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gabriele wrote:
annieahoy wrote:
CEK40 wrote:
Not sure how true this is....
Amber Rose, Val Chmerkovskiy SplitI would say they fell into lust rather than growing into love. As that song, "It was just one of those things" says, "It was too hot not to cool down." I hope they are both okay with not being together.
I was hoping that we will be spared a fauxmance in the upcoming season because of this relationship commitment. Now we have to have hope the partner will be somehow out of the romance range, because we know production is all for it....
LOL. LOL. But didn't the recently hired producer get the boot or take a job elsewhere? I thought I read that on the board recently?? Or do I have him confused with someone else? It was Rob Wade.
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gabriele wrote:
annieahoy wrote:
gabriele wrote:
Man crush Monday catch up, Sean Connery in Zardoz, 1974. I wouldn't mind having a pair of these boots
My first reaction -- LOL
Those bullet suspenders/braces cleverly disguise the hint of beginning love handles. Have to remember that as a styling tip.
Hey....if suspenders is all it takes to deal with love handles, maybe I should get some!!! LOL. Start a new fashion trend!!! LOL. LOL
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CEK40 wrote:
Nivea-in-shower-body-lotion-Colgate-Shall-We-Dance-On-Ice Series........well....that about covers it all!!! The whole body and the mouth!!! LOL. LOL
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I see Peta is back to the tried and true slicked-back-little-bun look! What happened?!!! LOL In a nursery photo posted more recently, her hair is down and lighter. Wonder if the latter was an earlier photo??
Last edited by JetmamaDiDi (2/11/2017 2:02 pm)
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Well, gotta get some things done while I can!
Have a great Saturday, ladies!!
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gabriele wrote:
JetmamaDiDi wrote:
CEK40 wrote:
Havn't heard that in forever....
Wooden Crate
BROKEN CRATEBROKEN HILL,
a mining town that gave BHP Billiton (the world's largest mining company) its initials. The movie 'Mad Max 2' was filmed there.
Frame from Mad Max 2
Broken Hill sculpture symposium
I forgot to add to this:
HILL TOP
(Cleaning out some stuff---and finding "lost" things!!!)
Last edited by JetmamaDiDi (2/11/2017 3:22 pm)
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JetmamaDiDi wrote:
gabriele wrote:
JetmamaDiDi wrote:
BROKEN CRATEBROKEN HILL,
a mining town that gave BHP Billiton (the world's largest mining company) its initials. The movie 'Mad Max 2' was filmed there.
Frame from Mad Max 2
Broken Hill sculpture symposium
I forgot to add to this:
HILL TOP
(Cleaning out some stuff---and finding "lost" things!!!)
Sorry, ladies...I can't seem to get out of the 50's when my big sisters were teenagers. Fats Domino I think recorded the original - there seems to be a V. Putin version also!!!!
BLUEBERRY HILL
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View from the Crow's Nest wrote:
JetmamaDiDi wrote:
gabriele wrote:
BROKEN HILL,
a mining town that gave BHP Billiton (the world's largest mining company) its initials. The movie 'Mad Max 2' was filmed there.
Frame from Mad Max 2
Broken Hill sculpture symposium
I forgot to add to this:
HILL TOP
(Cleaning out some stuff---and finding "lost" things!!!)Sorry, ladies...I can't seem to get out of the 50's when my big sisters were teenagers. Fats Domino I think recorded the original - there seems to be a V. Putin version also!!!!
BLUEBERRY HILL
Good one, View! I remember my aunt leading the singing of Blueberry Hill as we drove to the beach from the summer home near Lake Michigan when I was less than 10 years old (we moved to NM then)...so I had to google the song as Fats Domino wasn't around until a few years later, as I recall.
"Blueberry Hill" is a popular song published in 1940 best remembered for its 1950s rock n' roll version by Fats Domino. The music was written by Vincent Rose, the lyrics by Larry Stock and Al Lewis. It was recorded six times in 1940. Victor Records released the recording by the Sammy Kaye Orchestra with vocals by Tommy Ryan on May 31, 1940 (catalog #26643, with the flip side "Maybe"; matrix #51050[1]). Gene Krupa's version was issued on OKeh Records (#5672) on June 3 and singer Mary Small did a vocal version on the same label with Nat Brandwynne's orchestra, released June 20, 1940 on OKeh Records #5678. Other 1940 recordings were by: The Glenn Miller Orchestra on Bluebird Records (10768), Kay Kyser, Russ Morgan, Gene Autry (also in the 1941 film The Singing Hill[2]), Connee Boswell, and Jimmy Dorsey. The largest 1940 hit was by The Glenn Miller Orchestra, where it reached #1.[3]
It was also sung by Louis Armstrong in 1949, it said in the next paragraph. Thought it was interesting.
BLUEBERRY PIE---another blast from the past at the Michigan beach house in that era. The neighbors (and lifelong friends of my grandparents as well as my parents) there had a blueberry farm next door and we would go over and pick them. YUM! I remember also picking blackberries and wild raspberries in the woods on the way over. Kind've felt like Little Red Riding Hood!!
