
(Just to get it out of the way for anybody who doesn’t know, Dick Sergeant replaced Dick York as Elizabeth Montgomery’s husband Darrin in Bewitched in 1969)

(Just to get it out of the way for anybody who doesn’t know, Dick Sergeant replaced Dick York as Elizabeth Montgomery’s husband Darrin in Bewitched in 1969)




Submitted by Andréa


Submitted by Andréa



Why would he feel awkward? Terrified, I could understand…
And really, if anybody should feel awkward in this situation, it would be Colonel Sanders. For that matter, for all Sanders knows, the last words he’ll ever hear will be “My name is Chester the Chicken. You killed my father. Prepare to die.”
Of course, I’m just assuming that’s Colonel Sanders. Maybe it’s Burl Ives and I’m really confused.

Yesterday, I happened to read something Norman Vincent Peale wrote in 1957 for Look magazine, regarding school boards banning books like Huckleberry Finn “because of inappropriate language and ideas” (yes, as far back as 1957).
He referred to “the peculiar notion that all ideas in fiction must be good,” and predicted that in the future “supernervous boards might drop Merchant of Venice or the Bible because some characters are depicted unsympathetically or in a way that some people might find disturbing [we’ve already gone there, of course]. If children’s minds are to be shielded from conflict and social change, it might be better to keep them away from reading entirely.”



First, because I don’t get it. Any of it.
And second because, for reasons I don’t understand, it showed up in my feed in place of Frazz.

Yes, parents play “got your nose” with young kids (my kids just looked at me like I was the village idiot, but that’s another matter) — but beyond that, I’m stumped