In Memoriam

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Vrede too
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Re: In Memoriam

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Vrede too wrote:
Thu Dec 16, 2021 5:16 pm
Leo Lyons wrote:
Thu Dec 16, 2021 4:50 pm
Nothing was covered; there was no pin; It was there in all it's glorious, unadulterated, nakidicity.
Just for a brief, fleeting moment; but the shiny, stiff little booger was there.
You won't find a pic or video that hasn't suppressed the raw event.
That's why the photo you posted brought back memories of the moment. :D :toothy:
???

Pics are easy to find, and Janet Jackson was wearing a nipple shield that did not actually shield her nipple from view.

Image
Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show controversy

... The incident also made Janet Jackson the most-searched person and term of 2004 and 2005. The incident broke the record for "most-searched event over one day". It became the most-watched, recorded and replayed television moment in TiVo history and "enticed an estimated 35,000 new [TiVo] subscribers to sign up". The term "wardrobe malfunction" was coined as a result of the incident, and was eventually added to the Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary....
Now, can anyone name the song they were singing? :D
Spoiler:
The Timberlake song "Rock Your Body". Final line: "Gonna have you naked by the end of this song".
Leo Lyons wrote:
Thu Dec 16, 2021 5:34 pm
I saw the event . . . and the nipple.
The nip shield was added to the photo after the fact to protect the innocent. :D
No, it wasn't. Look, it doesn't even hide her nipple.
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neoplacebo
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Re: In Memoriam

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I've known some women who would not be able to wear a device like that unless it was glued on. I once applied for a job at the place where they glue those things on to women who otherwise wouldn't be able to use them. It was not what I expected and I quit after three days.

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Vrede too
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Re: In Memoriam

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neoplacebo wrote:
Thu Dec 16, 2021 6:15 pm
I've known some women who would not be able to wear a device like that unless it was glued on.
Vrede too wrote:
Thu Dec 16, 2021 5:36 pm
... Janet Jackson was wearing a nipple shield that did not actually shield her nipple from view....
A nipple shield is a piece of body jewelry worn on the nipple, partially or fully covering the areola. The shield encircles the nipple, and can be attached by several means, including suction, friction and the action of glue, but is most often held in place by a nipple piercing....
I might see a piercing on Jackson, but I'm not sure.
neoplacebo wrote:
Thu Dec 16, 2021 6:15 pm
I once applied for a job at the place where they glue those things on to women who otherwise wouldn't be able to use them. It was not what I expected and I quit after three days.
:o Tell us more.
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Re: In Memoriam

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Vrede too wrote:
Thu Dec 16, 2021 6:53 pm
neoplacebo wrote:
Thu Dec 16, 2021 6:15 pm
I've known some women who would not be able to wear a device like that unless it was glued on.
Vrede too wrote:
Thu Dec 16, 2021 5:36 pm
... Janet Jackson was wearing a nipple shield that did not actually shield her nipple from view....
A nipple shield is a piece of body jewelry worn on the nipple, partially or fully covering the areola. The shield encircles the nipple, and can be attached by several means, including suction, friction and the action of glue, but is most often held in place by a nipple piercing....
I might see a piercing on Jackson, but I'm not sure.
neoplacebo wrote:
Thu Dec 16, 2021 6:15 pm
I once applied for a job at the place where they glue those things on to women who otherwise wouldn't be able to use them. It was not what I expected and I quit after three days.
:o Tell us more.
It was worse than being forced to write bad checks. People were hanging by their nipples from the rafters. Others were having nipples stretched, starched, or galvanized. God would have left the place in disgust and considered it not worth stomping.

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Ulysses
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Re: In Memoriam

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Well, it wound up being perhaps the most famous nip pic in history.

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Vrede too
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Re: In Memoriam

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Ulysses wrote:
Thu Dec 16, 2021 7:15 pm
Well, it wound up being perhaps the most famous nip pic in history.
That's only because neoplacebo did not persevere.
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Re: In Memoriam

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:lol: Check out this guy's obituary he wrote for his mother. She was "a plus sized Jewish lady redneck" and "a more disrespectful trash reading, talking, and watching woman in NC, FL, or TX was not to be found." She died in Fayetteville recently.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/sons-brutall ... 19335.html

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Re: In Memoriam

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neoplacebo wrote:
Mon Dec 20, 2021 8:48 am
:lol: Check out this guy's obituary he wrote for his mother. She was "a plus sized Jewish lady redneck" and "a more disrespectful trash reading, talking, and watching woman in NC, FL, or TX was not to be found." She died in Fayetteville recently.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/sons-brutall ... 19335.html
Love it!

