Frog Applause by Teresa Burritt for October 29, 2012

  1. Emerald
    margueritem  over 11 years ago

    Wait for me,I’m free!

     •  Reply
  2. Willin 2
    bluskies  over 11 years ago

    Maybe I’m not totally free, but I am really (cheep)!

     •  Reply
  3. Oldwolfcookoff
    The Old Wolf  over 11 years ago

    Also sending thoughts and prayers to those in the path of Sandy.

     •  Reply
  4. Thinker
    Sisyphos  over 11 years ago

    Fly away, little birdie! Fly away and join your friends. I guess I’ll just read this newspaper, instead of using it to line your cage. Sniff.

     •  Reply
  5. Glen with cheesesteak
    philyfanstukinmi  over 11 years ago

    blog – where do you get an ish watch. Since I’ve retired, that would come in handy for making appointments.

     •  Reply
  6. P1010868
    scarbro  over 11 years ago

    Blackbird flyInto the light of the dark black media night….

     •  Reply
  7. Josette   13 march 2016   c
    Bill Thompson  over 11 years ago

    Dracula and Nosferatu!

    Universal filmed two versions of Dracula in 1931; the English language version with Lugosi and a Spanish language version with Carlos Vilarias as the Count. The films were made simultaneously, in two shifts; the English version filmed by day and the Spanish version using the same stages and props at night. In theory they used the same script. Watching them shows the impact of Hollywood’s self-censorship on the movies. The Lugosi version often pulls its punches, andthanks to various cuts is a half-hour shorter than the Spanish version. (The censors were out to protect the delicate American audience; Hispanics, it seems, had tougher moral fibre, and needed no protection.)

    The Nosferatu ad is for the film’s 1929 American debut in Manhattan. Along with its handsome, nay, debonair leading man, it is the first cinematic version of Stoker’s book. It makes some changes in the story which I believe reflect the German experience of the Great War: Knock, the sinister estate agent, makes a secret pact with evil. He sends Hutter off on a profitable adventure, and like many young men in 1914 Hutter is at first delighted with the prospects. He soon comes face to face with death and terror, and barely escapes with his life. Back on the home front, the consequences of Knock’s pact bring death and illness to the people (think Turnip Winter, blockade and Spanish Flu). It ends on a hopeful note as Knock is beaten down and Wismar (Weimar?) is freed of the evil.

    (Probably other people have thought of this, but I haven’t seen it written anywhere.)

     •  Reply
  8. Josette   13 march 2016   c
    Bill Thompson  over 11 years ago

    Of course that bird wants to fly the coop. Thanksgiving draws near and if he stayed, his goose would be cooked

     •  Reply
  9. Oldwolfcookoff
    The Old Wolf  over 11 years ago

    Cat head biscuits, made with real lard, can’t be beat for good, down-home satisfaction.

     •  Reply
  10. Colt2
    coltish1  over 11 years ago

    I guess at the nudist colony they allow smoking at the sushi microbrew bar.

     •  Reply
  11. Pirate63
    Linguist  over 11 years ago

    For all of you readers in Sandy’s path, my thought and prayers go out for your security and safety.

     •  Reply
  12. Img 0813
    GoodQuestion Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Tom waits for no bird . . . ☻

     •  Reply
  13. Img 7448
    Happy, happy, happy!!!  over 11 years ago

    well, flock me.

     •  Reply
  14. Missing large
    comicnut4636  over 11 years ago

    Re Blog: I hope the STOP sign didn’t "stop " the reporter. OUCH!! That had to hurt!

     •  Reply
  15. Bunny blossom 0
    Treerabbit  over 11 years ago

    ’Twas early in the morningbefore the break of dayI went looking for my milk cowbut it had up and flown awayThe coop it lay so emptythere was poop all over the floorhigh up a raven twittered:“Bye sucker! Nevermore!”

     •  Reply
  16. Turnslower
    Larry Miller Premium Member over 11 years ago

    SELF-PROMOTIONReminds me that as a regular here, I should probably stop using ‘Frog’ as a substitute for ‘God’ when cursing. Frog dangit!

