Three Russian guys admire another guy's car at a gas station. One offers to buy it, but the car's owner refuses. Dejected, they go to the Red Circle and drink champagne in the spa until they forget all about it. Eighty-four people and one dog live happily ever after.
Recently I asked my wife if she'd ever eaten a kumquat, and she said no, she wouldn't even know how to prepare one. And I said it's easy, "I'm gonna eat you, kumquat... ready?" Which I thought was pretty funny, but when I posted it to Facebook everyone ignored the joke and just laughed at the word kumquat. I need new friends.
Correct answers for the book cover questions: 1. No. A hot dog without a bun is still a hot dog, and that is not a sandwich. 2. Fire is not an invention. Anyone who's visited Facebook knows the answer is the Internet. 3. James Cromwell. We've been through this.
I considered trying it (the spicy Korean ramen challenge was a snap) but one of these chips is currently going for $70 on Amazon. That is a concept I refuse to understand.
I would chalk it up to Paul's being difficult to work with, from a certain perspective. Towards the end, he was not nearly as interested in collaboration as he was in seeing his vision realized by the other three, and he wasn't always entirely diplomatic about it. Watching "Let It Be" really brings this home, where we can see George's exasperation with being reduced to simply playing what Paul told him to play at any moment. Paul wasn't even above recording Ringo's drum parts and letting him find out about it the next day. When you have one guy who wants to run the show, and three others who are more into being a real band, and that one guy gets his way more often than not, that can result in a lot of resentment. Bottom line, Yoko didn't break up the Beatles, Paul did. I still love the guy, don't get me wrong, but everyone involved including Paul has confirmed this is pretty much how it all went down at the end.
As for not retaliating, go take a closer listen to "3 Legs", "Dear Friend", and *especially* "Too Many People" sometime. He was hardly above it.
1. No. A hot dog without a bun is still a hot dog, and that is not a sandwich.
2. Fire is not an invention. Anyone who's visited Facebook knows the answer is the Internet.
3. James Cromwell. We've been through this.
As for not retaliating, go take a closer listen to "3 Legs", "Dear Friend", and *especially* "Too Many People" sometime. He was hardly above it.