Can fondly recollect once knowing an awesome Librarian named Mary S. which some times had summer time paper projects and puppet shows for kids in grade school. Those water color days were much simpler and fun.
This reminds me of a true story that is somewhat related. Remember Farfel, the puppet dog on the “N-E-S-T-L-E-S, Nestle’s makes the very best – choc’late.” commercials from 1955-1965? Remember how he snaps his wooden jaws after saying “choc’late”? Well, that snap was a big no-no among puppeteers. What happened was that ventriloquist Jimmy Nelson was nervous during his audition before Nestle executives and his sweaty finger slipped off the mouth control. The Nestle executives liked that, so he kept it in the commercials and the rest is history.
Uncle Kenny 8 days ago
Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain!
jaydogg187 8 days ago
Did this ever happen to Jeff Dunham?
SteveHL 8 days ago
Can anyone in the audience read that sign?
littlejohn Premium Member 8 days ago
You might find the Line in the warp or weave of the sock. If the Sock puppet drops a stitch, will it leave the audience laughing?
GiantShetlandPony 8 days ago
Mental health breakdown?
DaBump Premium Member 8 days ago
Okay, I’m beginning to seriously worry about Corky now.
BJDucer 8 days ago
Perhaps ventriloquists have the same reputation as Italian folks do…they talk with their hands :0)
That Wichita Guy! 8 days ago
Go with ‘NOBODY expects the Spanish Inquisition.’ Always a promising start.
See? YOU didn’t anticipate that, now did you?
Jelliqal 8 days ago
Must be during the writers strike
rshive 8 days ago
Just wing it!
GoldLions Premium Member 8 days ago
Can fondly recollect once knowing an awesome Librarian named Mary S. which some times had summer time paper projects and puppet shows for kids in grade school. Those water color days were much simpler and fun.
[Unnamed Reader - 14b4ce] 8 days ago
Lamb Chop
mbhiggins5555 8 days ago
This reminds me of a true story that is somewhat related. Remember Farfel, the puppet dog on the “N-E-S-T-L-E-S, Nestle’s makes the very best – choc’late.” commercials from 1955-1965? Remember how he snaps his wooden jaws after saying “choc’late”? Well, that snap was a big no-no among puppeteers. What happened was that ventriloquist Jimmy Nelson was nervous during his audition before Nestle executives and his sweaty finger slipped off the mouth control. The Nestle executives liked that, so he kept it in the commercials and the rest is history.
gliderrider 7 days ago
I saw a ventriloquist once, he was lousy, but the dummy was great
hagarthehorrible 6 days ago
The good old days of entertainment was better and more fun.