TGIF

SpinnerBait_Nut

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"No, Thank You!"<br /><br />A well-dressed gentleman entered an upscale<br />restaurant in the East End of Manhattan, and<br />took a seat at the bar.<br /><br />The bartender came over and asked "What<br />can I get you to drink, sir"?<br /><br />The gentleman responded, "Nothing, thank<br />you. I tried alcohol once, didn't like it, and<br />never tried it again."<br /><br />The bartender was a bit perplexed, but being<br />a friendly, outgoing sort, he pulled out a pack<br />of cigarettes and offered the gentleman a<br />cigarette.<br /><br />The gentleman refused, saying, "I tried<br />smoking once, didn't like it, and never did it<br />again. The point is, I wouldn't be in here at<br />all, except that I'm waiting for my son."<br /><br />The bartender retorted, "Your only child, I<br />presume?"
 

SpinnerBait_Nut

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
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Re: TGIF

"Not So Exact Quotations"<br /><br />Follow your dream! Unless it's the one where<br />you're at work in your underwear during a fire<br />drill.<br /><br />Always take time to stop and smell the roses...<br />and sooner or later, you'll inhale a bee.<br /><br />Do not walk behind me, for I may not lead. Do<br />not walk ahead of me, for I may not follow. Do<br />not walk beside me, either, Just leave me alone.<br /><br />If you don't like my driving, don't call anyone.<br />Just take another road. That's why the highway<br />department made so many of them.<br /><br />If a motorist cuts you off, just turn the other<br />cheek. Nothing gets the message across like<br />a good mooning.<br /><br />When I'm feeling down, I like to whistle. It makes<br />the neighbor's dog run to the end of his chain<br />and gag himself.<br /><br />A handy telephone tip: Keep a small chalkboard<br />near the phone. That way, when a salesman calls,<br />you can hold the receiver up to it and run your<br />fingernails across it until he hangs up.
 

SpinnerBait_Nut

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
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Re: TGIF

"The Efficiency Expert"<br /><br />An efficiency expert concluded his lecture with<br />a note of caution. "You don't want to try these<br />techniques at home."<br /><br />"Why not?" asked somebody from the audience.<br /><br />"I watched my wife's routine at breakfast for<br />years," the expert explained. "She made a lot of<br />trips between the refrigerator, stove, table and<br />cabinets, often carrying a single item at a time.<br />One day I told her, 'Hon, why don't you try<br />carrying several things at once?'"<br /><br />"Did it save time?" the person in the audience<br />asked.<br /><br />"Actually, yes," replied the expert. "It used to<br />take her 20 minutes to make breakfast. Now<br />I do it in seven."<br /> :D :D :D <br />You all have a good week-end
 

FLATHEAD

Captain
Joined
Dec 29, 2002
Messages
3,508
Re: TGIF

Five surgeons are discussing who makes the best<br />patients to operate on.<br /><br />The first surgeon says, "I like to see accountants on<br />my operating table, because when you open them up, <br />everything inside is numbered,"<br /><br />The second responds, "Yeah, but you should try<br />electricians. Everything inside them is color-coded,"<br /><br />The third surgeon says, "No, I really think librarians<br />are the best; everything inside them is in alphabetical order."<br /><br />The fourth surgeon chimes in: "You know, I like<br />construction workers. They always understand when you <br />have a few parts left over at the end and when<br />the job takes longer than you said it would."<br /><br />But the fifth surgeon, Dr. Morris Fishbein, shuts them<br />all up when he observes: "The French are the easiest to operate on.<br />There's no guts, no heart, no balls and no spine. Plus the head and a$$<br />are interchangeable."
 

SpinnerBait_Nut

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
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Re: TGIF

