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NOT John Cleese's letter to America
soupcan Jan 24 2008 06:53 AM Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Jan 24 2008 09:39 AM |
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Thought this was amusing - apologies for wasting your time if you don't...
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AG/DC Jan 24 2008 07:16 AM |
Jeez.
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Benjamin Grimm Jan 24 2008 07:18 AM |
I like England, I really do. But I can easily come up with more than 20 reasons why I'm glad we won the Revolution.
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metirish Jan 24 2008 07:26 AM |
Ah it was a bit of a laugh, but like Grim I am glad you lot won the Revolution.
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AG/DC Jan 24 2008 07:31 AM |
This is a really just a red cape to Nymr's bull, isn't it?
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AG/DC Jan 24 2008 07:33 AM |
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Benjamin Grimm Jan 24 2008 07:39 AM |
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Not surprised. Wasn't there also something that circulated that was allegedly by Kurt Vonnegut? And I've been forwarded stuff by "Andy Rooney" too. I guess people think their words will carry more weight if it was thought to have been written by somebody famous. No glory comes to the author, but they get the sense of pride that comes with having millions of people delete their words from their e-mail boxes, mostly unread.
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sharpie Jan 24 2008 07:43 AM |
I remember seeing Cleese on a talk show about 10-15 years ago where he spoke about his side business of making industrial films (films made for corporations such as training films) and talking about how spending so much time with captains of industry have moved his politics to the right.
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metsmarathon Jan 24 2008 07:48 AM |
bah! humphry davy, a brit, hypothesized the existence of aluminum, and named it as such. later, some other brits come along and think that -ium would sound better, and be more consistent with other elements at the time (sodium, potassium and the like). then an american comes along and either intentionally or accidentally changes it back to the way it was.
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AG/DC Jan 24 2008 07:49 AM Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Jan 24 2008 08:26 AM |
I just found the MacDowell thing to be too clumsy for Cleese or to have gotten by a professional editor. A lot of British humour may sound like Cleese --- both because he's distinctly British and because he's influenced two generations of British and American humourists --- but not all British humour can be passed off as his.
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Willets Point Jan 24 2008 08:16 AM |
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Willets Point Jan 24 2008 08:19 AM |
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Shit AG, that's my job!
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metirish Jan 24 2008 08:23 AM |
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I would think (hope)that Nymr would see the humoUr in it, right Nymr?
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Willets Point Jan 24 2008 08:24 AM |
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I find it amusing that while the letter is obviously written in response to the 2000 election, it's been brought up to date by replacing "Tony Blair" with "Gordon Brown."
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metsmarathon Jan 24 2008 09:06 AM |
i was too busy researching the history of the naming of aluminum to out-snopes the other snopists.
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soupcan Jan 24 2008 09:42 AM |
Ah shit.
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Willets Point Jan 24 2008 11:46 AM |
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No need to apologize. I think it was sent by your douchebag neighbor to trip you up.
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AG/DC Jan 24 2008 12:46 PM |
That douchebag.
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Nymr83 Jan 24 2008 02:03 PM |
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yes, but without the "U." number 15 is the most unacceptable. beer should be COLD, end of story. I once had warm Harp at a pub in Brooklyn and nearly puked (from one glass.)
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DocTee Jan 24 2008 02:27 PM |
Mayonaise on "fries"-- horrendous!
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Nymr83 Jan 24 2008 02:47 PM |
disgusting.
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AG/DC Jan 24 2008 02:50 PM |
Also a dead giveaway that this is not someone writing with a lot of overseas experience.
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Willets Point Jan 24 2008 03:44 PM |
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Depends on the beer. Lagers (like Harp) MUST be served cold. Traditionally in English pubs you would receive bitters which are served at room temperature and taste delicious at that temperature. Today of course you'll probably find most people in an English pub drinking Budweiser, and yes they should be drinking it cold. Really it comes down to the right and wrong way of serving different styles of beer and has nothing to do with an American or English way.
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