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Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller for December 19, 2012
Transcript:
Jeffrey: Uh... what's that thing, Danae? Danae: A hula hoop. It was the most popular toy in the world when my gran'ma was our age. Jeffrey: Cool! What does it do? Danae: I'm still trying to figure that out. Jeffrey: Our poor, poor grandparents. Danae: Maybe it was supposed to help teach them to deal with disappointment.
Destiny23 about 12 years ago
I pity todayâs kids â they have no idea how to have fun!
Linguist about 12 years ago
I love Danaeâs last statement. Maybe it was, Danae,maybe it was.
The Mixer about 12 years ago
Iâm hoping that this story arc continues with Flo giving the girls her old yo-yo. Joe then demonstrates some tricks but, with thirty years of rust on his yo-yo wrist, gets a concussion when he raps himself on the head while trying to go around the world.
bluskies about 12 years ago
Maybe sheâll figure it out, It took quite a while before I learned how to make a yo-yo do more than yo.
Michelle Morris about 12 years ago
WOULD SOMEONE PLEASE SHOW THESE KIDS HOW TO WORK THE BLOODY THING!?!?
Kvasir42 Premium Member about 12 years ago
She needs a stick if she is going to roll that hoop properly. That is the earlier usage.
wndrwrthg about 12 years ago
It needs the âshoop, shoopâ sound.
psychlady about 12 years ago
Itâs like riding a bike â you donât forget! I got mine out again and use it. Great exercise!
roctor about 12 years ago
I use it as my template.
Burnside217 about 12 years ago
It just needs Bluetooth.
webfootgwk07 about 12 years ago
Grandma also had a pogo stick
emptc12 about 12 years ago
Our local PBS station plays reruns from âThe Ed Sullivan Show.â The really early shows (âriiily greeeat showsâ) have old performers, probably from the last of the vaudville acts, doing plate spinning and tricks with hoops. .And other things such as musical glasses and musical saws. And remember the Harmonicats?.I could go on, but todayâs kids watching that old stuff must be flabbergasted â as I was, when as a kid the old folks put on âminstrel showsâ with black-face and cakewalks..I get too sentimental around the holidays, and this is getting me started âŠ
trowsh about 12 years ago
I remember Creepy Crawlers, nothing sez fun like a hot plate and melting plastic
cdward about 12 years ago
I actually hated the hula hoop when I was a kid. I could never get the stupid thing to work. Played lots of ping pong back in the day, though, and guess what? So do my kids.
jsprat about 12 years ago
Hey,I would be willing to bet Victoria knows how to use it! Enter stage leftâŠ
jimsizemore1405 about 12 years ago
Iâm waiting for Danaeâs dad to come alongâŠ
dabugger about 12 years ago
is disappointment their legacy or something they will grow into?
ottod Premium Member about 12 years ago
Probably just needs a software update.
Reppr Premium Member about 12 years ago
Toy trains! Stilts! A bygone world awaits.
Vonne Anton about 12 years ago
Would you rather have a paddleball? I was the school hero when I hit 100 before anyone else did. Sigh.
Gokie5 about 12 years ago
My kids had Creepy Crawlers. The fumes were so bad we kept the oven or whatever in the garage. Guess they were discontinued because the fumes were determined to be toxic.
kevindix about 12 years ago
Creepy Crawlers and the related toy, Vac-U-Form, probably were dropped because of the exposed heating element.
stej_dot_com about 12 years ago
This is another reason why Iâm going to initiate âNo Electricity Saturdaysâ in my house this summer!
dflak about 12 years ago
I grew up in Brooklyn in the 1950âs. I did the math. There must have been over 500 kids on our street. You had to learn how to get along with others â you didnât have a choice.
Varnes about 12 years ago
Thanks for mentioning Creepy Crawlers, Iâve been trying to think of their name all morningâŠAt least you could play with them, what do you do with Vac-U-Form shapes?
rojroj about 12 years ago
No imagination. They only get to view the products of other peopleâs imaginations.
meowlin about 12 years ago
I use them for mounting the outer ring of lights on UFOs.
uniquename about 12 years ago
When I was a kid in the â60s & â70s, I daydreamed about the toys (consoles, etc) that kids have today. It never occurred to me that you could actually make them a reality. Just because kids play differently today doesnât mean they donât have fun or create. Itâs just different. The only constant in the world is change.
unca jim about 12 years ago
And should we forget the Social Activists, Meddlers, and Protesters that sanitized, safety-ized, and Lawyered-upevery activity we ever had going for us, so that whatever we do or use today needs a sticker, certification or warning label attached thereto plus a fine for faiure to comply ?
mr_sherman Premium Member about 12 years ago
I would like to respond to your last sentence.Please consider the old definition of fear meaning âbeing in aweâ. And the fact that the nightime sky was considered âGodâ. Therefore standing in awe of the universe and recognizing yourself in relation to it is the beginning of wisdom. The next step is realizing your capability to comprehend that recognition, then coming to terms that you (all of us) are actually somwhere in between the nothingness in comparison to the Universe and the greatness of our capabilities. Most people miss that boat, especially most present well-known âreligiousâ leaders.
pcolli about 12 years ago
I never got what I wanted for Christmas, so who is it that buys these electronic thingies for their children and grandchildren?
alviebird about 12 years ago
I like to translate âfearâ as âawesome respectâ. Although there are places in that book where the word translated as fear means fear.
vwdualnomand about 12 years ago
isnât danaeâs grandparents baby boomers? or, is this a previous timeline, and her grandparents were depression babies and fighting the war? if they were baby boomers, then it was the golden age of toys with some exceptions(like lead paint). but, then again, the baby boomers were all protesting the war, fighting in the war, getting high, being promiscuous, dodging the draft, or wasting their youth on stupid stuff.
vldazzle about 12 years ago
In MY grandmaâs days they would have chased the hoop with a stick ;-D
mistercatworks about 12 years ago
I trained as a belly dancer for 2 years. I still couldnât get a hula hoop to stay up.
Varnes about 12 years ago
Uniquename, your last sentence is the great secret of life.."Within, without the constant theme is change..But different doesnât mean itâs not the same. I saw my old friend Linda just today. She looked the same to me as yesterday. Her wrinkles gave he character, she still had lots to say. We talked about the dues weâd had to pay. Sheâs still the same still growinâ every dayâŠ
The constant things unflexible are few. And most of them are things that you shouldnât do. Even this old stupid world knows how to start new. How many people sparkle like the dew? Light gravity stay the same not youâŠ.Parts of one of my songsâŠ
Varnes about 12 years ago
Darwinskeeper, funny, dudeâŠ.