Daddy's Home by Tony Rubino and Gary Markstein for October 25, 2011

  1. Daddyshome0801 10
    rubinocreative Premium Member about 13 years ago

    Who is Stingy Jack?

     •  Reply
  2. Last 9 11 rescue dog birthday party new york bretagne pronounced brittany owner and rescue partner denise corliss texas
    Dry and Dusty Premium Member about 13 years ago

    Wasn’t he in one of those slasher/horror/Halloween flicks?

     •  Reply
  3. Last 9 11 rescue dog birthday party new york bretagne pronounced brittany owner and rescue partner denise corliss texas
    Dry and Dusty Premium Member about 13 years ago

    Tony I hope Pellie is going trick or treating with the kids!

     •  Reply
  4. Text if you d like to meet him
    Yukoneric  about 13 years ago

    Black balllllllllllllllllled

     •  Reply
  5. Images
    Sugie63  about 13 years ago

    He may be a bowling ball but he’s smooth and that’s coool.

     •  Reply
  6. 5346ae65734b4d0e82350407ef0d8e00 250
    cleokaya  about 13 years ago

    She met him in an alley.

     •  Reply
  7. 5346ae65734b4d0e82350407ef0d8e00 250
    cleokaya  about 13 years ago

    Stingy Jack tricked the Devil.

     •  Reply
  8. Missing large
    cstewart23  about 13 years ago

    First talking pelicans, now talking pumpkins. “The world has indeed gone completely mad.”

     •  Reply
  9. Ca411d48 e35e 4a21 b058 f79259484708
    Dr Sheriff MB esq PhD DML   about 13 years ago

    he’s gonna crush her like a pie…. just wait

     •  Reply
  10. Viking
    steelersneo  about 13 years ago

    Origin of the Jack – O – Lantern //

    The story of the carved vegetable as a lantern comes in many variants and is similar to the story of Will-o’-the-wisp9 retold in different forms across England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland. An old Irish folk tale tells of Stingy Jack, a lazy yet shrewd farmer who uses a cross to trap the Devil. One story says that Jack tricked the Devil into climbing an apple tree, and once he was up there Jack quickly placed crosses around the trunk or carved a cross into the bark, so that the Devil couldn’t get down. Another tale says that Jack put a key in the Devil’s pocket while he was suspended upside-down.

    Another version of the story says that Jack was getting chased by some villagers from whom he had stolen, when he met the Devil, who claimed it was time for him to die. However, the thief stalled his death by tempting the Devil with a chance to bedevil the church-going villagers chasing him. Jack told the Devil to turn into a coin with which he would pay for the stolen goods (the Devil could take on any shape he wanted); later, when the coin/Devil disappeared, the Christian villagers would fight over who had stolen it. The Devil agreed to this plan. He turned himself into a silver coin and jumped into Jack’s wallet, only to find himself next to a cross Jack had also picked up in the village. Jack had closed the wallet tight, and the cross stripped the Devil of his powers; and so he was trapped.

    In both folktales, Jack only lets the Devil go when he agrees never to take his soul. After a while the thief died, as all living things do. Of course, his life had been too sinful for Jack to go to heaven; however, the Devil had promised not to take his soul, and so he was barred from hell as well. Jack now had nowhere to go. He asked how he would see where to go, as he had no light, and the Devil mockingly tossed him an ember that would never burn out from the flames of hell. Jack carved out one of his turnips (which was his favourite food), put the ember inside it, and began endlessly wandering the Earth for a resting place. He became known as “Jack of the Lantern”, or Jack-o’-Lantern.

    The term jack-o’-lantern originally meant a night watchman, or man with a lantern, with the earliest known use in the 1660s in East Anglia; and later, meaning an ignis fatuus or will-o’-the-wisp.10 In Newfoundland and Labrador, both names “Jacky Lantern” and “Jack the Lantern” refer to the will-o’-the-wisp concept rather than the pumpkin carving aspect.

     •  Reply
  11. Large tv test pattern  color
    Lyons Group, Inc.  about 13 years ago

    Hope they don’t “split” up.

     •  Reply
  12. Large tv test pattern  color
    Lyons Group, Inc.  about 13 years ago

    Poor Jack. Now he has nowhere to go but in the “gutter”! LOL. SOMEBODY STOP ME!!

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Daddy's Home