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Post by Girl on Sept 7, 2009 7:56:30 GMT -5
jarv wrote:
P.S. (The very point of this thread is that the "Solution to Sgt. Pepper Enigma" incorporates this kind of wordplay...which suggests that this kind of "jousting" belongs right here, in this thread...)
So then it would seem to be a very long and winding road indeed... as depicted by the silly peppers... and another tequila sunrise... son rise... what 4 men only need 2 pair of socks...
crackpot genii... well I guess that happens if one rubs the lamp the wrong way. And if it's on crack and pot, well what can I say.
It's been fun, gotta run. Good day to everyone.
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 7, 2009 11:36:08 GMT -5
This is Tyrone Power, aka Ty Power, the ties that bind us. Here you can see that John, George, and Paul have ties, while Ringo wears a mock turtleneck. (Lewis Carroll writes about the Mock Turtle, and Ringo played the role of the Mock Turtle in the 1985 television adaptation of Alice in Wonderland, so Ringo clearly has "Looking Glass" ties...) Back to Ty Power. Here he is in the film "Brigham Young," where he played the role of Jonathan Kent: This is another Jonathan Kent: This is C Lark, C Lark, C Lark: And finally, This is The C-Arse: -j
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 7, 2009 11:43:12 GMT -5
Speaking of ducks, this is an excerpt from chapter 3 of Alice in Wonderland: `Found what?' said the Duck.
`Found it,' the Mouse replied rather crossly: `of course you know what "it" means.'
`I know what "it" means well enough, when I find a thing,' said the Duck...Here's to you, Reverend Robinson. -j
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Post by B on Sept 7, 2009 11:59:17 GMT -5
from link in jarv's post above:
"Reverend Robinson Duckworth DD, CVO, VD, (4 December 1834 - 20 September 1911) was present in the original boating expedition of 4 July 1862 during which Alice's Adventures were first told by Lewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson).
He is represented by the Duck in the book, a play on his last name.
Duckworth was the second son of Robinson Duckworth Sr of Liverpool and his wife Elizabeth. He was educated at the Royal Institution School in Liverpool, and later at University College, Oxford, where he took his BA in 1857." ------------------
And, if you heed the lyrics to Mrs. Robinson carefully, you'll be able to surmise that "she" is secretly a cross dresser, possibly with a drug problem, being admitted to a place of supervision like The Betty Ford clinic. (Got to hide it from the kids.)
Koo Koo Katchoo! (she's nutty)
Goo goo gajoob.
And yes, imo, Simon and Garfunkel included PID/PWR clues in their songs.
"Mrs. Robinson" may have been a "mister", who chose to go to the clinic in disguise, as a member of the opposite sex.
Jude-y in Disguise, you might say.
S&G salute her none-the-less. Soo..."Mrs. Robinson" is a character in the "Wonderland" entourage.
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 7, 2009 12:13:55 GMT -5
Koo Koo Katchoo! (she's nutty)Goo goo gajoob. And yes, imo, Simon and Garfunkel included PID/PWR clues in their songs. Paul Simon Paul's eye, man! Paul's eye moon! -j
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 7, 2009 12:40:50 GMT -5
And yes, imo, Simon and Garfunkel included PID/PWR clues in their songs. "Joltin' Joe has left and gone away. Hey hey hey."This is Marilyn Monroe, who married Joltin' Joe Di Maggio. It is reported that he was a slugger in more ways than one. Joltin' Joe has left? He probably had a wicked left. (Hey there Seamus...) This is Joltin' Joe: And now, to make things light, or black, this is Joltin' Joe: This is Joltin' Joe: "And again, hot drinks are not for the body or belly."--LDS Doctrine & Covenants 89:9 (written by Joe Smith) This is Joltin' Joe: -j
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 7, 2009 12:47:51 GMT -5
Who do you suppose Oscar Hammerstein is dis-cussing under the covers of this song? Poor Marilyn Monroe ate bloody betel nuts, i.e. she ate beatings from the "glove" of the slugger, Joe Di Maggio.
Bloody Mary (from The South Pacific):
Bloody Mary is the girl I love. Bloody Mary is the girl I love. Bloody Mary is the girl I love. Now ain't that too damn bad!
Her skin is tender as Dimaggio's glove. Her skin is tender as Dimaggio's glove. Her skin is tender as Dimaggio's glove. Now ain't that too damn bad!
