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Bring it...
The wide distribution of Warner cartoons from the late 1950s thru the early 1990s were pretty much the only thing keeping elements of 1940s popular culture alive during that period. A lot of '80s kids will recognize Red Skelton, Jerry Colonna and Lou Costello catchphrases to this day, without having any actual idea whatsoever of where they really came from. "I'm only thwee and a half years old!" "I dood it!" "Silly, isn't he?"
Not to mention all of the wonderful music that was composed and/or arranged by Carl Stalling. Stalling allegedly had an encyclopedic knowledge of music, and could think of a song to fit almost any scenario the writers, directors, and/or animators could come up with.If it wasn't for early Warner Brothers cartoons, I wouldn't know today what half of the slang of the 40s meant.
And the classic Warner Brothers "Russian Rhapsody"- featuring those "gremlins from the Kremlin," got laughs from the two kids we adopted from Russia... the older one recognizing the Stalin caricature gremlin as well as the ranting cartoon Adolf Hitler.
The wide distribution of Warner cartoons from the late 1950s thru the early 1990s were pretty much the only thing keeping elements of 1940s popular culture alive during that period. A lot of '80s kids will recognize Red Skelton, Jerry Colonna and Lou Costello catchphrases to this day, without having any actual idea whatsoever of where they really came from. "I'm only thwee and a half years old!" "I dood it!" "Silly, isn't he?"
Even though I was a very young fan of classic movies, I first met Cary Grant (as Cary Granite) and some other classic Hollywood stars as characters on "The Flintstones." I remember making the connection backward when I started to see them in their movies.
International Harvester trucks (IH is now Navistar International Corporation) were once popular in the logging industry and were commonly referred to as "Cornbinders". Haven't heard that term in years.
International Harvester trucks (IH is now Navistar International Corporation) were once popular in the logging industry and were commonly referred to as "Cornbinders". Haven't heard that term in years.
I had a scout too, very good solid vehicle, better than the Jeep CJ5 I had a couple of years later.I used to own a Binder!!!! Well a Scout, to be exact. Loved that vehicle. I want another, but they're getting very hard to find, and ridiculously expensive. "Binder" is still common in the IH enthusiast circle, but it's a small circle.
I had a scout too, very good solid vehicle, better than the Jeep CJ5 I had a couple of years later.
The Flintstones was most definitely Hanna-Barbera's version of The Honeymooners set in the stone age. Jackie Gleason wanted to sue Hanna-Barbera, but friends convinced him it would be bad for his image and his career if he became known as "the man who killed Fred Flintstone".I picked up on the similarities between Fred and Wilma, and Ralph and Alice Kramden, at a very early age.
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That's still the system I use today -- I throw what little actual food waste that I generate over the back fence into the junkyard where creatures take care of it for me. As long as there's seagulls, skunks, and raccoons, my solid-waste issues are easily resolved. The Circle Of Nature and all that.