Song Parody: Homebound

♩♩♪

I’m sitting in the railway station

Not getting to my destination
Mmmmmmm


Amateur at six-foot stance
My soap and my Purell in hand
At every stop I take my chance
Forfeiting all, because it’s banned

Home-bound
:
I washed and I was

Home-bound.

Home
Thoughts of escaping

Home
Where my music’s playing

Home
But the whole world’s waiting

Virulently for me

♩♩♪

A Toast to Not Being Toast

Submitted by Slapout:

Saturday Night Hootenanny

 

Well my friends I head back to my youth for tonight’s Hootenanny.

It’s almost funny five time.

With a couple of bonus tracks.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

No Weird Al, I leave that for Basil.

We’re All Ready for the Hootenanny

Even the cat:

IMAO Time Machine: Fun Facts About the 50 States: Alabama

This is a reposting of one of Harvey’s classics. There’s a link to the book in the sidebar. — The Editors


Welcome to Fun Facts About the 50 States, where – week by week – I’ll be taking you on a tour around this great nation of ours, providing you with interesting, yet completely useless and probably untrue, information about each of the 50 states.

This week: first in our hearts, first in the alphabet, dead last in shoes per capita, we’re headed down south to Alabama, so let’s get started…


Alabama flag
The flag of Alabama is a big red X on a white field, which symbolizes the state’s high illiteracy rate.
  • Alabama is a medium-sized state in the Southern US. It’s very similar to its neighboring state, Florida, except it doesn’t have as many old people or alligators.
  • The first Mardi Gras parade was held in Mobile, Alabama in 1711. It featured colorfully decorated, slow-moving cars driving down the streets amongst a crowd of stumbling, drunken pedestrians wearing funny costumes. This is the source of the Alabama state motto: “Alabama – where every day is like Mardi Gras!”
  • The state motto has since been changed to “Alabama – the sorta shaped like a beer gut state.”
  • Workers from Alabama built the first rocket designed to put humans on the moon. It was launched from Florida so that wouldn’t be attacked by angry villagers with torches and pitchforks who thought it was a tool of the devil.
  • The world’s first Electric Trolley system was introduced in Montgomery Alabama in 1886. It was immediately destroyed by angry villagers.
  • Perhaps NOW you understand NASA’s fear.
  • Alabama is the only state with all the major natural resources to make iron and steel. This explains why all the villagers had pitchforks.
  • To help fund education, Alabama instituted a America’s first pitchfork tax in 1937.
  • The flag of Alabama is a big red X on a white field which symbolizes the states high illiteracy rate.
  • Maybe they need to raise the pitchfork tax.
  • Montgomery Alabama was the capital and birthplace of the Confederate States of America, which earned Montgomery the nickname “Birthplace of Bad Ideas.”
  • The Confederate Flag was designed and first flown in Alabama in 1861 by the great-grandfather of Bo and Luke Duke.
  • Alabama became the 22nd state on December 14th, 1819. This posed a problem for celebrating the event, since most Alabama citizens couldn’t count past 20, even with their shoes off, although certain of the more inbred sections of the state didn’t seem to have as much of a problem with it.
  • Alabama is actually a Creek Indian word meaning “can’t count past 20 even with his shoes off.”
  • Alabama’s state government is known for its love of high-spending pork projects, and its state capitol building was once blown down by a hungry wolf.
  • Serves ’em right for building it out of sticks.
  • Baseball player Hank Aaron was born in Mobile in 1934. He started playing for the Mobile Black Bears in 1950, but his career there was cut short when he was arrested for “Batting While Black.”
  • The state song of Alabama is “Alabama.” I’d sing it for you but it has no words, since nothing rhymes with Alabama.
  • Well, except “gamma”, but the Greek alphabet is outlawed in Alabama, so that doesn’t really work.
  • The highest point in Alabama is Mount Cheaha at 2405 feet. The second highest point is in Trashy Acres Trailer Park at the top of Mary Lou Clanton’s hair-do.
  • The musical group Alabama has a fan club and museum in Fort Payne, Alabama, which was burned to the ground by angry villagers after the group used the word “gamma” in a song.
  • Governor George C. Wallace served four terms in office and spent two of them shooing colored people away from his drinking fountain.
  • In 1995, Alabama native Heather Whitestone was the first disabled woman chosen to serve as Miss America. I’m not sure exactly WHY she was classified as disabled, since the Johns Hopkins Medical Encyclopedia lists “being an Alabama native” as a “handicap” rather than a “disability.”
  • Hitler’s typewriter is on display at the Hall of History in Bessemer, Alabama. It’s unknown whether it still works, since no one in Alabama can correctly spell the sentence, “The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.”
  • The city of Mobile, Alabama is named for the Mauvilla Indian word meaning “Damn! Squaw have heap big hairdo!”
  • Alabama’s official state mineral is automotive rust.
  • Alabama’s state insect is the Monarch Butterfly, or – as natives refer to it – “that pretty little bug what’s flappin’ around over there.”
  • Alabama’s state bird is the pecan pie.
  • Long story. Something to do with a gallon of moonshine & Hitler’s typewriter. I’m not really at liberty to discuss it, since it involves the word gamma.
  • In 1864, at the battle of Mobile Bay, Union Admiral David Farragut issued his famous command “Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead!” Also uttered that day was the less famous Confederate reply – “Holy crap! They’re coming right for us! RUN!”
  • Despite having only 50 miles of coastline, Alabama’s beaches are a popular tourist destination. Be sure to visit during early March to witness the “Feed Yankee Tourists to the Sharks” Festival.
  • The town of Enterprise, Alabama houses the Boll Weevil Monument which celebrates the role this destructive insect played in encouraging farmers to grow crops other than cotton. But despite all their contributions, Alabama still doesn’t allow Boll Weevils to either vote or ride in the front of the bus.