Bloody Mary's chewin' betel nuts. She is always chewin' betel nuts. Bloody Mary's chewin' betel nuts. And she don't use Pepsodent! Now ain't that too damn bad!
Bloody Mary is the girl I love. Bloody Mary is the girl I love. Bloody Mary is the girl I love. Now ain't that too damn bad! Now ain't that too damn bad!
-j
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 7, 2009 14:04:42 GMT -5
Voulez Vole. (Pardon my buggy French...something about flies.) Some people call me Maurice Cause I speak of the consonants of love(Apollo-gees to Brother Steve Miller for my butcher cover.) So anyway, speaking of beatings, (and scarlet letters with lies...), somebody got clubbed in the head by a hyperbolic cosine. I think the math people write that 'cosh,' if I am not mistaken. (Then there is that out-of-nowhere double Jeffer-Dee twist at the end...something to do with power and the key to everything.) Power: No power: Once a pawn a Dee-trick: "All you need is LOVE," thus saith little Anna Graham (after drinking a hare too much of that good ol' Baileys). -j
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Post by B on Sept 7, 2009 16:46:34 GMT -5
" Anna Graham"
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Post by Girl on Sept 7, 2009 19:50:05 GMT -5
Sidenote: Interestingly, the name Paul Simon means "little heard"... depending on your source, that is...
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 7, 2009 21:29:55 GMT -5
There's no place like home. (Brother, can you take me back?) The man of Sn, a cowardly, scared gym crow. Sold out for cashes. Surrendered to the clay. (We are all klay too). -j
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 7, 2009 22:48:22 GMT -5
Philosophers' Rolling Stones... D' Ors means "of gold." Gold Stones and Ruby Slippers. Follow the yellow brick road: (The tension mounts, you score an Oz. Ole!) -j
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 8, 2009 1:48:48 GMT -5
This is corn semolina, aka "my grits": This is The Son of Man, by "My Grits" Magritte: This is "Semolina My Grits" Maigret (played by Charles Laughton) climbing up the Eiffel Tower : Charles Laughton played the role of Captain Kidd (you know, the pirate who buried Poe's Goldbug treasure): This is Oscar Wilde: This is Charles Laughton in the film adaptation of Oscar Wilde's Canterville Ghost: Oscar Wilde wrote a play called Salome, which is about the step-daughter of Herod Antipas (you know, the sweet young thing who requested John Baptist's head). Aubrey Beardsley (shown below) created illustrations for Wilde's Salome: This is one of Beardsley's Salome illustrations: This is Charles Laughton, who played Herod Antipas in the 1953 film version of Salome: This is George Bernard Shaw: The third act of Shaw's Man and Superman is called Don Juan in Hell, in which Charles Laughton played the Devil: Charles Laughton played a LAWyer, Sir Wilfred Robarts, (Robe Arts), in Witness for the Prosecution, also starring Dietrich and Power: -j P.S. Charles Laughton played King Lear. It's a real ton of laughs!
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Post by iameye on Sept 8, 2009 5:58:40 GMT -5
This is one of Beardsley's Salome illustrations: And finally, this enigmatic piece of art from Sir Paul titled 'Tara's Plastic Skirt' (He stated he meant Tara Browne) The Peacock Skirt - Beardsley www.youtube.com/watch?v=-2kwyzSzzO8
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 8, 2009 6:33:04 GMT -5
ROFL!
God bless Brother Burroughs' Willy. ;D
-j
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 8, 2009 7:30:46 GMT -5
ROFL! Robber and Ruse, France's very own Dee, Laughing Lamberton, and Rollover Beethoven. ;D This is William Claude Dukenfield, aka W. C. Fields. W.C. = Double, you see? Painting my room in the colorful way. Two are flyin' and one is glidin'. -j
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Post by SS on Sept 8, 2009 11:33:15 GMT -5
You all are funny. More than half the time I have no idea what you are posting about and how it connects to the subject, however, it makes for good entertainment and a laugh or two.
This is a comment I just left online in response to my latest video. I thought it may be interesting or not but food for thought regardless.
One idea of many I was trying to get across in this video is how Crowley's LAM, The Wizard of Oz, Scientology's Xenu, and MAL Evans using the large forehead in the video for "A Day in the Life" along with the typical alien in today's society, all are a representative of the same being. Secret societies may take on a different name but the song remains the same. It is the same beast and organizations with different titles.