     •  Reply
  17. Turnslower
    Larry Miller Premium Member over 11 years ago

    ROUTINEAre we absolutely positive that sign didn’t originally say ‘Poutine’?

     •  Reply
  18. Img 7448
    Happy, happy, happy!!!  over 11 years ago

    paddle her saddle?

     •  Reply
  19. Guitar
    kilioopu  over 11 years ago

    Did you read the article “Some Girls Get Talked About”?

     •  Reply
  20. Gabeybaby
    gabrielmcgrath  over 11 years ago

    Take any one day of Frog Applause or Frog Blog, and how is that not an amazing collection of things to see! Now… take many days all in a row, that in itself is also an amazing thing to see. Way to go Teresa… and thank you! :)

     •  Reply
  21. My eye
    vldazzle  over 11 years ago

    The really old horror films were fun and entertaining. Hollywood has totally lost the knack to do it right- not even good date night films anymore ;-(

     •  Reply
  22. Oldwolfcookoff
    The Old Wolf  over 11 years ago

    Hope you get those computer problems fixed without undue pain, Teresa. Sending you the best of energy.

     •  Reply
  23. Duck1275
    Brass Orchid Premium Member over 11 years ago

    The world is my newspaper. Unfortunately, the op-eds are often swift and bloody, but usually only for the slow and stupid, which is mostly humanity as it turns out.

     •  Reply
  24. Tiny avatar
    lauisha  over 11 years ago

    @blog: Ruby Dee! Guy Davis’s mom. I’ve seen Guy live 6 or 8 times.http://guydavis.com/guydavis/biography.htm

     •  Reply
  25. Photo on 2010 11 08 at 15.31
    peachyanddanny  over 11 years ago

    Blog: Anybody know if that’s Sonny Terry playing harmonica and whooping for the dancing chicken? I think it must be.

     •  Reply
  26. Photo on 2010 11 08 at 15.31
    peachyanddanny  over 11 years ago

    Blog: There’s a band called Cathead Biscuit:

    http://www.myspace.com/music/player?sid=54562017&ac=now

     •  Reply
  27. 1 22 06
    SusanCraig  over 11 years ago

    I hope Vlad can help Teresa cure her computer issues because I miss them both…. I can scroll through the archives only so many times….

     •  Reply
  28. Td  2
    Rotifer NOT GETTING RUBEN BOLLING’S PIN Thalweg Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Happy Halloween.

    Since it’s Halloween and further given Teresa’s continued and mysterious absence, I propose a contest to see who can come up with the best cover story to explain her disappearance.

    I think she was kidnapped by a gang of naked midgets who cooked her in a pandowdy stew that was then eaten by clowndiggers using sporks.

    What other explanations could there be for the absence of updates to FA and FB?

     •  Reply
  29. Bz1
    drbob456x  over 11 years ago

    Why would you keep old boxers in your basement?

     •  Reply
  30. Missing large
    missjunebug  over 11 years ago

    Ms. T, We surely do miss you. Hope your computer problems are history soon.

     •  Reply
  31. 5346ae65734b4d0e82350407ef0d8e00 250
    cleokaya  over 11 years ago

    Teresa came trick or treating at my door last night costumed as a rump roast with an expiration date of Aug. 6, 2009. That scared the pants off of me. Oh wait, I was already without pants. Never mind.

     •  Reply
  32. Josette   13 march 2016   c
    Bill Thompson  over 11 years ago

    “Do not scratch or deface the table.” That’s what the “Attorney” sign on the blog says. It shows Robert Mitchum speaking with his attorney Jerry Geisler after his 1949 arrest and conviction for smoking marihuana. It’s partway down this page:

    http://tinyurl.com/cj44k5d

     •  Reply
  33. Td  2
    Rotifer NOT GETTING RUBEN BOLLING’S PIN Thalweg Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Re: DO NOT SCRATCH OR DEFACE THE ATTORNEY

    “I like my version of the sign better.”

