Here's a two-fer fer your Friday consideration.
Every business conversation, or meeting, or whatever, will inevitably produce some saying "reach out to so and so". It started with a TV commercial jingle in the 1970's with AT&T encouraging phone users to make long distance calls to family...
Is it a genuine Stratoliner that you want? I can think of several hat makers who could provide you with a high quality replica. Tony, you still have your equipment?
If only "two" rhymed with "p"... And consider, three is one of the magic numbers (e.g., The Three Stooges, Three Blind Mice, Three Wise Men from the East, Cinderalla's three wicked step sisters, how many companions did Dorothy collect on her way to Oz?...)
I'm trying to imagine the pitch to potential investors for these products. I can't stop laughing!
As to Tony's remark on low-cost alternatives, back, oh, 50 years or so ago, before flat screen TVs and remote controls, I used to watch the commercials. I do remember a product called "Nair"...
Lest anyone thing this thread is only about theater, here's another one. A few months back I had run out of shaving cream. (Don't let the beard fool you, I shave my throat and cheeks daily.)
So I went to a nearby location of a national chain drug store, looked up at the aisle signs and walked...
It was redone about 20 years ago with Nathan Lane in the Max Biyalistock role and Matthew Broderick covering for Gene Wilder.
Skip if if you have the chance and stick with the original movie.
My wife just walked up and asked, "Did you see that someone has made a musical out of "Twelve Angry Men"?
I had to check. An opera, well, OK, maybe, but a musical!?
I can see the ad now: "All singing! All dancing! A rollicking experience!"
You might as well make a musical out of the trial of...
Certainly a "roman a clef", but the "clef" isn't exactly hidden under a bushel. Likewise for 1984, which I've just finished re-reading for the first time since I was a teenager. And that was a long, long, time ago.
These days we have creeping or crashing into our vocabulary our time's NEWSPEAK...
In the US, that image shows the activity with the fully-qualified name, "soliciting for the purposes of prostitution", often shortened to "soliciting" when the context makes the latter part of the phrase unnecessary.
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