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If it can be two people, Iād like to listen in while Einstein talks with Newton. We had all these nice neat āLawsā of physics from Newtonian Mechanics until Dr. Einstein came along.
Harry Truman, Teddy Roosevelt, C.S. Forester, Nevil Shute, John Steinbeck, Daphne Du Maurier, Madeline LāEngle, Pearl Buck, Isaac Asimov, Agatha Christie, H.G. Wells, Helen MacInnes, . , ,
OK OK itās a buffet, but why not splurge if the opportunity arises.
I forget who said when asked, āWhat person, living or dead, would you like to lunch with?ā they would answer, āLiving. Dead people smell funny.ā
Sidenote: itās a pet peeve of mine that the snowmen that appear in comic strips are so often physically impossible to make. I realize itās a snow dog in todayās trip, but the point holds true.
Some college buddies and I set out to make one of Calvinās creations. We couldnāt do it ā snow simply wouldnāt stay that way. And it required a lot of sticks of specific shapes.
Jefferson and/or Madison. We just got to talk about that electoral college stuff!! And, phasing out slavery, and popular vote and gerrymandering. It wouldnāt be a short conversation.
My Grandparents and my Great Grandparents. I knew only my maternal Grandmother and she lived across the Atlantic; saw her rarely. The rest died long before I was born. I have since become a Grandfather AND a Great Grandfather. Lemme tell ya, it was a steep learning curve as I had no mentorsā¦but donāt get me wrong, itās been a blast.
Iām rethinking, for an entertaining lunch Iād take Tolkien. He was a story teller. He didnāt sit in a secluded cabin and write, he told his children stories and evolved them into novels.
At the moment, Iād have to say either Kurt Vonnegut, Terry Pratchett, or Christopher Moore.
But other times, it might be Mother Jones, Eleanor Roosevelt, Thaddeus Stevens, Guy Clark, Bernie Sanders, Jerry Garcia (pre-smack), Neil Cassidy; I wouldnāt mind a chance to ask Thomas Jefferson how heād reconcile his brilliant theorizing on liberty & equality with raping his slaves.
But maybe most of all, my paternal grandfather or my maternal grandmother.
Iām likely one of many who will be āborrowingā Mrs. Olsenās response the next time I see/hear that question. Good one. One more for Terry Pratchett, add Neil Gaiman. Just so they get to hang out again together one more time and I get to kibitz.
Putting aside cultural and generational barriers, Iād prefer to have a meeting of the minds with someone who sees me as an equal, with whom I can actually talk which would exclude most of the men in history and many who are still living. They tend to have pre-conceived ideas of what a woman might be there for.
āWhat if you could have lunch with ā¦ anybody from history?
1) Choose only one, āaboveā all others? I donāt see a point to that.
2) With those who disappeared, would it be possible for them to tell the circumstances of their disappearance? (Jimmy Hoffa comes to mind.)
3) To what purpose? To ask what they think is important today? To ask their opinions/advice on topics that I think are important? To make suggestions about what I think they should have done? Hmmā¦ maybe to get the ātruthā about their media āscandalsā?
With any of the above and more, I donāt see how such a lunch could be of any practical benefit to me or those I care about.
4) Besides, Iāve already had conversations ā though mostly not accompanied by lunch ā with a few of those suggested hereā¦ and several that I expect would eventually turn up if this thread continues long enough.
There have also been a few near misses. E.g., a friend was late for a meeting because she had been at a memorial service for a recently departed family friendā¦ Isaac Asimov.
Many of the people Iād most want to meet have reputations as not being pleasant companions (famous wits are often insecure, depressed drunkards). Fred Rogers is probably the least likely to be disappointing and/or disillusioning, so Iām going to say him. But he was a vegetarian, so I wouldnāt want to meet him for dinnerā¦
Thereās a marvelous book out there ā 1942ās āVan Loonās Livesā (by Hendrik Willem Van Loon), the gist of which is that the author finds he is able to invite historical personages to dinner by slipping the invitations under the stone lions at the public library ā and they show up! So he has them over, two by two, in in fascinating pair-ups; Queen Elizabeth 1 and Byzantine Empress Theodora, for one. Yes, they all speak the same language or at least are able to communicate perfectly somehow. Itās a lot of fun and also reflects a lot of historical research.
Bilan about 1 year ago
Just donāt have a drink with Socrates.