    Me too.

     •  Reply
  34. Colt2
    coltish1  over 11 years ago

    Welcome back, Ms. T. I hear all the frogs clapping.

     •  Reply
  35. Peam thumb
    Peam Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Good to see you blogging again, Teresa. xx

     •  Reply
  36. Turnslower
    Larry Miller Premium Member over 11 years ago

    What seems strange to me is that they had a problem with attorneys defacing the table.

     •  Reply
  37. Missing large
    androgenoide  over 11 years ago

    The karate student kicking the stranger out of her house reminded me of a story from Santa Rosa some years back in which a guy tried to attack a jogger, not realizing that she was staying in shape for a martial arts tournament… Stories like that kinda bring balance back to an unbalanced world.

     •  Reply
  38. Colt2
    coltish1  over 11 years ago

    Excuse me for noticing that the young lady in the kissing booth appears to be on her knees. That WOULD be the newest attraction. (Or the oldest profession …)

     •  Reply
  39. Photo on 2010 11 08 at 15.31
    peachyanddanny  over 11 years ago

    Diego, Dino is to Quicksilver as stevie is to Fleetwood Mac.

     •  Reply
  40. Willin 2
    bluskies  over 11 years ago

    RE: blog “airless tires”- Under development by several companies and possibly in use on some few military vehicles for testing. Not for your grandfather’s Oldsmobile anytime soon.

     •  Reply
  41. Thinker
    Sisyphos  over 11 years ago

    Jonesin’.

     •  Reply
  42. Josette   13 march 2016   c
    Bill Thompson  over 11 years ago

    There is understandably little to be found on Joseph E. Bissell’s 1910 “flying machine.” It’s briefly mentioned in William F. Trimble’s “High Frontier: A History of Aeronautics in Pennsylvania,”

    http://tinyurl.com/bnotzme

    where it earns one sentence in a paragraph that begins “Pennsylvanians during this period produced their share of peculiar contraptions, none of which exhibited the slightest capacity for flight.”

     •  Reply
  43. Josette   13 march 2016   c
    Bill Thompson  over 11 years ago

    The “At the Dentist” picture is here:

    http://tinyurl.com/c4fpcct

    It’s a fourteen year old Irish-American boy in Boston, Massachussetts; someone could probably date the photo from the wristwatch, but I’m guessing Twenties or Thirties. The Forsyth Medical infirmary was (and still is) a dental clinic for children.

     •  Reply
  44. Oldwolfcookoff
    The Old Wolf  over 11 years ago

    Hooray for the renewed “Frog Blog” – I was deep into withdrawal.

    I had one of those “horror masks” – it was given to me by my stepbrother when I was 8. Green and white, stringy hair, very creepy.
     •  Reply
  45. Oldwolfcookoff
    The Old Wolf  over 11 years ago

    The “at the dentist” kid made me think of young Willy Wonka in the Depp remake, which was just painful to watch (not because the movie was bad, but because of that hideous headgear.)

     •  Reply
  46. Josette   13 march 2016   c
    Bill Thompson  over 11 years ago

    I knew that “At The Dentist” picture looked familiar:

    http://obituarytypo.blogspot.com/2012/03/maxillo-facial-dept-walter-reed-general.html

    Hell of a way to expose the teeth for a photograph.

     •  Reply
  47. Photo on 2010 11 08 at 15.31
    peachyanddanny  over 11 years ago

    Never give up. Never surrender.

    —Dr. Lazarus
     •  Reply
  48. Photo on 2010 11 08 at 15.31
    peachyanddanny  over 11 years ago

    Teresa, You are missing Joe “Count” Viglione, a great denizen of the brilliant ’70s Boston music scene:

    http://www.popkrazy.com/tags/count-viglione

     •  Reply
  49. Avatarneal2
    APersonOfInterest  over 11 years ago

    After spending our five day mandatory evacuation high and dry in a friends apartment in Hell’s Kitchen we’re finally back home. We have phone service, we’re back online and happy to report that our humble abode … and my studio … has no damage. it’s difficult to explain how we escaped the wrath of SANDY but here we are … safe and sound.

