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Post by jarvitronics on Jul 12, 2010 11:13:43 GMT -5
The Fool and The Star. As shown: The Fool (a novice) is covered with "Stardom" (spiritual inspiration). A Pica Pica Parody of a Crowing Rookey baked in Flaming Pi (It's about seeing the spin): The pica pica is the only non-mammal capable of recognizing itself in a mirror. -j
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Post by B on Jul 12, 2010 12:13:00 GMT -5
One for sorrowTwo for luck; (or mirth) Three for a wedding, Four for death; (or birth) Five for silver, Six for gold; Seven for a secret, Not to be told; Eight for heaven, Nine for hell And ten for the devil's own sell! Pica pica"Macho" Pica ;D
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Post by jarvitronics on Jul 12, 2010 14:38:48 GMT -5
What's the bigger picture? (Where is that shot from?) As shown: The Fool (a novice) is covered with "Stardom" (spiritual inspiration). Rocky Horror redux; it's a mouse trap laid by a sucker. Card game starts at 1:30: Skeleton in the closet on old Memory Lane: Longing for old memories: pining Piney Lane -j
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Post by B on Jul 12, 2010 18:12:14 GMT -5
scene occurs at 1:55 in the video As shown: The Fool (a novice) is covered with "Stardom" (spiritual inspiration). Alternately: A fool, who is walking off a cliff, is "covered" - with spiritual guidance, you might say. Nicely shown here by TheMagickian, it seems to me: A Craftsman in the Works www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ud6ms3No6hcPerhaps ... a bit more.
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Post by thespacebetween on Jul 13, 2010 17:33:13 GMT -5
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Post by thespacebetween on Jul 15, 2010 2:06:29 GMT -5
Shaken, not stirred 'Significant Other' The Hand controls the Fingers If you want it, anytime , I can get it. Give me your hand I'd like to shake it -.-. --- -. -. . -.-. - - .... . -.. --- - ...
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Post by iameye on Jul 15, 2010 7:58:54 GMT -5
The Hand controls the Fingers If you want it, anytime , I can get it. -.-. --- -. -. . -.-. - - .... . -.. --- - ... connect the dots? lol That poor finger has a nail in it! Ouch! Maybe a little shepherd will come by and remove the thorn? ;D The Lion and the Shepherd A LION, roaming through a forest, trod on a thorn. Soon afterward he came up to a shepherd and fawned on him, wagging his tail as if to say, "I do indeed seek your aid." The shepherd boldly examined the beast, discovered the thorn, and placing his paw on his lap, pulled it out. Thus relieved of his pain, the lion returned into the forest. Some time after, the shepherd, being imprisoned on a false accusation, was condemned "to be cast to the lions" as the punishment for his imputed crime. But when the lion was released from his cage, he recognized the shepherd as the man who healed him, and instead of attacking him, approached and placed his foot on his lap. The king, as soon as he heard the tale, ordered the lion to be set free again in the forest, and the shepherd to be pardoned and restored to his friends. Fables of Aesopthe mouth that roared
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Post by jarvitronics on Jul 15, 2010 9:28:25 GMT -5
The Cue that Bombed: -j
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Post by thespacebetween on Jul 15, 2010 16:13:48 GMT -5
The Cue that Bombed: -j Take this Brother, may it serve you well Brother can you take me back
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Post by thespacebetween on Jul 15, 2010 18:00:57 GMT -5
A Pica Pica Parody of a Crowing Rookey baked in Flaming Pi (It's about seeing the spin): EggJackley! all good children go to heaven
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Post by B on Jul 15, 2010 20:44:32 GMT -5
'Then I hope your finger is better now?' Alice said very politely, as she crossed the little brook after the Queen. 'Oh, much better!' cried the Queen, her voice rising to a squeak as she went on. 'Much be-etter! Be-etter! Be-e-e-etter! Be-e-ehh!' The last word ended in a long bleat, so like a sheep that Alice quite started. .... Hey Jude Hey Jude, don't make it bad take a sad song and make it better Remember to let her under your skin Then you can begin to make it better Better, better, better, better, better, oh -j
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Post by B on Jul 15, 2010 20:51:56 GMT -5
Is it just me, or do the characters sing "Wrack Paul brain" at the end of the song? (2:44) www.youtube.com/watch?v=wqy2UepBgEUThis may be Faul's response: MAKING LOVE UNDERNEATH THE BED, SHOOTING STARS FROM A PURPLE SKY. I DON'T CARE HOW I DO IT, I'M THE MAN ON THE FLAMING PIE.
STICK MY TONGUE OUT AND LICK MY NOSE, TUCK MY SHIRT IN AND ZIP MY FLY. GO AHEAD, HAVE A VISION, I'M THE MAN ON THE FLAMING PIE.
EV'RYTHING I DO HAS A SIMPLE EXPLANATION, WHEN I'M WITH YOU, YOU COULD DO WITH A VACATION. I TOOK MY BRAINS OUT AND STRETCHED 'EM ON THE RACK, NOW I'M not SO SURE I'M EVER GONNA GET 'EM BACK.
CUT MY TOES OFF TO SPITE MY FEET, I DON'T KNOW WETHER TO LAUGH OR CRY. NEVER MIND, CHECK MY RHYTHM, I'M THE MAN ON THE FLAMING PIE.
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Post by jarvitronics on Jul 15, 2010 23:47:15 GMT -5
The Cue that Bombed: -j Take this Brother, may it serve you well Brother can you take me back Rocky said, "Doc it's only a scratch, and I'll be better, I'll be better Doc, as soon as I am abel." Ding dong. -j
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Post by jarvitronics on Jul 16, 2010 11:43:24 GMT -5
They couldn't prevent Nat from being happy.
