You should have that done by now!Thanks. The rest of us are busy hiring our next football coach.
I just referenced this line this morning at work with some less than 30 year olds.An all-timer, ro!
You should have that done by now!
Wrong audience. Try the assisted care facility, that is your target demographic.I just referenced this line this morning at work with some less than 30 year olds.
The response was stone silence.
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Oh, for sure.Jan Smithers>>Loni Anderson
I’m not sure about that…I had a poster of Loni Anderson on my wall in high school, not Jan Smithers. I guess it depends on if you’re looking for one night or a marriage.Oh, for sure.
OK - see you there! I will bring you a nice cup of warm ovaltine!Wrong audience. Try the assisted care facility, that is your target demographic.
I am sure you are well supplied. What made you think 30-somethings would be interested in what some old geezer finds humorous?OK - see you there! I will bring you a nice cup of ovaltine!
Welcome Back Kotter theme songAs an aside, I think the WKRP theme song is maybe the best ever (Greatest American Hero up there too) - listening to it as an adult and it’s sad but hopeful.
Baby, if you've ever wondered,
Wondered whatever became of me,
I'm living on the air in Cincinnati,
Cincinnati, WKRP.
Got kind of tired packing and unpacking,
Town to town up and down the dial
Maybe you and me were never meant to be,
Just maybe think of me once in awhile.
I'm at WKRP in Cincinnati.
Is there a channel that airs WKRP reruns?Just watched the one where Johnny fever takes the reaction test from the cop after taking shots. #2 all time episode IMO
Jan either way.....I’m not sure about that…I had a poster of Loni Anderson on my wall in high school, not Jan Smithers. I guess it depends on if you’re looking for one night or a marriage.
Is Gary Sandy available?Thanks. The rest of us are busy hiring our next football coach.
Welcome Back Kotter theme song
Totally up my alley. 70s chicks were the best.
I like it but it's hard to beat Greatest American Hero! Loved that show (even though it was bad) and the song is even better!As an aside, I think the WKRP theme song is maybe the best ever (Greatest American Hero up there too) - listening to it as an adult and it’s sad but hopeful.
Baby, if you've ever wondered,
Wondered whatever became of me,
I'm living on the air in Cincinnati,
Cincinnati, WKRP.
Got kind of tired packing and unpacking,
Town to town up and down the dial
Maybe you and me were never meant to be,
Just maybe think of me once in awhile.
I'm at WKRP in Cincinnati.
76 is the new 65. (I am 68. Pro tip: your hearing is the first thing to go.)76 actually
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I like it but it's hard to beat Greatest American Hero! Loved that show (even though it was bad) and the song is even better!
I had a teacher in junior high who would tell Wop jokes. He was himself Italian, which "made it okay." I'm telling this story just to point out how different things were back in the day, compared to now.I remember my 6th grade science teacher custom making a very good approximation of the red super suit and wearing it to school for Halloween.
He even entertained us by imitating the character’s initial attempts at flight by running across the front of the classroom, taking a leap, hitting the wall, and flopping to the floor.
Good times.
That's a slow Tuesday afternoon for me.He even entertained us by imitating the character’s initial attempts at flight by running across the front of the classroom, taking a leap, hitting the wall, and flopping to the floor.
I had a teacher in junior high who would tell Wop jokes. He was himself Italian, which "made it okay." I'm telling this story just to point out how different things were back in the day, compared to now.
Oh, yeah, before being mainstreamed I went to a school for the deaf in Fairmont, Philadelphia, all my teachers were Irish Catholic, like me. My dad was born in Dorchester and I’m told that I had a good Boston brogue going back then. I was their pet but got it across the face more than a few times, I had been begging for it, of course.Oh yeah for sure, I can think of so many examples of the different societal standards that we lived under back in our youth.
For example, here in PA at least, the schools still made pretty regular use of corporal punishment via paddling.
That same 6th grade year, my math-slash-homeroom teacher had his paddle hanging on the inside of the closet door in his classroom and would openly boast of his prowess with it. On the last day of the school year, he had a tradition of letting students VOLUNTARILY sign up to receive one swat on the rear from him. If you did, you could sign your name on his paddle for posterity. I was nervous but seeing a number of my classmates do it, I eventually went through with it. I’m assuming he held back a bit, but it DID sting.