    Wildwood Island is five miles long and ranges from less than one to maybe a bit over two miles across. We’re in Wildwood Crest on the very narrow Southern tip and when I stand on our front porch I can see the back bay to the right and the ocean to the left. The prediction was that during the surge, water from the back bay and the ocean would meet and we would be under five to ten feet of water. When the storm made that sharp left turn … I’m sure you saw that on TV … the eye passed directly over us. But almost all of the damage was caused by the wind and wave surge to the right of the eye. So for reasons that no one seems to be able to explain … we were spared.

    At four a.m. Thursday morning I had the good fortune of finding a gas station in Manhattan where I filled our van for the trip. That took about two and a half hours of waiting on line while NYC’s finest herded the hack drivers and pissed off delivery truck drivers into lanes … and stopped fist fights and adjudicated finder benders. Never has so many curse words been shouted in so many languages in such a small concrete covered plot of mother earth … hand wringing … flying spittle … waving fists … bulging eyes … yet somehow it all worked out … I have to give credit to those young police officers … somehow they made it work. As far as I know, not shots were fired.

    On our way down the Garden State Parkway we saw five mile long lines of cars waiting at exit ramps … all trying to gas up … so purchasing gasoline before we left was a lucky break.

    The destruction just a few miles North of us is mind boggling. What can I say except that we were really, really lucky.

     •  Reply
  50. Turnslower
    Larry Miller Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Yay, my picture is in the childhood pictures now. I wore a really spiffy bow tie.

     •  Reply
  51. 1 22 06
    SusanCraig  over 11 years ago

    so glad the Frog Blog is as active as ever…. looking forward to Teresa’s computer repair. I browsed for some time with links on James Dean, never realizing his family farm is just an hour or so from where I grew up… must make that pilgrimage

     •  Reply
  52. Missing large
    Cat43ullus  over 11 years ago

    In re Counts:

    There was also Count No ’Count, the soubriquet given to William Faulkner at the U. of Mississippi while he was an undergraduate.

    He was in charge of the college post office for a while and allegedly retained interesting magazines for his personal perusal, sometimes for several weeks.

     •  Reply
  53. Avatar 3
    pcolli  over 11 years ago

    That’s what you think.

     •  Reply
  54. Thinker
    Sisyphos  over 11 years ago

    FB seems to be flourishing. Hope the computer is well soon, so that FA may make its eagerly anticipated and triumphant return!

     •  Reply
  55. 1 22 06
    SusanCraig  over 11 years ago

    Teresa, with you gone, I’m expanding a browse of the site and found the 2 Frog Blog songs – both are exceptionally lame! Such a Score! Hurrrah!

     •  Reply
  56. Comic s
    S  over 11 years ago

    sigh

     •  Reply
  57. Casa
    booktrout  over 11 years ago

    VLAD! You are surrounded! Release the woman and no harm will come for to you!

     •  Reply
  58. Turnslower
    Larry Miller Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Since we’re just hangin’ out and commenting on the blog, I got some nice shots this morning after we had freezing fog last night. I’ll post some here later — gotta get the RAW files converted to jpgs.

     •  Reply
  59. Bunny blossom 0
    Treerabbit  over 11 years ago

    It seems we will have to take care of our own amusement and mental stimulation for a while. Oh well, as a wise man once said, “No frog, no applause”.Which, 35 translations on, comes out as “Frog applause just doesn’t.” I couldn’t have said it any better myself.

     •  Reply
  60. Josette   13 march 2016   c
    Bill Thompson  over 11 years ago

    “Women of Protest.” Thanks, Teresa. British suffragettes were treated that badly; I hadn’t known we did it, too.

