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Terms Which Have Disappeared

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
My father also used to say that.:(

As many times as I’ve seen this movie, when Rod Steiger is on
I forget that there are other actors in the scene with him.
That’s how good he was for me.
Dr. Zhivago is another.
 
Last edited:
Messages
17,190
Location
New York City
My father also used to say that.:(

As many times as I’ve seen this movie, when Rod Steiger is on
I forget that there are other actors in the scene with him.
That’s how good he was for me.
Dr. Zhivago is another.

I agree - Steiger is that insanely good. In a weird way, he is the glue in Doctor Zhivago.
 
Messages
17,190
Location
New York City
Ballyhoo

Great word - hardly ever hear it anymore.

As happens 90% of the time, it just popped out of my head as I was posting on another thread and thought, that's one you don't hear much at all now.
 
I always did wonder whether people from Missouri were more skeptical and whether it still holds up today.

I'll suspend judgement on that for the time being.

tommy.gif
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,715
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Ballyhoo

Great word - hardly ever hear it anymore.

As happens 90% of the time, it just popped out of my head as I was posting on another thread and thought, that's one you don't hear much at all now.

"Ballyhoo" was the most popular humor magazine of the 1930s, combining smeary sex jokes with deep-cutting satires of advertising and popular culture.
14sinft.jpg
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,715
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Similar, but more cartoon-oriented. Their fake ads were much more brutal than Mad's ever were.

ballyhoo1.jpg


The editor of Ballyhoo, a fellow by the name of Norman Anthony, was one of the biggest names in humor in the 1920s and early 1930s -- he'd been the editor of Judge, which he turned into the snappiest humor sheet of the twenties by hiring people like S. J. Perelman, Jefferson Machamer, and Dr. Seuss, and when Dell Publishing lured him over to start Ballyhoo it was hot news for comedy fans. Anthony rode the success of Ballyhoo magazine all the way to Broadway, creating a stage revue called "Ballyhoo of 1932" which featured Bob Hope in one of his first starring roles, and song lyrics by Yip Harburg.

Anthony remained influential until the end of the thirties, when Ballyhoo folded, and he dropped completely off the map. But a lot of the people who created "Mad" in the 1950s grew up reading his work -- and his influence is clearly evident in theirs.
 

Big Cat

New in Town
Messages
4
My grandpa always used the term "Well, I'll be jiggered", when something had him stumped.

I occasionally use that and people just looooooook at me...
 

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