Retelling that now in today’s litigious climate and where such things go immediately viral online, it feels like a false story even to me… but it’s completely true.
We had a math teacher who had one leg. May God help you if he deemed it necessary to break out the paddle. Super nice teacher, till he wasnt.Oh yeah for sure, I can think of so many examples of the different societal standards that we lived under back in our youth.
For example, here in PA at least, the schools still made pretty regular use of corporal punishment via paddling.
That same 6th grade year, my math-slash-homeroom teacher had his paddle hanging on the inside of the closet door in his classroom and would openly boast of his prowess with it. On the last day of the school year, he had a tradition of letting students VOLUNTARILY sign up to receive one swat on the rear from him. If you did, you could sign your name on his paddle for posterity. I was nervous but seeing a number of my classmates do it, I eventually went through with it. I’m assuming he held back a bit, but it DID sting.
Retelling that now in today’s litigious climate and where such things go immediately viral online, it feels like a false story even to me… but it’s completely true.
And the books we read, no way in hell could you use those books nowadays. Manchild in the Promised Land, stuff like that. Just too controversial these days. I went to a good high school, got a hell of an education, just saying.Oh, yeah, before being mainstreamed I went to a school for the deaf in Fairmont, Philadelphia, all my teachers were Irish Catholic, like me. My dad was born in Dorchester and I’m told that I had a good Boston brogue going back then. I was their pet but got it across the face more than a few times, I had been begging for it, of course.
Mr bright the science teacherOh yeah for sure, I can think of so many examples of the different societal standards that we lived under back in our youth.
For example, here in PA at least, the schools still made pretty regular use of corporal punishment via paddling.
That same 6th grade year, my math-slash-homeroom teacher had his paddle hanging on the inside of the closet door in his classroom and would openly boast of his prowess with it. On the last day of the school year, he had a tradition of letting students VOLUNTARILY sign up to receive one swat on the rear from him. If you did, you could sign your name on his paddle for posterity. I was nervous but seeing a number of my classmates do it, I eventually went through with it. I’m assuming he held back a bit, but it DID sting.
Retelling that now in today’s litigious climate and where such things go immediately viral online, it feels like a false story even to me… but it’s completely true.
I had a teacher in seventh grade who would drill holes in his paddle to get more velocity. He also put notches on the handle for every kid he hit. Nobody wanted to make him and because he never held back.Oh yeah for sure, I can think of so many examples of the different societal standards that we lived under back in our youth.
For example, here in PA at least, the schools still made pretty regular use of corporal punishment via paddling.
That same 6th grade year, my math-slash-homeroom teacher had his paddle hanging on the inside of the closet door in his classroom and would openly boast of his prowess with it. On the last day of the school year, he had a tradition of letting students VOLUNTARILY sign up to receive one swat on the rear from him. If you did, you could sign your name on his paddle for posterity. I was nervous but seeing a number of my classmates do it, I eventually went through with it. I’m assuming he held back a bit, but it DID sting.
Retelling that now in today’s litigious climate and where such things go immediately viral online, it feels like a false story even to me… but it’s completely true.
Bob will be right back ……76 is the new 65. (I am 68. Pro tip: your hearing is the first thing to go.)
Our teachers would drill holes in them so they would hurt moreOh yeah for sure, I can think of so many examples of the different societal standards that we lived under back in our youth.
For example, here in PA at least, the schools still made pretty regular use of corporal punishment via paddling.
That same 6th grade year, my math-slash-homeroom teacher had his paddle hanging on the inside of the closet door in his classroom and would openly boast of his prowess with it. On the last day of the school year, he had a tradition of letting students VOLUNTARILY sign up to receive one swat on the rear from him. If you did, you could sign your name on his paddle for posterity. I was nervous but seeing a number of my classmates do it, I eventually went through with it. I’m assuming he held back a bit, but it DID sting.
Retelling that now in today’s litigious climate and where such things go immediately viral online, it feels like a false story even to me… but it’s completely true.