    One of the ironies is that at the same time we treated these women so badly, we actively recruited some 30,000 women into military service:

    http://userpages.aug.com/captbarb/femvets4.html

    Even more women worked in defense plants, or took over jobs done by men who had entered the military. In September 1918 Woodrow Wilson urged Congress to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment (I doubt the nobility of his intentions; I think he did it to keep women motivated. But women’s service was a definite factor in wining the right to vote.)

     •  Reply
  61. Turnslower
    Larry Miller Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Here’s some pictures of stuff coated in ice crystals after last night’s freezing fog. Each picture links to a much larger version. Some wild fall asters:A blackberry leaf:A rosebud:I’ll post more tomorrow if no one objects.

     •  Reply
  62. Missing large
    androgenoide  over 11 years ago

    I find the Tea Party coloring book disturbing on more than one level.

     •  Reply
  63. Bren suit
    FLIGHT SUIT  over 11 years ago

    Always a thrill to see Japanese monsters on the blog, but the title of this one has been mistranslated:

    http://obituarytypo.blogspot.com/2012/11/underworld-vs-frankenstein-monster-1965.html

    The film’s actual title is “Frankenstein vs. Baragon,” though it was released in the US as “Frankenstein Conquers the World.”

    The more well-known “War of the Gargantuas” is a semi-sequel to this film.

    Fun trivia:

    When Baragon appeared in the 2002 film, “Godzilla, Mothra, and King Ghidorah, Giant Monsters All Out Attack,” stunt woman and actress Rie Ôta wore the Baragon suit and in so doing, became the first woman ever to play a monster in a Godzilla film.

    Rie was chosen for the role because the story called for Baragon to be considerably smaller than Godzilla and the other monsters, who were played by male actors.

     •  Reply
  64. Bren suit
    FLIGHT SUIT  over 11 years ago

    Regarding that mistranslation of the Frankenstein movie’s title, further research reveals that it was also known in Japan as “Frankenstein versus Subterranean Monster Baragon.”

    So you can see how “Subterranean” would have gotten mistranslated as “Underworld.” Not sure how or why Baragon’s name would have been left off, though.

     •  Reply
  65. Turnslower
    Larry Miller Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Here’s some goldenrod pictures with ice crystals on the flowers gone to seed from yesterday’s freezing fog. As in the post above, each picture links to a much larger version.Different from the one above, but the same plant lit by the sun and backlit.

     •  Reply
  66. Motherthalweg
    Mother Thalweg  over 11 years ago

    Mother Thalweg’s French Word of the Day

    bulletin de vote {boolahteen de voht} – ballot

    “Teresa a écrit secrètement son propre nom sur le bulletin de vote Présidentiel.”—Teresa secretly wrote her own name on the Presidential ballot.

     •  Reply
  67. Missing large
    missjunebug  over 11 years ago

    Larry, Great pictures.

     •  Reply
  68. Turnslower
    Larry Miller Premium Member over 11 years ago

    You can too buy it. Look in the fertilizer aisle.

     •  Reply
  69. Josette   13 march 2016   c
    Bill Thompson  over 11 years ago

    The commerce clause in Article I, Section 8 gives a more solid basis for allowing the government to “create jobs.” Historicaly, one reason we replaced the Articles of Confederation with the Constitution was because he articles made interstate commerce virtually impossible. Before he was president, George Washington wanted to develop some land he owned by arranging the construction of the interstate Patowmack Canal. Doing that required signing trade agreements between several states. The Constitution put supervising and regulating commerce in Federal hands.

    When it comes to “creating jobs,” the government has been doing that all along, subsidizing canals, railways, airlines and now astronautics (the recent Falcon 9/Dragon launch to the ISS was on a NASA COTS contract, meant to support the development of private space companies.) Every ship, aircraft and gun built for the military is built because the government hired someone to build them.

     •  Reply
  70. Josette   13 march 2016   c
    Bill Thompson  over 11 years ago

    In light of the recent blog entry on the persecution of suffragettes:

    http://www.shorpy.com/node/14016?size=_original#caption

     •  Reply
  71. Mug1
    waycyber  over 11 years ago

    Any news?

