Category: Nostalgia
Borden’s Curious Ads, Part II
Borden’s Curious Ads, Part I
Midvale Steel December 1939
Filet-O-Fish Photobomb
Honey, I Shrunk The Technician
Delectable Vegetable Soup
You already know soup is good food, but here are some more soup-related quotes to stir your soul.
Anyone who tells a lie has not a pure heart, and cannot make a good soup.–Ludwig van Beethoven
Let me be the first to tell you, drinking alcohol is the worst thing to do in cold weather. Hot soup is the best because the process of digesting food helps to warm you up.–Morgan Freeman
Soup is a lot like a family. Each ingredient enhances the others; each batch has its own characteristics; and it needs time to simmer to reach full flavor.–Marge Kennedy
A first-rate soup is more creative than a second-rate painting.–Abraham Maslow
I live on good soup, not on fine words.–Moliere
Whenever something went wrong when I was young – if I had a pimple or if my hair broke – my mom would say, ‘Sister mine, I’m going to make you some soup.’ And I really thought the soup would make my pimple go away or my hair stronger.–Maya Angelou
(source: www.brainyquote.com)
Summer Of ’69
New Balls For DiMaggio
Swiss Cardio 1929
Depression Apples In The Big Apple
When Your Cat Hates You
To be fair, all cats hate you. The contempt is thinly-veiled. For those of you unfamiliar with the wide-eyed Brazil nut pictured here, it’s Carmen Miranda, aka The Chiquita Banana Lady. And wide-eyed she was!
She may have danced her way to fame with a pile of fruit atop her head, much to the chagrin of Latin nations who felt stereotyped, but she had the last laugh. By 1945, she earned more than $200,000 (over $2 million in today’s money), becoming Hollywood’s highest-paid entertainer.
Numero uno, y’all!

She must have had fabulous posture and core control to forever be balancing colorful edible headgear and bearing the burden of 27 lbs of heavy metal accessories. No pain, no gain.

In August of 1955, Miranda was shooting a a song and dance number for the The Jimmy Durante Show when she fell to one knee. Out of breath, she finished the segment and went home. The next morning, Miranda died from a heart attack at her home in Beverly Hills. She was only 46.

To see her sing and samba, catch this 1943 clip of her in “The Lady in the Tutti-Frutti Hat.”