Last edited by JetmamaDiDi (2/11/2017 4:42 pm)
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JetmamaDiDi wrote:
View from the Crow's Nest wrote:
JetmamaDiDi wrote:
I forgot to add to this:
HILL TOP
(Cleaning out some stuff---and finding "lost" things!!!)Sorry, ladies...I can't seem to get out of the 50's when my big sisters were teenagers. Fats Domino I think recorded the original - there seems to be a V. Putin version also!!!!
BLUEBERRY HILL
Good one, View! I remember my aunt leading the singing of Blueberry Hill as we drove to the beach from the summer home near Lake Michigan when I was less than 10 years old (we moved to NM then)...so I had to google the song as Fats Domino wasn't around until a few years later, as I recall.
"Blueberry Hill" is a popular song published in 1940 best remembered for its 1950s rock n' roll version by Fats Domino. The music was written by Vincent Rose, the lyrics by Larry Stock and Al Lewis. It was recorded six times in 1940. Victor Records released the recording by the Sammy Kaye Orchestra with vocals by Tommy Ryan on May 31, 1940 (catalog #26643, with the flip side "Maybe"; matrix #51050[1]). Gene Krupa's version was issued on OKeh Records (#5672) on June 3 and singer Mary Small did a vocal version on the same label with Nat Brandwynne's orchestra, released June 20, 1940 on OKeh Records #5678. Other 1940 recordings were by: The Glenn Miller Orchestra on Bluebird Records (10768), Kay Kyser, Russ Morgan, Gene Autry (also in the 1941 film The Singing Hill[2]), Connee Boswell, and Jimmy Dorsey. The largest 1940 hit was by The Glenn Miller Orchestra, where it reached #1.[3]
It was also sung by Louis Armstrong in 1949, it said in the next paragraph. Thought it was interesting.
BLUEBERRY PIE---another blast from the past at the Michigan beach house in that era. The neighbors (and lifelong friends of my grandparents as well as my parents) there had a blueberry farm next door and we would go over and pick them. YUM! I remember also picking blackberries and wild raspberries in the woods on the way over. Kind've felt like Little Red Riding Hood!!![]()
HUMBLE PIE
[size=100]and because I'm not sure if it is part of your version of English,
'[/size]eat humble pie definition. To be forced to acknowledge one's deficiencies or errors: “Professor Norris had to eat humble pie when the reviewers pointed out numerous factual errors in his book.” Humble pie refers to a dish originally made from the innards of a deer.'
..... entrails..... and here we are in yucky territory once again...
Last edited by gabriele (2/11/2017 9:02 pm)
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gabriele wrote:
JetmamaDiDi wrote:
View from the Crow's Nest wrote:
Sorry, ladies...I can't seem to get out of the 50's when my big sisters were teenagers. Fats Domino I think recorded the original - there seems to be a V. Putin version also!!!!
BLUEBERRY HILL
Good one, View! I remember my aunt leading the singing of Blueberry Hill as we drove to the beach from the summer home near Lake Michigan when I was less than 10 years old (we moved to NM then)...so I had to google the song as Fats Domino wasn't around until a few years later, as I recall.
"Blueberry Hill" is a popular song published in 1940 best remembered for its 1950s rock n' roll version by Fats Domino. The music was written by Vincent Rose, the lyrics by Larry Stock and Al Lewis. It was recorded six times in 1940. Victor Records released the recording by the Sammy Kaye Orchestra with vocals by Tommy Ryan on May 31, 1940 (catalog #26643, with the flip side "Maybe"; matrix #51050[1]). Gene Krupa's version was issued on OKeh Records (#5672) on June 3 and singer Mary Small did a vocal version on the same label with Nat Brandwynne's orchestra, released June 20, 1940 on OKeh Records #5678. Other 1940 recordings were by: The Glenn Miller Orchestra on Bluebird Records (10768), Kay Kyser, Russ Morgan, Gene Autry (also in the 1941 film The Singing Hill[2]), Connee Boswell, and Jimmy Dorsey. The largest 1940 hit was by The Glenn Miller Orchestra, where it reached #1.[3]
It was also sung by Louis Armstrong in 1949, it said in the next paragraph. Thought it was interesting.
BLUEBERRY PIE---another blast from the past at the Michigan beach house in that era. The neighbors (and lifelong friends of my grandparents as well as my parents) there had a blueberry farm next door and we would go over and pick them. YUM! I remember also picking blackberries and wild raspberries in the woods on the way over. Kind've felt like Little Red Riding Hood!!![]()
HUMBLE PIE
[size=100]and because I'm not sure if it is part of your version of English,
'[/size]eat humble pie definition. To be forced to acknowledge one's deficiencies or errors: “Professor Norris had to eat humble pie when the reviewers pointed out numerous factual errors in his book.” Humble pie refers to a dish originally made from the innards of a deer.'
Hi, Gabriele....Good to *see* you tonite (tomorrow for you!).
We do use the expression "humble pie" although not as frequently as we should these days, no doubt!
. Too many people use lame excuses instead of taking a dose of humble pie and learning the lesson!!
Isn't it interesting how many colloquialisms or metaphors actually stem from "guts" of some critter or another?!!! LOL
Last edited by JetmamaDiDi (2/11/2017 9:07 pm)