He stomped her proper!

Image
A plus-sized Jewish lady redneck died in El Paso on Saturday. Of itself hardly news, or good news if you're the type that subscribes to the notion that anybody not named you dying in El Paso, Texas is good news. In which case have I got news for you: the bawdy, fertile, redheaded matriarch of a sprawling Jewish-Mexican-Redneck American family has kicked it. This was not good news to Renay Mandel Corren's many surviving children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren, many of whom she even knew and, in her own way, loved. There will be much mourning in the many glamorous locales she went bankrupt in: McKeesport, PA, Renay's birthplace and where she first fell in love with ham, and atheism; Fayetteville and Kill Devil Hills, NC, where Renay's dreams, credit rating and marriage are all buried; and of course Miami, FL, where Renay's parents, uncles, aunts, and eternal hopes of all Miami Dolphins fans everywhere, are all buried pretty deep. Renay was preceded in death by Don Shula. Because she was my mother, the death of zaftig good-time gal Renay Corren at the impossible old age of 84 is newsworthy to me, and I treat it with the same respect and reverence she had for, well, nothing. A more disrespectful, trash-reading, talking and watching woman in NC, FL or TX was not to be found. Hers was an itinerant, much-lived life, a Yankee Florida liberal Jewish Tough Gal who bowled 'em in Japan, rolled 'em in North Carolina and was a singularly unique parent. Often frustrated by the stifling, conservative culture of the South, Renay turned her voracious mind to the home front, becoming a model stay at home parent, a supermom, really, just the perfect PTA lady, volunteer, amateur baker and-AHHAHAA HA! HA! HA! Just kidding, y'all! Renay - Rosie to her friends, and this was a broad who never met a stranger - worked double shifts with Doreen, ate a ton of carbs with Bernie, and could occasionally be stirred to stew some stuffed cabbage for the kids. She played cards like a shark, bowled and played cribbage like a pro, and laughed with the boys until the wee hours, long after the last pin dropped. At one point in the 1980's, Renay was the 11th or 12th- ranked woman in cribbage in America, and while that could be a lie, it sounds great in print. She also told us she came up with the name for Sunoco, and I choose to believe this, too. Yes, Renay lied a lot. But on the plus side, Renay didn't cook, she didn't clean, and she was lousy with money, too. Here's what Renay was great at: dyeing her red roots, weekly manicures, dirty jokes, pier fishing, rolling joints and buying dirty magazines. She said she read them for the articles, but filthy free speech was really Renay's thing. Hers was a bawdy, rowdy life lived large, broke and loud. We thought Renay could not be killed. God knows, people tried. A lot. Renay has been toying with death for a decades, but always beating it and running off in her silver Chevy Nova. Covid couldn't kill Renay. Neither could pneumonia twice, infections, blood clots, bad feet, breast cancer twice, two mastectomies, two recessions, multiple bankruptcies, marriage to a philandering Sergeant Major, divorce in the 70's, six kids, one cesarean, a few abortions from the Quietly Famous Abortionist of Spring Lake, NC or an affair with Larry King in the 60's. Renay was preceded in death by her ex-boyfriend, Larry King. Renay was also sadly preceded in death by her beloved daughter, Cathy Sue Corren Lester Trammel Webster, of Kill Devil Hills, NC, who herself was preceded in death by two marriages, a fudge shop and one eyeball lost in a near-fatal Pepsi bottle incident that will absolutely be explored in future obituaries. Losing her 1-eyed badass bitch of a daughter in 2007 devastated Renay, but it also made her quite homeless, since Cathy pretty much picked up the tab. A talented and gregarious grifter, Renay M. Corren eked out her final years of luxury (she literally retired at 62) under the care, compassion, checking accounts and, evidently, unlimited patience of her favorite son and daughter-in-law, Michael and Lourdes Corren, of world-famous cow sanctuary El Paso, TX. Renay is also survived by her son, Jeffrey Corren and his endlessly tolerant wife, Shirley, of Powell's Point, NC; Scott Corren, and what's left of his colon, of Hampton, VA; Marc and Laura Corren, the loveliest dirt farmers of Vernon, TX (seriously, where is that); and her favorite son, the gay one who writes catty obituaries in his spare time, Andy Corren, of - obviously - New York City. Plus two beloved granddogs, Mia and Hudson. Renay was particularly close to and grateful for the lavish attentions of her grandaughter, Perla and her great-grandchildren, Elijah and Leroy, as well as her constant cruise companions Sam Trammell of Greenville, NC, and Adam Corren of El Paso, TX. Renay took tremendous pride in making one gay son and two gay grandchildren.There will be a very disrespectful and totally non-denominational memorial on May 10, 2022, most likely at a bowling alley in Fayetteville, NC. The family requests absolutely zero privacy or propriety, none what so ever, and in fact encourages you to spend some government money today on a 1-armed bandit, at the blackjack table or on a cheap cruise to find our inheritance. She spent it all, folks. She left me nothing but these lousy memories. Which I, and my family of five brothers and my sister-in-laws, nephews, friends, nieces, neighbors, ex-boyfriends, Larry King's children, who I guess I might be one of, the total strangers who all, to a person, loved and will cherish her. Forever. Please think of the brightly-frocked, frivolous, funny and smart Jewish redhead who is about to grift you, tell you a filthy joke, and for Larry King's sake: LAUGH. Bye, Mommy. We loved you to bits. RIP RENAY MANDEL CORREN 10 MAY 1937 - 11 DEC 2021.
Published on December 18, 2021
Eamus Catuli~AC 000000 000101 010202 020303 010304 020405....Ahhhh, forget it, it's gonna be a while.