OK, if nobody else will do it, I'm going to patch up this spat between the United States and France.<br /><br />As you know, our two nations are not getting along, as evidenced by the high-level meeting in Paris last week, during which French President Jacques Chirac and U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, in what aides described as ''a frank exchange of views,'' bit each other.<br /><br />Yes, relations are at an all-time low. The French view us as a bunch of fat, simplistic, SUV-driving, gum-chewing, gun-shooting, mall-dwelling, John Wayne cowboys who put ketchup on everything we eat, including breath mints. Whereas we view the French as a bunch of snotty, hygiene-impaired, pseudo-intellectual, snail-slurping weenies whose sole military accomplishment in the past 100 years was inventing the tasseled combat boot.<br /><br />Sadly -- as is so often the case when people resort to vicious stereotypes -- both sides in this dispute are 100 percent correct. But the fact that we hate each other, with good reason, does NOT mean we can't be friends! After all, the United States and France have a close relationship that dates back to the Revolutionary War, when we were helped in our struggle for independence by a French person whose name we will never, ever forget, as long as we have Internet access to the Encyclopedia Britannica.<br /><br />Let's see . . . Ladybird, Ladybug, Ladyfinger . . . OK, here it is: Lafayette. Actually, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica, his full name was -- I am not making this up -- Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Motier, Marquis de Lafayette. As a result, he had a hellish childhood. His mother would lean out the kitchen window and shout: ''Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Motier, Marquis de Lafayette! You get back in here and finish your snails THIS INSTANT!'' Hearing this, the other French children would tease Lafayette, calling him ''Marie'' and threatening to brush his teeth. So as soon as he could, he left France and came to America, where he joined the army and told everybody his name was Mark.<br /><br />From that moment on, France and America were close allies. In 1886, as a gift symbolizing more than a century of friendship, France gave us the Statue of Liberty; in return, we sent the French 18 tons of jerky, which they claimed was lost in shipping. And the relationship continues to this very day, when, many of the words that we use all the time, such as ''French fries,'' ''French toast,'' ''French kiss,'' ''French poodle'' and ''Chef Boy-Ar-Dee,'' are, believe it or not, actually of French origin.<br /><br />We simply cannot allow a close relationship like this to be destroyed because of some silly little dispute over who gets to run the world. That is why today I am calling upon you, my fellow Americans, to ''extend the olive jar'' to our French brothers and sisters and yappy little dogs. I want you to deliberately approach French people wherever you can find them -- on the street, on the Internet, in the ''Small World'' ride at Disney World, in public restrooms -- and make friendly overtures to them in their own language (French). To help you do this, here is a list of friendly French phrases:<br /><br />''Bonjour, personne francaise!'' (Hello, French person!'')<br /><br />''Je suis un Americain, et, dangue il, je vais vous donner une grande vieille etreinte!'' (I am an American and, dang it, I am going to give you a big old hug!'')<br /><br />''Parole! Vous ne sentez pas demi aussi de mauvais que j'ai prevu!'' (Say! You do not smell half as bad as I expected!'')<br /><br />''Qui s'inquiete qui court darned le monde?'' (Who cares who runs the darned world?'')<br /><br />''Voulez-vous la gomme? Elle ketchup-est assaisonnee!'' (Do you want gum? It's ketchup-flavored!'')<br /><br />''Voulez que je vous porte au mail dans mon SUV?'' (Want me to take you to the mall in my SUV?'')<br /><br />''Vous pouvez vous rendre au garde de securite!'' (You can surrender to the security guard!'')<br /><br />''Ha ha, je suis badiner juste autour hors de l'amiti!'' (Ha ha, I am just kidding around out of friendship!'')<br /><br />''Hey, revenez ici!'' (Hey, come back here!'')<br /><br />''Il n'y a aucune cause pour l'alarme! Mon pistolet a une surete!'' (There is no cause for alarm! My gun has a safety!'')<br /><br />Yes, fellow Americans, with a little effort, we can heal this rift between us and our old friends. Because, in the end, we have a lot more in common than we do separating us! Or, as the French would say, ''Je suis un grand gros menteur'' (I am a big fat liar''). :D
 

SlowlySinking

Master Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Oct 31, 2002
Messages
897
Re: TGIF

Spinner_bait Nut, don't count the French out yet, I understand they all carry a French Army Knife for self defence,,,,,, :D :D <br /><br />
FrenchArmyKnife.jpg
 

SpinnerBait_Nut

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
Aug 25, 2002
Messages
17,651
Re: TGIF

Yea I know and this show all the cool stuff you get plus a special free gift when you get one. :D <br /><br />
french_knife.gif
 

KennyKenCan

Commander
Joined
Aug 26, 2002
Messages
2,501
Re: TGIF

Oh yea,<br /><br />France, the Islamic Empire.<br /><br />Trust them... NOT!
 

Hooty

Rear Admiral
Joined
Oct 2, 2001
Messages
4,496
Re: TGIF

Miss France 2003<br /><br />
Miss%20France%202003.jpg
<br /><br />c/6<br /><br />Hooty
 

SpinnerBait_Nut

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
Aug 25, 2002
Messages
17,651
Re: TGIF

What was that little skunks name in the cartoons?<br />Peppy Lepue or something like that.<br /><br />He would like her for sure. :D
 

snapperbait

Vice Admiral
Joined
Aug 20, 2002
Messages
5,754
Re: TGIF

Dang Hooty... :eek: Where'd you find that pic?.. Nah, wait, Nevermind.. I don't want to know...
 

12Footer

Fleet Admiral
Joined
Mar 25, 2001
Messages
8,217
Re: TGIF

Eeeww! Hooty, looks like she's smuggling in a a Muslim claric!
 

magster65

Commander
Joined
Sep 1, 2002
Messages
2,573
Re: TGIF

oh...<br />my...<br />god...<br />rrrrrrrrrrrrrralph!<br />She's so hairy Sasquatch take pictures of her.
 
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