GreasyOldTam about 1 year ago
Rudolph Diesel. Iād ask what really happened when he disappeared. in 1913. Where did he go and what did he do?
Chrisdiaz801 about 1 year ago
Stephen King. I have always wanted āSurvivor Typeā to be made into a film.
OldsVistaCruiser about 1 year ago
FDR.
TheSkulker about 1 year ago
Nikola Tesla
Concretionist about 1 year ago
Hmm. Iām told that many authors arenāt so great at conversation. Though the two that Iāve known are pretty reasonable at it.
Eric Thom Premium Member about 1 year ago
Ms. Olson has the right idea, set the ground rules early
Gizmo Cat about 1 year ago
Would have liked to talk with Sean Connery. And with a peasant in the Middle Ages.
Doug K about 1 year ago
Where would they want to eat? Do I have to dress up?
daveoverpar about 1 year ago
Terry Pratchett.
E.Z. Smith Premium Member about 1 year ago
Looks like a Jeff Koons.
Ichabod Ferguson about 1 year ago
Theyād have to speak English or weād be eating in awkward silence.
stillfickled Premium Member about 1 year ago
Janis Joplin
acmiller Premium Member about 1 year ago
Iāll have what sheās having!
mrwiskers about 1 year ago
Kevin Kelly
fjc007 about 1 year ago
Carl Jung
P51Strega about 1 year ago
If it can be two people, Iād like to listen in while Einstein talks with Newton. We had all these nice neat āLawsā of physics from Newtonian Mechanics until Dr. Einstein came along.
ksu71 about 1 year ago
Tossup between Ben Franklin and Thomas Jefferson.
sandpiper about 1 year ago
Harry Truman, Teddy Roosevelt, C.S. Forester, Nevil Shute, John Steinbeck, Daphne Du Maurier, Madeline LāEngle, Pearl Buck, Isaac Asimov, Agatha Christie, H.G. Wells, Helen MacInnes, . , ,
OK OK itās a buffet, but why not splurge if the opportunity arises.
HappyDog/įµŹ³Źø į“®įµį¶»įµ ā“ įµŹ°įµ į¶ įµāæ įµį¶ į¶¦įµ Premium Member about 1 year ago
Do we have to talk? Iām trying to read here!
rshive about 1 year ago
A Lebanon bologna sandwich ā the finest food made by the hand of man.
smoore47 about 1 year ago
Hunter S. Thompson.
ThreeDogDad Premium Member about 1 year ago
I forget who said when asked, āWhat person, living or dead, would you like to lunch with?ā they would answer, āLiving. Dead people smell funny.ā
Ed The Red Premium Member about 1 year ago
Sidenote: itās a pet peeve of mine that the snowmen that appear in comic strips are so often physically impossible to make. I realize itās a snow dog in todayās trip, but the point holds true.
Some college buddies and I set out to make one of Calvinās creations. We couldnāt do it ā snow simply wouldnāt stay that way. And it required a lot of sticks of specific shapes.
Darkknight55 about 1 year ago
Abraham Lincoln
Diane Lee Premium Member about 1 year ago
Jefferson and/or Madison. We just got to talk about that electoral college stuff!! And, phasing out slavery, and popular vote and gerrymandering. It wouldnāt be a short conversation.
innertuber about 1 year ago
Marianne von Werefkin
TMMILLER Premium Member about 1 year ago
Dali Lama, Steven King, Hemingway and Tom K Ryan
Otis Rufus Driftwood about 1 year ago
This strip is often drier than an off brand saltine thatās at least a week past the ābest byā date on the box.
Jimmyk939 about 1 year ago
My Grandparents and my Great Grandparents. I knew only my maternal Grandmother and she lived across the Atlantic; saw her rarely. The rest died long before I was born. I have since become a Grandfather AND a Great Grandfather. Lemme tell ya, it was a steep learning curve as I had no mentorsā¦but donāt get me wrong, itās been a blast.
P51Strega about 1 year ago
Iām rethinking, for an entertaining lunch Iād take Tolkien. He was a story teller. He didnāt sit in a secluded cabin and write, he told his children stories and evolved them into novels.
Mike Baldwin creator about 1 year ago
Very funny! Love it. Two simple answers to a complex hypothetical question.
dlogotop83 about 1 year ago
George Washington Stephen Crane Edgar Allan Poe
Cozmik Cowboy about 1 year ago
At the moment, Iād have to say either Kurt Vonnegut, Terry Pratchett, or Christopher Moore.