     •  Reply
  72. Oldwolfcookoff
    The Old Wolf  over 11 years ago

    We do have one of those head massagers… and ours vibrates. Yes. Yes. Yes!

     •  Reply
  73. 1 22 06
    SusanCraig  over 11 years ago

    I live in a violin… it is very comfortable… I speak like the hip, you dig?

     •  Reply
  74. 5346ae65734b4d0e82350407ef0d8e00 250
    cleokaya  over 11 years ago

    “Hail Mary, Full of grace”…my words exactly as I gaze upon such delectable offerings.

     •  Reply
  75. Oldwolfcookoff
    The Old Wolf  over 11 years ago

    The bicycle lane says “Jitensha” (bicycle). I’m impressed with myself that I could read it. Had it been written in kanji (自転車) I probably would have only gotten the “sha” bit. The characters mean “self-rolling-vehicle”.

     •  Reply
  76. Cat29
    x_Tech  over 11 years ago

    Re: HOW TO SPEAK HIPThat’s not Hip!This is Hip Talk!

     •  Reply
  77. Josette   13 march 2016   c
    Bill Thompson  over 11 years ago

    The C-47 Dakota on the blog appears to be one that was submerged in mid-2011 to help form an artificial reef. The site is off the coast of Kas, Turkey, which has developed into a tourist destination for scuba divers.

    “Dakota” is the name the British gave the C-47 Skytrain during WW II. This is definitely a C-47; it has the navigator’s glass dome above and behind the cockpit. The civilian version of the Gooney Bird, the DC-3, didn’t have that feature.

     •  Reply
  78. Bz1
    drbob456x  over 11 years ago

    Please! I’m trying to tapir off.

     •  Reply
  79. Turnslower
    Larry Miller Premium Member over 11 years ago

    WHERE BABIES COME FROMAre you missing the mother’s expression? Seems to me she’s trying to figure out how to tell them.

     •  Reply
  80. 5346ae65734b4d0e82350407ef0d8e00 250
    cleokaya  over 11 years ago

    That is not a typical gocomics reader. My horn points up.

     •  Reply
  81. Td  2
    Rotifer NOT GETTING RUBEN BOLLING’S PIN Thalweg Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Director of Pharmaceutical DistributionATTN: Little Pink Pill DivisionFrog Applause/Blog EnterprisesSomewhere, USA

    Re: Little Pink Pills

    Dear Sir or Madam

    Where do I find some?

    Sincerely,

     •  Reply
  82. Avatarneal2
    APersonOfInterest  over 11 years ago

    I really miss FA! Please hurry back, Teresa!

     •  Reply
  83. Avatarneal2
    APersonOfInterest  over 11 years ago

    ON THE OTHER HAND, I LOVE WHAT YOU’VE POSTED ON YOUR BLOG!

     •  Reply
  84. 5346ae65734b4d0e82350407ef0d8e00 250
    cleokaya  over 11 years ago

    Yes. I am suffering from FA withdrawal!

     •  Reply
  85. Avatar 3
    pcolli  over 11 years ago

    Teresa, I don’t always understand what your cartoons are trying to say but your blog is ALWAYS interesting.

     •  Reply
  86. Missing large
    JEF Oliver Premium Member over 11 years ago

    It’s definitely sub-optmal, there has been a recent but significant (~100%) drop off in strips. Given the flown avian nature of the [final] strip is this permenant?

     •  Reply
  87. 1 22 06
    SusanCraig  over 11 years ago

    Love the horny bacon mask!

     •  Reply
  88. 1 22 06
    SusanCraig  over 11 years ago

    as far as where babies come from… in an effort to share her point of view, my mom told me – then 11 years old – that I would know i had become a woman when I would drop an egg every month….at the time, all I could imagine was the proportion of a chicken to her egg… and considering the size of a newborn…. it was a scary proposition wondering where I could hide during the dropping part, how much it would hurt and…

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Frog Applause