-j
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Post by jarvitronics on Jul 18, 2010 12:55:04 GMT -5
Stubbins: "soccer toes" or Socrates? Did Socrates really exist? Some say Socrates was the invention of Plato, who taught the 'socratic method' to Aristotle, who in turn taught it to Alexander. We Wish You a Merry Cornus Mas! Turn him to any cause of policy, The Gordian Knot of it he will unloose, Familiar as his garter--Shake Spearwood Column, Bus, Egg: (Not much of a supper, that last). -j
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Post by B on Jul 18, 2010 15:40:30 GMT -5
-j wrote:
(Not much of a supper, that last).--------------- Back to the egg, eh?
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Post by haworth on Jul 24, 2010 23:42:42 GMT -5
to Becky Joe Ephgrave's [Sgt Pepper drumskin designer] grandaughter. Hi Becky-I'm the one who commissioned your Grandad to do the cover and support fully your story. NO conspiracy chaps- Becky is right! Just a straight commission. Joe did several for me and for my mother. He painted wardrobes, sideboards, lettering for the shop Palisades and the famous drum. He was an outstanding fairground painter.
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Post by B on Jul 25, 2010 8:44:19 GMT -5
How is it that you were involved in the Pepper cover creative process, haworth? Were you part of the Capitol records staff, and someone said, "We need a really cool drum skin painting for the cover! Anybody here know someone who could do it?" or something?
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Post by jarvitronics on Jul 25, 2010 8:54:38 GMT -5
to Becky Joe Ephgrave's [Sgt Pepper drumskin designer] grandaughter. Hi Becky-I'm the one who commissioned your Grandad to do the cover and support fully your story. NO conspiracy chaps- Becky is right! Just a straight commission. Joe did several for me and for my mother. He painted wardrobes, sideboards, lettering for the shop Palisades and the famous drum. He was an outstanding fairground painter. This is not Jann Haworth. -j
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Post by ramone on Jul 25, 2010 13:02:53 GMT -5
Some wikinfo-
"The works she made over the next five or so years, independently of the 'soft sculptures' being created during the same period by Claes Oldenburg in New York, were highly personal and very specifically rooted in the circumstances of her background and in her experience as a young American woman. References abound not only to fast foods and newspapers, but also to her native Hollywood (where her father was an Oscar-winning production designer), for example in the deliciously improbable happy family of Mae West, Shirley Temple and W.C. Fields of 1967.
Jann Haworth became a leading member of the British Pop Art Movement in the 1960s, and almost its only female member.[1][2]
In 1967 she co-designed the iconic Sgt. Pepper LP cover for the Beatles with her then-husband, Peter Blake.
In the '70s she and Blake were members of the group of artists known as the Brotherhood of Ruralists.[3] In 1979 she founded and ran The Looking Glass School near Bath, Somerset, an arts and crafts primary and middle school."
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Post by ramone on Jul 25, 2010 13:19:42 GMT -5
to Becky Joe Ephgrave's [Sgt Pepper drumskin designer] grandaughter. Hi Becky-I'm the one who commissioned your Grandad to do the cover and support fully your story. NO conspiracy chaps- Becky is right! Just a straight commission. Joe did several for me and for my mother. He painted wardrobes, sideboards, lettering for the shop Palisades and the famous drum. He was an outstanding fairground painter. Yes he certainly was. But I think some are missing the point. Just because he did something on commission doesn't mean there was no conspiracy. That's a breakdown in point to point reasoning. What you and Becky are saying could be entirely correct in that, yes, he was paid to do a job for them. I don't know who helped with the set up on the cover exactly. I don't know who made tea and scones and coffee on the set. Who ever did was paid for that service. But it doesn't mean they must have known about the overall design and intent. (and because THEY didn't there COULDN'T POSSIBLY be anything cryptic at all) That fact that people were used for different aspects of the whole thing in no way proves that the lads didn't conceive of things prior.
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Post by jarvitronics on Jul 25, 2010 17:21:52 GMT -5
Chewing obfuscation: Ex-chewing obfuscation: So alike yet so different. -j
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Post by JoJo on Jul 25, 2010 17:58:37 GMT -5
Peter Blake said this in Mojo magazine about three years ago:
It didn't occur to me that the waxworks of the suited Beatles looked like 'the Beatles are dead; long live the Beatles' and that they were looking at their funeral flowers, but it's an interesting idea. We set up a couple of myths to find in the puzzle, but most of them are dead ends. What's intriguing is how the mythology never stops.
"Myths to find in the puzzle"... Haworth, comments?
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Post by jarvitronics on Jul 26, 2010 3:14:10 GMT -5
Peter Blake said this in Mojo magazine about three years ago: It didn't occur to me that the waxworks of the suited Beatles looked like 'the Beatles are dead; long live the Beatles' and that they were looking at their funeral flowers, but it's an interesting idea. We set up a couple of myths to find in the puzzle, but most of them are dead ends. What's intriguing is how the mythology never stops."Myths to find in the puzzle"... Haworth, comments? Do you know the issue date of the interview JoJo? Or do you know of an online transcript? We set up a couple of myths to find in the puzzle, but most of them are dead ends.That sounds much like what Apollo used to say. "A couple of myths" might be hinting at a famous couple, a pair of lovers, whose story spans multiple mythologies. A Couple (of Myths): Most are Dead Ends: -j
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Post by iameye on Jul 26, 2010 8:19:31 GMT -5
Ok, well - it looks like were at a REDDD LIGHTTT PWR CHALLENGGGE! So, we need five correct answers in 30 seconds.
If we do it we win $250.00 (or because of inflation, $218. (and 25 cents) by the time you read this)
Ready? Go! a girl a boy a love a promise and Ben Bailey
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