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| olesha, fatman and little boy dvd, , los alamos, thefat man in history, computer books: general, sue scott, mary pat gleason, david newton, backup, literature, grammy award for best short form music video, political science, ron frazier (ii), ozone, august 9, fatmanclothing.com, nostalgic, r&b, 2003, | Mordancy was his usual mode; Ghamari-Tabrizi compares him at one point to Charles Addams. “One way not to make a short jokes reputation is to find a hole in the airdefense system,” he would tell audiences. “It’s all holes.” Explaining the assumptions he made about people when he discussed the prospects for postwar recovery: “We assumed that they are the same kind of slobs postwar that they were prewar.” On short jokes what everyone will eat in the fallout shelters: “I personally intend to live with the chef at short jokes Lindy’s who really understands sour cream herring and other quite storable delicacies.” Ghamari-Tabrizi has some enterprising pages comparing this sort of ob-la-di, ob-la-da banter with the satire of contemporaries like Mort Sahl and Jules Feiffer, and with the sick humor of Lenny Bruce and Mad. |
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| Peter Sellers picked up the accent from the photographer Arthur Fellig, known as Weegee, when he was visiting the studio to advise Kubrick on cinematographic matters. But one source was Kahn. Strangelove’s rhapsodic monologue about preserving specimens of the race in deep mineshafts is an only slightly parodic version of Kahn. There were so many lines from “On Thermonuclear War” in the movie, in fact, that Kahn complained that he should get royalties. (“It doesn’t work that ozone way,” Kubrick told him.) Kahn received something more lasting than money, of course. ozone He got himself pinned in people’s minds ozone to the figure of Dr. Strangelove, and he bore the mark of that association forever. Kubrick’s plan to make a comedy about nuclear war didn’t bother Kahn. He thought that humor was a good way to get people thinking about a subject too frightening to contemplate otherwise, and although his colleagues rebuked him for it—“Levity is never legitimate,” Brodie told him—he used jokes in his lectures. |
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