"So, who's on first?"
"Exactly."
"Exactly's on first?"
"No, Who is on first!"
"What're you askin' me for?!"
=P That's probably older than most people here... even Sharuuk and Squeaky here.
You want classic comedy, try the old radio shows.StrangeWulf13 wrote:I'd have to agree, a lot of comedy has gone downhill in the last few years. Forget "The Five Words You Can't Say On TV." Give me "Who's on First?" anytime!I have a DVD with that, and it always makes me laugh.
"So, who's on first?"
"Exactly."
"Exactly's on first?"
"No, Who is on first!"
"What're you askin' me for?!"
LOL I love those guys!
=P That's probably older than most people here... even Sharuuk and Squeaky here.
OUCH!!! Hey ya don' hafta twist the knife now doya????StrangeWulf13 wrote: =P That's probably older than most people here... even Sharuuk and Squeaky.
Not to mention upsydaisium, counterfeit box tops, and IMHO, the least subtle dig - when Boris and Natasha got hold of the stupidity-inducing Goof Gas and then didn't bother using it on the US Senate after listening to them debate for a few minutes. "Borees, vhy you not use Goof Gas on zem?" "Somebody beat me to eet, Natasha..."Archae45 wrote:Like the Kirwood Derby?Sharuuk wrote:Rocky & Bullwinkle were great. There were some really BITING stabs at politics that the kids didn't get but the parents did.UncleMonty wrote:For political humor, I liked Rocky and Bullwinkle...
Shaaruuk
Same here, I was under ten, but when that big shipping magnate "didn't pick things up very good," (Bullwinkle said that,) I cracked up laughing.Sharuuk wrote:Notice how there were a LOT of puns in these shows....most of which the kids missed entirely....at least for me I recognized what the Kirwood Derby meant.Archae45 wrote: And don't forget the Ruby Yacht Of Omar Khayyam.
Shaaruuk
I can't remember if it was me or my mother, but I will say that you are not alone in not getting that one for a while.RHJunior wrote:Have a heart, here. It took me months of reading Harry Potter before I figured out what the pun was in the name Knockturn Alley.
8) The serial number ends in K-57, if you check under the wings; one of the first babies born -in- the Space Age. I was exaggerating slightly; my first solid current-events memory is the Alan Shephard launch. I probably did see the kitchen debate as current events, but didn't really pay attention to it; I was rocket-mad back then (still am), but not much else made it onto my radar screen. (This is no longer true. Now I'm a full-fledged eclectic data junkie.)Sharuuk wrote:O-Kaaaay....NOW I know about how old ya are...Kerry Skydancer wrote: History? History?? That was current events to me, once upon a time! It's not history if you remember it personally, y'know....it was current events for me as well....which is why I find some of these old political comedy albums so funny.
Heck....go back to some of the 60's era James Bond movies.....who was it that S.P.E.C.T.R.E. was always trying to start a nuclear exchange between? There's just SO much cold war humor in some of the older shows both TV and movie that thanks to the abysmal curriculum of schools today, kids have no idea what it means.
And I seriously doubt if todays kids have any idea just how close to nuclear war we came to on several occasions back then. Let me re-phrase that...the REAL, TRUE, UN-SANITIZED, POLITICALLY INCORRECT version of who the real enemy of freedon was.
Shaaruuk
He was also Alan Funt's sidekick. Can you say Candid Camera?Sharuuk wrote:OMG...Kerry Skydancer wrote: Like the Kirwood Derby?..the Derwood Kirby reference.......lessee...he was Gary Moore's sidekick wasn't he?
Man-oh-man are we going WAAYY back in time now.
Shaaruuk
That's right....Alan Funt.....now there was a twisted genius! Do you remember the toy called "Mr. Machine"? It was a "robot" you could take apart and reassemble made of clear and opaque plastic. Maybe 10-15 pieces total, all fairly large, nothing tiny. It was motorized and you could watch all the parts working and turning when it ran. It was supposed to be for kids 8 and up. One of the funniest bits I ever saw on Candid Camera was at a toy store. They had taken one apart and the salesgirl (the bait) was asking customers for help putting it all back together. You should have seen people....ADULTS....trying to reassemble this thing from the pile of parts on the counter. Nothing was missing, everything was there...except the instructions.Squeaky Bunny wrote: He was also Alan Funt's sidekick. Can you say Candid Camera?
(And if you are really, really ancient you'll recall Hans Conried and Fractured Flickers)
LOVED IT....ya almost had to feel sorry for poor old Tony Vinccinzo..I've been collecting the episodes on my TeVo and transferring them to DVD minus the commercials. That and the original "Avengers" series......Diana Rigg helped me get thru puberty.UncleMonty wrote:Argh!
You HAD to bring up "The Night Stalker"!
'Way off topic now, but dang it that wasn't the best show of its time.
Karl Kolchak was my hero.