Posts by andrew llewellyn
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Oh poo - I'm going to post that again
This reminds me - I think it was in the 90s that Red Hot Riding Hood was seized by customs as it made its way to the NZ Film Festivals.
Embarrassed officials released the film just in time for its first screening.
Click through the link to see the whole film (it inspired Jim Carrey's The Mask). It's worth it.
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This reminds me - I think it was in the 90s that {{http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8039477657790445932|Red Hot Riding Hood] was seized by customs as it made its way to the NZ Film Festivals.
Embarrassed officials released the film just in time for its first screening.
Click through the link to see the whole film (it inspired Jim Carrey's The Mask). It's worth it.
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So I am...whoops. I stood in an elevator next to Larry Hagman once..does that make up for it?
Golly yes!
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And JR's mother no less
You're thinking of Mary Martin
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Even worse, poor Michelle's poor husband had to resign his job with MI5.
OMG, without even reading the background, this, somehow says it all. Parsh me the whip, Moneypenny.
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"So you didn't win. How did that make you feel?"
It's not confined to NZ
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Does anyone remember a viral video of men's sprinting, in slow motion, frontal view in tight lycra, with added sound effects?
I do recall Roy & HG at the Sydney Olympics, as a lycra clad male gymnast spun around on a pommel horse (or whatever they are)... a voice would intone, every time his frontage hove into view "Allo boys..."
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BTW, I'm sure Mr Edgeler will correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't it totally illegal for an employer to say 'fuck me or fuck off' to an employee or applicant, and nothing proposed by National (or any other party) will change that?
The second case has alliterative attraction, It involved Mr Futty – a fish filleter. Futty was told by his foreman:
“If you don’t like the job – fuck off!”which Futty duly did. He then brought proceedings for unfair dismissal. Other fish filleters gave evidence concerning the meaning which should be given to the expression and after hearing these explanations the Tribunal found that the foreman’s words were no more than “a general exhortation to get on with job”. There had been no dismissal. (Futty v P & D Brekkes Ltd [1974] IRLR 130)
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No, I'm fairly sure she was standing.
Or is it thst she has standing?
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Duru-duruddudu-duddudu-duddudu-duuu
I totally would have recognised that.