Brevity by Dan Thompson for December 11, 2022

  1. Missing large
    sergioandrade Premium Member over 1 year ago

    When I hear the word Scord I think of a joke I heard, the punchline is “This is the first time I heard that question in the first person progressive”.

     •  Reply
  2. Unnamed
    The dude from FL (not bragging) Premium Member over 1 year ago

    Any fresher you’ll get scrod eggs, might be good?

     •  Reply
  3. Missing large
    TStyle78  over 1 year ago

    If the fish can sing, don’t eat it! Worth WAY more alive than dead. Hopefully it isn’t like Michigan J. Frog from Looney Tunes though.

     •  Reply
  4. Sunshine   copy
    SusanSunshine Premium Member over 1 year ago

    OK, guys… I figured out the joke.

    I admit… some Googling was required.

     

    We’re apparently meant to notice that the fish is (sort of) wearing the blue & turquoise costume and blonde braided hairdo of “Elsa,” from Disney’s animated film, “Frozen”.

    In that movie, Elsa sings a song called “Let It Go”, which the Elsa-fish is also singing.

     

    Ergo, the customer wonders if it’s really fresh, because it’s from Frozen.

    Hilarity thus ensues.

     

    The fact that she’s a scrod is merely a red herring.

    (Lame pun admittedly intended. Sorry.)

    You’re welcome.

     •  Reply
  5. B3b2b771 4dd5 4067 bfef 5ade241cb8c2
    cdward  over 1 year ago

    I worked at a school when Frozen came out, so I heard that song more times than my brain could process. Thus, I instantly knew where this joke was going. Not sure that’s a good thing.

     •  Reply
  6. Snoopy
    Darryl Heine  over 1 year ago

    Cold fish never bothered it anyway…

     •  Reply
  7. Ed583643 91bf 4172 be99 60eabdf33fa3
    Lee26 Premium Member over 1 year ago

    I heard he couldn’t carry a tuna, tho.

     •  Reply
  8. Irish  1
    Zen-of-Zinfandel  over 1 year ago

    Sounds a little hoki.

     •  Reply
  9. Missing large
    GreenT267  over 1 year ago

    Many of us with children and grandchildren (now teenagers and on to other irritating interests) wished for several years that they would just “let it go.”

    BTW, “scrod” is not a specific fish, but a way of cooking fish. It comes from the Anglo-Cornish dialect word scraw: Fish are scrawed by cutting them flatly open and then slightly sprinkling them with salt and pepper. Not exactly onomatopoetic or mimetic or enticing in any way.

     •  Reply
  10. Missing large
    norphos  over 1 year ago

    As opposed to frozen scrod?

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Brevity