CDIH

Full Version: What did you learn today, friday... umm sunday? - What?
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
Pages: 1 2 3
I learned on Tuesday Arpi will start a thread stating CDIH is just like family to him

and I will start a poll to determine if the populace feels Maynard should be reinstated as mod.
I learned that If I just sit here quietly and watch this screen, shit just seems to pass me by.
i learned that if i nap too long , i get all groggy afterwards
Me too. That sucks.
I learned that my 25 year old friend just may die a virgin....
Quote:my 25 year old friend
TRANSLATION:
Polly's vagina.
please ken!! that thing has been used so much ethel merman could roller skate in it!!
who is ethel merman?
shouldnt you be hunched over the necrinomicon right now?
Quote:shouldnt you be hunched over the necrinomicon right now?
TRANSLATION:
Having sex with Polly.......
Quote:Quote:

shouldnt you be hunched over the necrinomicon right now?

TRANSLATION:
Having sex with Polly.......
now that is funny :rofl:
Quote:who is ethel merman?

Remember the hospital scene in Airplane! ?

"...thinks he's Ethel Merman. <singing>You'll be swell, you'll be great...</singing> War is hell!"


Courtesy IMDB:
Born in the Astoria section of Queens, New York City, Ethel Merman was surely the pre-eminent star of 'Broadway' musical comedy. Though untrained in singing, she could belt out a song like quite no one else, and was sought after by major songwriters such as Irving Berlin and Cole Porter. Having debuted in 1930 in "Girl Crazy, " she is yet remembered for her marvelous starring appearances in so many great musicals that were later adapted to the silver screen. Among the film versions, Merman herself starred in Anything Goes (1936) and Call Me Madam (1953). That wonderfully boisterous blonde, Betty Hutton, had the Merman lead in both Red, Hot and Blue (1949) and Annie Get Your Gun (1950). Besides Hutton, other Merman screen stand-ins included Lucille Ball (in Du Barry Was a Lady (1943)), Ann Sothern (in Panama Hattie (1942)), Vivian Blaine (in Something for the Boys (1944)) and Rosalind Russell (in Gypsy (1962)). (Russell could never render Stephen Sondheim and Jule Styne's "Everything's Coming Up Roses" the way the immortal Merman did, over and over again.)


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thanks for the info, but I was just making a dig at how old arpi is...
oh....nevermind......
Quote:Thanks for the info, but I was just making a dig at how old arpi is...
yeah it sucks being old. by the way, how's that still living with your mom thing going? :lol:
Arpi, leave Maynard out of this little fray.
:angry:

I move out in a month, but you'll still be old.
Quote:Arpi, leave Maynard out of this little fray.
:rofl:
unless she kicks you out sooner due to some satanic correspondence:rofl:
I'm never confiding in you again!!!
Pages: 1 2 3