That wraps up the Alabama edition of Fun Facts About the 50 States. Next week we’ll be hitting the frozen tundra – and a few baby seals – as we take a look at Alaska.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got to get back to working on the lyrics for Alabama’s state song:

I live in Alabama… I really hate my mamma… I hit her with a hamma… and they threw me in the slamma…

Hmmm… not bad.


[The complete e-book version of “Fun Facts About the 50 States” is now available at Amazon.com. If you don’t have a Kindle, you can download free Kindle apps for your web browser, smartphone, computer, or tablet from Amazon.com]

You Keep Using That Word, “Palace.” I Do Not Think It Means What You Think It Means.

DC: Trees Encroach on The Mall During Congressional Shutdown

Best of Poll results for the week of April 7th

Two polls complete from last week. Your preferences are as follows.

 

Le Chiffre – Mads Mikkelsen – Casino Royale

Who do you prefer?

  • LeChiffre - Mad Mikkelsen - Casino Royale (48%, 43 Votes)
  • Ernst Stavro Blofeld - Christoph Waltz - Spectre (27%, 24 Votes)
  • Tiago "Raoul Silva" Rodriguez - Javier Bardem - Skyfall (19%, 17 Votes)
  • Dominic Greene - Mathieu Amalric - Quantum of Solace (6%, 5 Votes)

Total Voters: 89

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Lois Maxwell

 

Who is the best Miss Moneypenny?

  • Lois Maxwell (58%, 93 Votes)
  • Samantha Bond (15%, 24 Votes)
  • Pamela Salem (14%, 22 Votes)
  • Naomi Harris (7%, 11 Votes)
  • Caroline Bliss (6%, 10 Votes)

Total Voters: 160

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Next week we will have the results from the Best Q poll and your favorite part of the day poll.

 

 

Well Delivered

Remarks by President Trump Celebrating America’s Truckers
whitehouse.gov | April 16, 2020
South Lawn of the White House

THE PRESIDENT:  At a time of widespread shutdowns, truck drivers form the lifeblood of our economy — and the absolute lifeblood.  For days, and sometimes weeks on end, truck drivers leave their homes and deliver supplies that American families need and count on during this national crisis and at all other times.  They’re always there.  Their routes connect every farm, hospital, manufacturer, business, and community in the country.
In the war against the virus, American truckers are the foot soldiers who are really carrying us to victory.  And they are.  They’ve done an incredible job.  We’ve had no problems.  It’s been just — it’s been just great, and we want to thank you very much. 

