Things that remind people of me


It’s time for another edition of that popular game where I browse through the mailbag and see what peculiar images people have sent to me, prompted by my peculiar reputation. It’s not all flabby, slimy squid this week!

Click on the images to go to the source.


Why would the plaintiff have brought suit in the first place?

i-77a283d7f99074e82d0ddea7bf399afe-octo_law.gif

Hubba hubba. Am I perverse for really wanting to see what’s under that dress?

i-08411259912cdbf9e9402192d1b8bd7e-spider_lady.jpg

Giant cephalopod! Fighting zombies! in Dutch!

i-b4df251ea16b948adefb86c42471985c-ceph_vs_zombie.jpg

Much, much too young for me. But cute.

i-47d1a215be4cca28b3f23d89decaf8af-cute_dress.jpg

Martian seagulls? That’s different and cool.

i-4742a2cc262564762b86a3de1343fa1c-nyctosaurus.jpg

Comments

  1. Martin Christensen says

    A couple of days ago, a wee baby girl was born unto me, and she’s the loveliest thing to grace this planet, to be sure. Such a wonderful dress and handbag must indeed be perfect to set her on the right path in life. Any ideas where to find them, and do they come in size teeny-tiny?

    Martin

  2. says

    Those aren’t alien seagulls, they’re Nyctosaurus pterodactyls, from what’s now Kansas (that particular neighborhood has gone down the drain since they’ve been there).

  3. Apikoros says

    Does anybody besides me look at that second picture, and hope that maybe Tim Burton is back in form and planning something good? She does look like Christina Ricci, after all.

    On the second picture, I’m confused: is a “huiveringwekkende” a couple of days spent fighting zombies with a vacuum cleaner?

  4. MikeM says

    This one definitely reminded me of you, but in a more-newsworthy, less-humorous sort of way:

    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/09/18/BAGF5L7LQS1.DTL&hw=longevity&sn=003&sc=501

    A controversial scientist who hopes to help humans live for thousands of years has received a multimillion-dollar grant from a Bay Area entrepreneur.

    Peter A. Thiel, co-founder and former chief executive officer of the online payments system PayPal, announced Saturday he is pledging $3.5 million “to support scientific research into the alleviation and eventual reversal of the debilities caused by aging.”

    The recipient will be the Methuselah Foundation, a Springfield, Va., nonprofit started and run by the most colorful scientist in aging research: Aubrey de Grey, a 43-year-old English researcher who says he hopes to “radically postpone aging, giving indefinite life spans.”

    In short, de Grey’s thesis is that there are seven main causes of aging, and that if those can be licked, then people could live indefinitely.

  5. Hank Roberts says

    Found here: http://www.boingboing.net/

    SquidSoap dispenser shows you when you’re done scrubbing
    Squid Soap’s mission is to “train tomorrow’s great hand washers.” The pump-bottle is decorated with a plastic squid, and the top of the pump has an ink-stamper that leaves a ring on your hand when you pump your soap. Once you’ve scrubbed enough to remove the ink-stamp, you’ve also scrubbed enough to kill the germs on your hands.
    Link http://www.squidsoap.com/
    (via Collision Detection) http://collisiondetection.net/

  6. SEF says

    Why would the plaintiff have brought suit in the first place?

    Because it seemed the appropriate thing to wear to court. ;-)

  7. Hairhead says

    Actually, one of my favourite cartoons of all time is one by Rodriguez, from National Lampoon’s collection.

    Scene: There is a rumpled burlap bag sitting on a chair, and through the opening of the bag can be seen one eye in the darkness. The lawyer sitting across from the bag says. “I’d say we have a VERY good case! Now, when did this autopsy take place . . ”

  8. Martin Christensen says

    Thank you most humbly, Shannon. Okay, maybe second most humbly. :-)

    Unfortunately, I can’t see any picture of the costume that might appear on the page to which you link, but I can imagine from the description what we’re dealing with.

    Here in Denmark, however, we do not celebrate haloween. But come the end of February, we have ‘fastelavn’, the breaking of the traditional month of fast (I’ve never, ever heard of any non-Jewish ethnic Dane actually fasting in February), where the kids do dress up and have their equivalent of trick-or-treating. They also ‘beat the cat in the barrel’, which traditionally was done by putting a black cat (a bad luck omen, of course), stringing up the barrel and beating the crap out of the barrel with sticks. Today we put candy, small (durable!) trinkets and confetti in the barrel for the kids and – more humanely – simply decorate it with black cats. The one to beat the bottom out of the barrel is crowned Cat King, and the one to get the last remaining boards off the rope becomes Cat Queen, regardless of gender.

    Just a bit of cultural trivia that some of you might find amusing.

    Martin

  9. Kseniya says

    “is a “huiveringwekkende” a couple of days spent fighting zombies with a vacuum cleaner?”

    Hahahah… No, but I wish it were!

    “Huiveringwekkende” means “horrible” in Dutch.