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neoplacebo
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Re: In Memoriam

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Yeah, I really got a kick from it. Glad you liked it.

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Vrede too
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Re: In Memoriam

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neoplacebo wrote:
Mon Dec 20, 2021 8:48 am
:lol: Check out this guy's obituary he wrote for his mother. She was "a plus sized Jewish lady redneck" and "a more disrespectful trash reading, talking, and watching woman in NC, FL, or TX was not to be found." She died in Fayetteville recently.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/sons-brutall ... 19335.html
:thumbup: NC proud!

Boy whose case inspired The Exorcist is named by US magazine

The boy whose case inspired the portrayal of a demon-possessed child in the 1973 horror movie classic The Exorcist has been named.

The US magazine the Skeptical Inquirer named the then 14-year-old boy, previously known as Roland Doe, who underwent exorcisms in Cottage City, Maryland, and St Louis, Missouri, in 1949.

Ronald Edwin Hunkeler died last year, a month before his 86th birthday, after suffering a stroke at home in Marriottsville, Maryland.

In adult life, Hunkeler was a Nasa engineer whose work contributed to the Apollo space missions of the 1960s and who patented a technology that helped space shuttle panels withstand extreme heat....
RIP . . . or not. :shock:
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O Really
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Re: In Memoriam

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Vrede too wrote:
Tue Dec 21, 2021 9:23 am

Boy whose case inspired The Exorcist is named by US magazine

The boy whose case inspired the portrayal of a demon-possessed child in the 1973 horror movie classic The Exorcist has been named.


RIP . . . or not. :shock:
Never any pics? Never any vids? Nobody bothered to document any of the claimed events, not even the magical writing on him? Practically everybody had something like this...
Image

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Vrede too
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Re: In Memoriam

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O Really wrote:
Tue Dec 21, 2021 11:07 am
Never any pics? Never any vids? Nobody bothered to document any of the claimed events, not even the magical writing on him? Practically everybody had something like this...
I'm not saying I believe it, but if they kept his name secret for 72 years they certainly could have kept hidden or destroyed any documentation. It's the Catholic Church, after all.
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Re: In Memoriam

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Vrede too wrote:
Tue Dec 21, 2021 2:08 pm
O Really wrote:
Tue Dec 21, 2021 11:07 am
Never any pics? Never any vids? Nobody bothered to document any of the claimed events, not even the magical writing on him? Practically everybody had something like this...
I'm not saying I believe it, but if they kept his name secret for 72 years they certainly could have kept hidden or destroyed any documentation. It's the Catholic Church, after all.
Sure, but the family was dealing with it before they went officially to the church. Also, although I can understand keeping the name confidential, it seems it would be in the best interest of the church to have a fully documented and verified case of de-possession. May or may not bring in more believers, but would certainly help keep the current members in check.

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Vrede too
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Re: In Memoriam

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O Really wrote:
Tue Dec 21, 2021 2:14 pm
Vrede too wrote:
Tue Dec 21, 2021 2:08 pm
O Really wrote:
Tue Dec 21, 2021 11:07 am
Never any pics? Never any vids? Nobody bothered to document any of the claimed events, not even the magical writing on him? Practically everybody had something like this...
I'm not saying I believe it, but if they kept his name secret for 72 years they certainly could have kept hidden or destroyed any documentation. It's the Catholic Church, after all.
Sure, but the family was dealing with it before they went officially to the church. Also, although I can understand keeping the name confidential, it seems it would be in the best interest of the church to have a fully documented and verified case of de-possession. May or may not bring in more believers, but would certainly help keep the current members in check.
I guess I'm playing devil's advocate. :wave:
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neoplacebo
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Re: In Memoriam

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Well, I suspect he'd never worked for NASA if they knew he was the fucking devil. But then again, they brought a bunch of Nazis over here to start what became NASA. I guess it just goes to show that anyone can get ahead in America. Especially Nazis and devils.

