Posted on 04/10/2021 4:22:52 PM PDT by SamAdams76
I don't know anything about props. But I could learn.
Times have not changed
If you make it all about her - you will be a winner!
Wally — “Could you meet me backstage at 3:15”
Ha, that isn’t “Wally,” that’s Joe Biden. Well, except for the fact that the video would have to be dated 1840, not 1940.
Don’t be like Mr. Bungle!
“If you make it all about her - you will be a winner!”
And it only takes the guy giving up his soul and life. What a win!
Probably from 1946.
Needs the MST3000 treatment.
An interesting look into the past, a different time from the way life is today.
The big difference between then and now, is that odds are you were more likely to live and settle down in the place where you grew up, and there weren’t exactly a lot of fish in the sea, and a bad reputation pretty much ruined your chances for finding a good mate.
I am a 1940’s high schooler... (Class of 51)
In freshman year, most of my friends kept their guns in their school lockers (during hunting season) because the best hunting was on the way home for four of us...
Of course, after the war, there were no deer seasons, but occasionally a stray 30-30 would miss its intended target and accidently hit a deer... (Those dang pheasants could really dodge...π)
My best friend (whose family had a hog farm) could make the deer disappear into 4 neat packets in a hurry...
I can remember my 12th birthday was the week that meat rationing came to an end... We still couldn’t get meat in stores until (I think) mid-1946...
I taught my boys to stand when company enters our home (or leaves)...and when a female enters or leaves a table. Boy...they have slacked!
They still hold the door open...thank goodness! π
Not a single tat to be found, that's for sure.
Mark
And those strapless formal gowns? The were glued on to hold up.
I can remember dining at fraternity houses at Auburn University in the late 70s. When I walked up to a table every young man stood up until I sat down. When I stood up to leave every young man stood up as well. It was incredible!
ππ Yep!
My grandfather, born in 1906, had one on his upper right arm.
It was a heart with a banner ribboned through it. If I recall, it read Semper Amare and my grandmother’s name.
They stayed together for 61 years until the day he died, and she grieved for him until she died 6 years later.
My husband has 5 of them, all on his arms. He is a rock-solid gun-toting hard-working family man who built a beautiful life for our children and me. I thank God daily that he is my husband.
I don’t think tats are the issue, but more the behavior of people that can be problematic.
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