Is that because he sticks the hot dog in his ear? He’s doing it wrong.
That’s why the doctor is worried; he (the hot dog eater) should be watering from the MOUTH. (For hot dogs? I don’t THINK so.)
Especially 4 dollar ones! I think the ones in New York are $2 (though it’s been a while since I priced them); IKEA has 75¢ ones (up from 50¢). This fourth of July they had 50¢ hot dogs and 50¢ cans of soda (Coke OR Pepsi!) at one of the local town’s after-parade celebration.
OK, Nathan’s are $4.95, as are all hot dogs on Cony Island; they don’t make my ears water, anyway.
I see a Pavlov reference struggling to get out. But not working. From the looks of the guy’s gut he has been listening to the bell quite a bit, watering ears or not.
Maybe we should just admit Tony Carrillo is not all there.
This is a guy who thinks the idea of someone wearing sequins to get around the spirit of the law of dress codes, or people eating pizza’s wadded into a ball being culturally inured is relevant and funny..
So hear we know that Pavlov’s dog experiment shows that dogs’ mouths water when the experience things associated with food. So wouldn’t it be funny if people did the same thing? And since people *hear* the bell instead of tasting it, wouldn’t it be funny if it were their ears watering instead of their mouths?
Now there are two obvious weird oversights in the idea that are SO basic we, the readers, can’t even comprehend someone making them.
In other words Tony Carrillo is not all there.
His doctor should worry. If his ears are watering, then his brain fluid is leaking out!
Is that because he sticks the hot dog in his ear? He’s doing it wrong.
That’s why the doctor is worried; he (the hot dog eater) should be watering from the MOUTH. (For hot dogs? I don’t THINK so.)
Especially 4 dollar ones! I think the ones in New York are $2 (though it’s been a while since I priced them); IKEA has 75¢ ones (up from 50¢). This fourth of July they had 50¢ hot dogs and 50¢ cans of soda (Coke OR Pepsi!) at one of the local town’s after-parade celebration.
OK, Nathan’s are $4.95, as are all hot dogs on Cony Island; they don’t make my ears water, anyway.
I see a Pavlov reference struggling to get out. But not working. From the looks of the guy’s gut he has been listening to the bell quite a bit, watering ears or not.
Maybe we should just admit Tony Carrillo is not all there.
This is a guy who thinks the idea of someone wearing sequins to get around the spirit of the law of dress codes, or people eating pizza’s wadded into a ball being culturally inured is relevant and funny..
So hear we know that Pavlov’s dog experiment shows that dogs’ mouths water when the experience things associated with food. So wouldn’t it be funny if people did the same thing? And since people *hear* the bell instead of tasting it, wouldn’t it be funny if it were their ears watering instead of their mouths?
Now there are two obvious weird oversights in the idea that are SO basic we, the readers, can’t even comprehend someone making them.
In other words Tony Carrillo is not all there.
His doctor should worry. If his ears are watering, then his brain fluid is leaking out!