To every trucker listening over the radio or behind the wheel, I know I speak for the 330 million-plus Americans that we say: Thank God for truckers.  That’ll be our theme: Thank God for truckers.

From the moment the invisible enemy landed on our shores, America’s 3.5 million truckers have never wavered at all, and they’ve never, ever let us down.  When we supply our country, we supply it through truckers.  And supply chains were stretched thin to hospitals and cities and states needed — they needed massive convoys of supplies that truckers kept on going, day and night.  It didn’t make any difference to them.  They had to get the job done.

With us today is Charlton Paul, a driver with UPS Freight from New York, and a leader in the Teamsters Local 707.  I know the Teamsters well.  I’ve had many a concrete truck in New York delivering to my buildings as I was building them.

Truckers move over 70 percent of all freight in the United States, over 10 million tons every single year.  Truckers keep our economy running.  And now, in this time of national need, they’re saving lives.

And we’re also working — I think they’ll be happy to know, because they know the roads better than anybody — we’re working very strongly on an infrastructure package.  And if we could get some Democrat support, we’re going to have a tremendous — you’re going to have nice roads again.  Nice, beautiful roads again.  A $2 trillion — potentially, a 2-trillion-dollar package.

We eased regulation so that the truckers could be free to drive more hours and to transport emergency relief supplies, including masks, and gloves, and gowns, and groceries.  We worked with states to lift burdensome restrictions and ensure that all states’ rest areas remain open to support these hardworking men and women on the road.

And we also declared that our talented workers at private truck stops are essential employees.  They are indeed.  I don’t know if you know that. 

Did you know we call you all as “essential”?  There’s very few people called “essential.”  I don’t know if they call me essential.  I’m not sure about that.  But you’re essential, that I can tell you.

IMAO Staff Work On Next Week’s Posts

Sea Level Rise Angry at Being Relegated to Page Three

(Wait — this is from 1890. Never mind. There were no SUVs back then.)

Pro Tip: Keep Driving

Sad To Say, Not a Babylon Bee Article

Dr. Fauci Endorses Tinder Hookups “If You’re Willing To Take a Risk”
NY Post | 4/15/2020 | Ben Cost

Tired of having to live your sex life online during lockdown? You’re in luck.

Government coronavirus expert Dr. Anthony Fauci says that heartsick isolationists can hook up with asymptomatic Tinder matches in real life — but, like love, it involves some risk.

The 79-year-old immunologist dropped the unorthodox dating tip in a Tuesday interview on Snapchat’s “Good Luck America.”

Toward the end of the taped segment, Fauci was asked: “If you’re swiping on a dating app like Tinder, or Bumble or Grindr, and you match with someone that you think is hot, and you’re just kind of like, ‘Maybe it’s fine if this one stranger comes over.’ What do you say to that person?”

“You know, that’s tough,” replied the befuddled National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases director to the curveball. “Because that’s what’s called relative risk.”

Then he dropped the bombshell. “If you’re willing to take a risk — and you know, everybody has their own tolerance for risks — you could figure out if you want to meet somebody,” said Fauci, who was named a candidate for People magazine’s “Sexiest Man Alive” award.

He added, “If you want to go a little bit more intimate, well, then that’s your choice regarding a risk.”

But don’t invite every one of your Tinder matches over for a Caligula-esque orgy just yet. The unlikely date doctor subsequently pointed out that “the one thing you don’t want to do” is base your decision on whether “the person is feeling well.”

Oh, really? Where’s that immunology degree from, again?

Washington Monument Moved to Grand Lake, Michigan, for Safekeeping

… because, you know, coronavirus…

Submitted for Your Approval: Take Two And Don’t Call Me in the Morning

Submitted by Slapout: