.
-dave
|
410.32 | several guesses | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | sprinkled with syntactic sugar | Thu Oct 29 1987 13:05 | 20 |
| I'd assume "in snide" would mean "in a snide way"
Dropsy used to refer to a common sickness (epilepsy? tuberculosis?
I dunno)...but I don't think that's what it means here. Whatever
it was, I think it made the physical features droop or "drop", or
made the person clumsy.
It can also be used to describe someone who's clumsy, as in "they
have dropsy".
Another idea would be "dropsy" as possibly being "payola", as criminals
are sometimes told to "make a drop" somewhere, or to drop off goods
for money, or money for goods.
I tried.
-Jody
|
410.33 | A crackers situation | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Oct 29 1987 17:05 | 12 |
| You're close, Jody. "Dropsy" was a bribe; "snide" was counterfeit
money.
How do I know this? In one panel of one Mad magazine, they had
a foreign film frame. The actor was saying "It's crackers to slip
a rozzer the dropsy in snide." -- which I had seen many times
before in that magazine (I subscribed) -- and the subtitle was
"It's crazy to give a cop the pay-off in counterfeit money." The
joke, of course, was that the dialogue being translated into English
*was* English. (I belabor, er, belabour the point. Sorry.)
Ann B.
|
410.34 | | IND::BOWERS | Count Zero Interrupt | Fri Oct 30 1987 14:23 | 6 |
| re .34;
Many thanks! The phrase has been driving me crackers for years.
I, too, first encountered it in the MAD marginalia.
-dave
|
410.35 | 2 items... | BLAS03::FORBES | Bill Forbes - LDP Engrng | Mon Mar 05 1990 19:32 | 10 |
| 1) I remember a piece in "Mad Magazine" which lampooned Reader's
Digest's "My Most Unforgettable Character" feature. The Mad lampoon
had a rather conceited individual who would come up to people at
random and say, "The echoes of Mankind are irrepressible!"
2) I just saw a book entitled "Never Trust a Naked Man Who Offers You
His Shirt." I didn't bother to look inside it, so I don't know what
it's about.
Bill
|
410.36 | Beware the Shark invitation to dinner! | MISFIT::GEMMEL | and now here's Mac and Tosh... | Mon Mar 05 1990 21:14 | 17 |
| RE: -.1
> 2) I just saw a book entitled "Never Trust a Naked Man Who Offers You
> His Shirt." I didn't bother to look inside it, so I don't know what
> it's about.
The book is targeted for management (or anybody interested in
business). Harvey Mackay also wrote "Swim With The Sharks (Without
Being Eaten Alive)". His books blend humor and cold hard business
sense together into thought provoking prose which can profoundly change
how you think about your job. "Swim With The Sharks" gives insite into
sales, management, employee motivation, and negotiation. "Naked Man"
continues the saga. I just got the book and haven't read enough to
really say much about it.
These are good books (I'm prejudging "Naked Man") and should be
required reading in every business class.
|
410.37 | | CALS::DESELMS | A closed mouth gathers no feet. | Wed Jun 23 1993 14:54 | 4 |
| Life is a road with many forks, and time is the spaghetti that slips
between the tines.
- Jim
|