
DrW
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Posts posted by DrW
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When I saw the title of this thread, I immediately thought of "My Cousin Vinnie". Other favorites:
Aliens
Shawshank
Fargo
Lord of the Rings trilogy
The Hunger Games (the first one)
The Bridge on the River Kwai
Duck Soup (Marx Brothers)
Nosferatu (1922)
The Discrete Charm of the Bourgeoisie (Bunuel)
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About 12 years ago, when our 1 acre lot was still close to fields, we had a pair of mallards nesting in our backyard. We just had removed a wooden playground structure, but the concrete foundations were still there. Thus, we could not mow this part and the mallards chose this as nesting site. From time to time we took a peek, and there were six eggs and later six chicks. One day, the mallard hen just walked away with the chicks in tow, through a hole under the backyard fence. Fortunately, it was a Saturday, and even more fortunately, I was just looking at the backyard when it happened - the exodus took less than two minutes.
Another episode from about the same time. We had a trampoline in the backyard for the kids. One day one of the kids left a plastic owl lying on the trampoline (the kind of plastic owl you use to deter small birds from your patio or your herb garden). Well, a young Swainson's hawk must have thought that a dead owl makes a nice meal, and it landed on the trampoline. Well, the fact that the owl was not made of flesh and blood must have been a disappointment. But the real problem came when it wanted to fly away. Raptors are not helicopters or VTOL airplanes and need some space to take off. However, the trampoline had a safety net which did not give sufficient space. Fortunately for the hawk, my son and I had seen the whole dilemma. We dismantled a part of the safety net, always aware to stay away from hawk, until it finally could lift off.
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College football: Texas Tech (my employer) at Texas (my son plays tuba in the Longhorn band) - a friendly family rivalry...
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One of the pioneers of "krautrock", Amon Düül II ...
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A late entry. The thread with Dylan covers brought me to the Flaming Lips. I do not think their cover of "Lay Lady Lay" is very remarkable. However, in my search I found this gem...
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1 hour ago, Rico said:
Three of my favs:
I love Siouxsie, but I think the ultimate version of "This Wheel's on Fire" is the one by Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger, and The Trinity.
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10 hours ago, The Poojer said:
if the suspect was double handcuffed, how did he take several phone calls, retrieve things out of his pocket AND stuff things up his bum????
If you want a serious answer, he was not double handcuffed. The cop used two handcuffs that were connected to each other, like o-oo-o, to give the guy under arrest a bit more mobility. In the end, that turned out to be too much freedom for the arrested.
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How fitting that after Spinal Tap we have another comedy troup. One of the producers of this song was Sir Paul McCartney.
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The school uniform looks English. Alan Turing?
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1 minute ago, The Jokeman said:
She was guessed earlier, no it's not Janet.
OK, then I go with Rebbie.
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My favorites:
- The 35 yard scramble against the Broncos
- The beautiful touch on the lob to Gabe in the Raiders game (one of the few TD passes that was not a laser)
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I am pretty sure it is not La Toya. That leaves Rebbie or Janet. Looking at an 1977 pic of the Jackson kids, my guess is Janet.
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24 minutes ago, The Jokeman said:
No, it was a reality show in which her and others fought crime not investigated. While she is famous her siblings are more famous.
A member of the Jackson family?
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Had a family of curve-billed thrashers at the suet feeder this morning, 2 adults, 2 young, already pretty chunky. One adult was hanging at the feeder and throwing down morsels of suet. The other adult took the morsels and fed them to the kids. Sorry, no pics.
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Roger Chapman, Charlie Whitney and Bob Tench in fine form...
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Let's continue with rock music in unusual time signatures. Today we feature songs in 11/4 or 11/8.
As suggested by Poojer, here we have the Grateful Dead.
Also in the second example, the time signature is included in the title.
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Regarding cars, I would call me not cheap, but frugal. In my 40+ years of driving, I just owned 7 cars. All of them were bought used and were at least four years old when I purchased them. And we put a lot of miles on them. My first car in the US (after I moved here from Germany) was an Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser, and we took it for trips from Rochester to the West Coast, to Florida, to Louisiana, and to Newfoundland. It died with 270,000 miles on the odometer.
Currently, I drive a 2010 Odyssey and my wife has a 2013 Honda CRV. In our upper middle class neighborhood, these are the oldest cars you will see around.
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3 minutes ago, I am the egg man said:
John Wayne?
Guessing, since he started in westerns and another singing cowboy, like Gene Autrey, was likely sought in their era.
Correct, it's "The Duke". Congratulations!
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2 minutes ago, T&C said:
I missed that... my bad. I was going to say Vincent Price but he's not american so I'll go with Richard Burton, I don't know where he was born. If its not him, that's my final answer, I like movies but don't follow them like I do music.
Not Richard Burton, different genre. The guy we are looking for won one Oscar, pretty late in his career.
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33 minutes ago, DrW said:
He is American, but he does not dance in his movies. He is especially well know for one specific movie genre.
To quote myself
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5 minutes ago, Greg S said:
Lloyd Bridges.
That gets the age about right, but he is more famous than Bridges.
Pre-Season Schedule (What everyone has been waiting for)
in The Stadium Wall Archives
Posted
I agree. The Labor Day weekend was always off.