Hey, Manitobaman we got hooked on watching “Ice Road Truckers” on the History Channel…..did you do any Ice Road work??? My admiration for those guys/gals is soooooooooo big!
JFri…..not so far…..My Mountain Man does the driving in the ice….and he’s REALLY good at it! However, farther East in MT, it’s pretty bad, lucky we’re here in Helena where they really maintain the roads. :)))
Good morning Montana lady . Nope…never did the ice roads myself. Though I’ve certainly seen my share of whiteout conditions and icy roads. Pretty cool show, though, eh? I also like the series about the loggers.
The original Popeye comic character was started to popularize spinache. The only problem is that the belief that spinach was good for children because it was high in iron was the result of a clerical error. The decimal point was transposed by one position by the clerk recording the FDA test results. Spinach has no more iron than any other vegetable. Kids were coerced into eating that slimy, bitter stuff for nothing.
Friday—1) see skinny girlfriend, 2) get stuck babysitting, 3) get beat up by another sailor, 4) talk about yams but eat spinach, 5) smoke musical pipe, 6) repeat
Here’s Valis616’s Spinach decimal error myth link fixed.
(@Valis616 - The GoComics comment parser treats underscores as formatting characters. For that reason, it’s best to TinyURL live links you drop here. Alternatively, you can go here for a GoComics style guide, which collects the formtting information we discovered by trial-and-error over at Pibgorn.)
“Popeye is the spinach-eating cartoon swab created for the “Thimble Theatre” comic strip on January 17, 1929 by E.C. Segar.
“Betty Boop” was born from that era and Max Fleischer who was a great fan of “Thimble Theatre,” plucked Popeye, Olive Oyl and Bluto from the funny papers putting each into one animated film.
On July 14th, 1933, the comic strip trio appeared in one of the Betty Boop entries titled, “Popeye the Sailor.”
Betty was used just briefly on screen as the film was designed to see if the sailor, who was a big hit with depression era audiences in newspapers, could translate that popularity to the big screen. Popeye, his cohort, Olive Oyl and nemesis Bluto live on.”
Free Popeye Cartoon Downloads Here
Edit: This history brought to you through the courtesy of Jesus.
Manitobaman over 14 years ago
He’s Popeye the sailor man….*toot toot * That cartoon was old when I was a kid…and that was awhile ago now. Used to watch it every day after school.
ksoskins over 14 years ago
I Yam What I Yam and That’s All That I Yam
margueritem over 14 years ago
I’ve always suspected this of Popeye…
Nice yam, Sheik.
MontanaLady over 14 years ago
Lessee……now where did I put that spinach??
MontanaLady over 14 years ago
Hey, Manitobaman we got hooked on watching “Ice Road Truckers” on the History Channel…..did you do any Ice Road work??? My admiration for those guys/gals is soooooooooo big!
The Duke 1 over 14 years ago
ML*, aren’t *you an Ice Road Trucker during those Montana winters?
MontanaLady over 14 years ago
JFri…..not so far…..My Mountain Man does the driving in the ice….and he’s REALLY good at it! However, farther East in MT, it’s pretty bad, lucky we’re here in Helena where they really maintain the roads. :)))
Manitobaman over 14 years ago
Good morning Montana lady . Nope…never did the ice roads myself. Though I’ve certainly seen my share of whiteout conditions and icy roads. Pretty cool show, though, eh? I also like the series about the loggers.
sottwell over 14 years ago
The original Popeye comic character was started to popularize spinache. The only problem is that the belief that spinach was good for children because it was high in iron was the result of a clerical error. The decimal point was transposed by one position by the clerk recording the FDA test results. Spinach has no more iron than any other vegetable. Kids were coerced into eating that slimy, bitter stuff for nothing.
Colt9033 over 14 years ago
Need new schedule.
lewisbower over 14 years ago
Friday—1) see skinny girlfriend, 2) get stuck babysitting, 3) get beat up by another sailor, 4) talk about yams but eat spinach, 5) smoke musical pipe, 6) repeat
ottod Premium Member over 14 years ago
I likes me spinach! I likes it best wilted with a little bacon grease and onion! The canned stuff seems to be digestible.
Valis616 over 14 years ago
“The only problem is that the belief that spinach was good for children because it was high in iron was the result of a clerical error. ”
Rubbish! Don’t you people do any research before spreading your dis-information?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpinachPopeyeIronDecimalError_Myth
eardroppings over 14 years ago
Actually, Joe. The answer to that question is “no”.
He was created by Elzie Crisler Segar, and first appeared in the daily King Features comic strip Thimble Theatre on January 17, 1929.
olmail over 14 years ago
Betty Boop may have been Popeye’s first animated cartoon appearance as opposed to comic strips.
CoBass over 14 years ago
Here’s Valis616’s Spinach decimal error myth link fixed.
(@Valis616 - The GoComics comment parser treats underscores as formatting characters. For that reason, it’s best to TinyURL live links you drop here. Alternatively, you can go here for a GoComics style guide, which collects the formtting information we discovered by trial-and-error over at Pibgorn.)
bald over 14 years ago
that is a hard workout schedule for popeye to maintain.
Ushindi over 14 years ago
Re history:
“Popeye is the spinach-eating cartoon swab created for the “Thimble Theatre” comic strip on January 17, 1929 by E.C. Segar.
“Betty Boop” was born from that era and Max Fleischer who was a great fan of “Thimble Theatre,” plucked Popeye, Olive Oyl and Bluto from the funny papers putting each into one animated film.
On July 14th, 1933, the comic strip trio appeared in one of the Betty Boop entries titled, “Popeye the Sailor.”
Betty was used just briefly on screen as the film was designed to see if the sailor, who was a big hit with depression era audiences in newspapers, could translate that popularity to the big screen. Popeye, his cohort, Olive Oyl and nemesis Bluto live on.”
Free Popeye Cartoon Downloads Here
Edit: This history brought to you through the courtesy of Jesus.
7351cisco over 14 years ago
That explains a lot