But other times, it might be Mother Jones, Eleanor Roosevelt, Thaddeus Stevens, Guy Clark, Bernie Sanders, Jerry Garcia (pre-smack), Neil Cassidy; I wouldnāt mind a chance to ask Thomas Jefferson how heād reconcile his brilliant theorizing on liberty & equality with raping his slaves.
But maybe most of all, my paternal grandfather or my maternal grandmother.
Bill The Nuke about 1 year ago
Mark Twain or Terry Pratchett
Mel-T-Pass Premium Member about 1 year ago
Iām likely one of many who will be āborrowingā Mrs. Olsenās response the next time I see/hear that question. Good one. One more for Terry Pratchett, add Neil Gaiman. Just so they get to hang out again together one more time and I get to kibitz.
raptor about 1 year ago
My parents
Mark Jackson Premium Member about 1 year ago
Probably Richard Feynman.
Charles about 1 year ago
Sir Pterry Pratchett
The Brooklyn Accent Premium Member about 1 year ago
Lots of great suggestions, though with most of them, Iād be too intimidated to talk much.
Can I toss in a vote for Shel Silverstein? I might not learn much, but it would be a trip.
Geophyzz about 1 year ago
All these answers, on a Sunday, and nobody wants to sit with Jesus.
denirwin Premium Member about 1 year ago
It always irritates me when asking about possible lunch companions, etc., the question is phrased with āwhatā instead of āwhoā.
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 1 year ago
George Carlin. And Iād ask how heād like to stick around for dinner on me as well.
Stephen Gilberg about 1 year ago
Salvador Dali.
tammyspeakslife Premium Member about 1 year ago
Emily Carr, Maya Angelou, Miriamma Thampy, Hadassah,
Putting aside cultural and generational barriers, Iād prefer to have a meeting of the minds with someone who sees me as an equal, with whom I can actually talk which would exclude most of the men in history and many who are still living. They tend to have pre-conceived ideas of what a woman might be there for.
gammaguy about 1 year ago
Does currently alive count as āfrom historyā?
gammaguy about 1 year ago
āWhat if you could have lunch with ā¦ anybody from history?
1) Choose only one, āaboveā all others? I donāt see a point to that.
2) With those who disappeared, would it be possible for them to tell the circumstances of their disappearance? (Jimmy Hoffa comes to mind.)
3) To what purpose? To ask what they think is important today? To ask their opinions/advice on topics that I think are important? To make suggestions about what I think they should have done? Hmmā¦ maybe to get the ātruthā about their media āscandalsā?
With any of the above and more, I donāt see how such a lunch could be of any practical benefit to me or those I care about.
4) Besides, Iāve already had conversations ā though mostly not accompanied by lunch ā with a few of those suggested hereā¦ and several that I expect would eventually turn up if this thread continues long enough.
There have also been a few near misses. E.g., a friend was late for a meeting because she had been at a memorial service for a recently departed family friendā¦ Isaac Asimov.
tchrisev about 1 year ago
Poor Mrs O has definitely experienced the monkey paw effect!
fritzoid Premium Member about 1 year ago
Many of the people Iād most want to meet have reputations as not being pleasant companions (famous wits are often insecure, depressed drunkards). Fred Rogers is probably the least likely to be disappointing and/or disillusioning, so Iām going to say him. But he was a vegetarian, so I wouldnāt want to meet him for dinnerā¦
Caeruleancentaur about 1 year ago
Jesus and/or his mother.
Caeruleancentaur about 1 year ago
Jesus and/or his mother.
LASteve about 1 year ago
Thereās a marvelous book out there ā 1942ās āVan Loonās Livesā (by Hendrik Willem Van Loon), the gist of which is that the author finds he is able to invite historical personages to dinner by slipping the invitations under the stone lions at the public library ā and they show up! So he has them over, two by two, in in fascinating pair-ups; Queen Elizabeth 1 and Byzantine Empress Theodora, for one. Yes, they all speak the same language or at least are able to communicate perfectly somehow. Itās a lot of fun and also reflects a lot of historical research.
eced52 about 1 year ago
Moses
tqnism about 1 year ago
And he didnāt say Frazz?