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Vrede too
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Re: In Memoriam

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neoplacebo wrote:
Tue Dec 21, 2021 3:50 pm
Well, I suspect he'd never worked for NASA if they knew he was the fucking devil. But then again, they brought a bunch of Nazis over here to start what became NASA. I guess it just goes to show that anyone can get ahead in America. Especially Nazis and devils.
:o :thumbup:

Then, there was Edward Teller, who was not a Nazi nor Satan as far as I know, but was easily as evil as either.
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Re: In Memoriam

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Vrede too wrote:
Tue Dec 21, 2021 4:56 pm
neoplacebo wrote:
Tue Dec 21, 2021 3:50 pm
Well, I suspect he'd never worked for NASA if they knew he was the fucking devil. But then again, they brought a bunch of Nazis over here to start what became NASA. I guess it just goes to show that anyone can get ahead in America. Especially Nazis and devils.
:o :thumbup:

Then, there was Edward Teller, who was not a Nazi nor Satan as far as I know, but was easily as evil as either.
And you've also got your Robert Oppenheimer, whose name should be "Oppsenheimer" since he famously seemed to regret his nuclear physics discoveries and then lamented "what hath god wrought" which I think Talking Heads used as inspiration for the line "my god, what have I done?" in the Once in a Lifetime song. And things have been deteriorating ever since. sick

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Vrede too
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Re: In Memoriam

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neoplacebo wrote:
Wed Dec 22, 2021 5:12 am
And you've also got your Robert Oppenheimer, whose name should be "Oppsenheimer" since he famously seemed to regret his nuclear physics discoveries and then lamented "what hath god wrought" which I think Talking Heads used as inspiration for the line "my god, what have I done?" in the Once in a Lifetime song. And things have been deteriorating ever since. sick
Oppenheimer's sincere repenting and subsequent disarmament work takes him out of the 'evil' category in my book.

Are you sure about the quote? It was the message sent by Samuel Morse to officially open the first telegraph line, from Baltimore to Washington, on May 24, 1844.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Samuel_F._B._Morse

Oppenheimer is famous for saying:
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Robert_Oppenheimer
We knew the world would not be the same. A few people laughed, a few people cried, most people were silent. I remembered the line from the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad-Gita: Vishnu is trying to persuade the Prince that he should do his duty and, to impress him, takes on his multi-armed form and says, "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds." I suppose we all thought that, one way or another.

-- Interview about the Trinity explosion, first broadcast as part of the television documentary The Decision to Drop the Bomb (1965), produced by Fred Freed, NBC White Paper; the translation is his own.
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Re: In Memoriam

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Vrede too wrote:
Wed Dec 22, 2021 9:28 am
neoplacebo wrote:
Wed Dec 22, 2021 5:12 am
And you've also got your Robert Oppenheimer, whose name should be "Oppsenheimer" since he famously seemed to regret his nuclear physics discoveries and then lamented "what hath god wrought" which I think Talking Heads used as inspiration for the line "my god, what have I done?" in the Once in a Lifetime song. And things have been deteriorating ever since. sick
Oppenheimer's sincere repenting and subsequent disarmament work takes him out of the 'evil' category in my book.

Are you sure about the quote? It was the message sent by Samuel Morse to officially open the first telegraph line, from Baltimore to Washington, on May 24, 1844.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Samuel_F._B._Morse

Oppenheimer is famous for saying:
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Robert_Oppenheimer
We knew the world would not be the same. A few people laughed, a few people cried, most people were silent. I remembered the line from the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad-Gita: Vishnu is trying to persuade the Prince that he should do his duty and, to impress him, takes on his multi-armed form and says, "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds." I suppose we all thought that, one way or another.

-- Interview about the Trinity explosion, first broadcast as part of the television documentary The Decision to Drop the Bomb (1965), produced by Fred Freed, NBC White Paper; the translation is his own.
I may be wrong. I though it was Oppenheimer who said something like that. I more often than not say something similar when I spill something or something weird happens.

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Re: In Memoriam

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One of my favorite books in college was a dual biography, "Lawrence and Oppenheimer". Well written, too. Still have it, on a book shelf somewhere. Came in handy when I had a summer job at the Lawrence Berkeley Lab. Not really.

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