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Post by B on Sept 8, 2009 14:14:51 GMT -5
Jarvitronics wrote: W.C. = Double, you see?----------------------- I had wondered why he had made the grade! Your suggestion is excellent, jarvitronics.
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 8, 2009 16:13:20 GMT -5
Secret societies may take on a different name but the song remains the same. It is the same beast and organizations with different titles. Your point being well taken, I find it quite amusing that one interpretation of SS is Secret Society. Lady Madonna sez... "The Bea't Goes On." Kan ye dig it? -j
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 8, 2009 17:14:30 GMT -5
This is H. G. Wells, who wrote The Island of Doctor Moreau: This is Charles Laughton in the role of Doctor Moreau (from the 1933 film adaptation, Island of Lost Souls): Jocko Homo: -j P.S. "No Spill Blood."
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 8, 2009 19:09:49 GMT -5
ROFL! Robber and Ruse, France's very own Dee, Laughing Lamberton, and Rollover Beethoven. ;D This is William Claude Dukenfield, aka W. C. Fields. W.C. = Double, you see? Painting my room in the colorful way. Two are flyin' and one is glidin'. -j I Hi hi hi Hi hi hi Do a roadhog...Co-starring... (wait for it...) Charles Laughton! That's a Lott o' Laughton! ROFL! -j
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Post by Doc on Sept 9, 2009 17:58:30 GMT -5
Here comes the Pun. Here come the Pun King. Punking, or Punk'd for short, as in we've all been punk'd. ;D Jarv, by any chance are you just trying to say that anything can be twisted and interpreted to mean anything, which in effect is true, of course, but such lovely word jousting should have its own thread I think... sort of like the song association game. More silly love schlongs... This is the Hill Cumorah, circa 420 AD, where Moron-i allegedly buried the gold record, the Sword of Laban, and the diamond looking glasses: In 1827 Joe Smith allegedly dug up the gold record, the Sword of Laban, and the diamond looking glasses, and hid them at his mother Lucy's house. This is the Hill Cumorah today: This is another kind of hill Cum Aura: (Also know as an Aura Gun, courtesy of Aubrey Beardsley) This is the State of Aura Gun: Oregon's statehood anniversary is February 14th, aka Valentine's Day. It is the Beaver State. The capital, Salem, is the Cherry City (where by chance, I was made...strangely enough, on or about Valentine's Day). That Aura Gun surely got a whole lotta love. ;D In case you can't clearly read the above envelope, that's the Pi O'neer Mother (located on the University of Oregon Duck campus). Pie on ear. That's just too, uhh, funny, er, I mean wonky. Duck! ;D ;D -j I really like the associations in this post.
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 9, 2009 23:05:42 GMT -5
The title of this film could be interpreted to mean "Flowers in the Dirt," since a "mar" is a scuff, scar, blemish, etc. "Lily Mars" are tramp-led "flowers," meaning de-flowered virgins. The film is by The Forewarner Brothers, Harry, Albert, Sam, and Jack. The film is parodied on Sgt. Pepper by Four Fab "Warner" Brothers. (Hey there Thames.) And Charles Laugh-ton is nowhere to be found. -j
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 9, 2009 23:22:44 GMT -5
And Charles Laugh-ton is nowhere to be found... According to the cover of Sgt Pepper, "Little Shirley Temple was in many movies directed by Cum-ings, Butt-ler, Seat-er, Do-one, etc. Shirley Temple starred in movies with the Cowardly Lion, the Tin Man, and The Wizard during the years before Oz was filmed." "Liquidated her did you?" That's dirty. Flowers in the dirt. The casting coo coochie coo. Power: No power: -j
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Post by jarvitronics on Sept 10, 2009 0:46:19 GMT -5
My son Maxwell wrote this, and I thought it wildly appropriate:
And in that urn they will leave your remains, the ashes of inconceivably powerful pains. It's the things you hide that cook your heart. But the worms don't give a fuck what you felt from the start. They will consume you eventually, it's all a necessity. what you feel is an illusion, it's all a confusion. no reason to chase after those dames cause in the end you get naught for you pains. you just decompose: organ, skin, bone, and self-important brains.
so bump the beat, crank the bass, and enter waaaaah. your lips move and emanate the frequency "BLAH" your belly is bare and tan, albeit intentional driving hormones maniacal, and magically tragically free, with your whisper powerful drugs you cast on me
so just shut up and enjoy this meal, the world is a reflection of the things you feel
--mAXwell sTERling
-j
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