Yeah, Mozart face.
The ultimate taboo? Page 22
You or the maow maow?
Quote: Aaron @ November 20 2008, 5:57 PM GMTYou or the maow maow?
I told you - the maow maow - M.M.W! So everyone turned out a winner!
Awesome!
Wait ... *glares* Which way round?
It'll still be in your inbox, along with all the discussion and reasoning! Glare ye not!
But I've got a limit on what shows in my inbox! Grr.
*starts searching*
... Bastard.
The bi-sexual necrophiliac galdiator.
He loves you so much he f**ks you twice.
The bi-sexual necrophiliac galdiator.
He loves you so much, he f**ks you whether you are alive or dead.
Quote: Brian Brane @ April 1 2012, 9:23 AM BSTThe bi-sexual necrophiliac galdiator.
He loves you so much, he f**ks you whether you are alive or dead.
I killed this thread ... yeah!
Quote: Brian Brane @ May 23 2012, 9:06 PM BSTI killed this thread ... yeah!
Well nobody knows what a "Galdiator" is.
This subject reminds me about this interview with Dudley Moore discussing the subject of taboos in comedy.
"What we basically did was speak the unspeakable. Take, for instance, cancer, which Peter and I discuss on one album. Cancer's one of those subjects that, when they come up, cause everyone to put on a serious face. Everybody fears it, because we all secretly feel it's self-induced through anxiety or doubt. I know that sometimes I sink into days when I get so anxious that I conjure up an image of a white-eyed, greedy little rodent gnawing away at my arsehole. That's cancer-causing.
Anyway, even though Peter and I knew that cancer was awful, it was something we wanted to ventilate. And in doing so we got into the most outrageous convolutions until we ended up competing with each other over who had the worst cancer...'I've got cancer of the wife'...'Only that? Well listen, I've got cancer of the house.' And it went on like that until we both got hysterical with laughter. As Peter said, there's absolutely no socially redeeming value about cancer, which is one of its greatest merits."
My favourite 'taboo' its not the disease its the 'broughaha' that surrounds 'illness'