Monday, July 16, 2012

Whose that girl?


She was a hot television babe for a while and occupied many a fantasy of Jack Elam.

And best of all her name is what where all the guys wanted her to go.

Whose that girl stroking her breasts.

27 comments:

chickelit said...

She was a hot television babe for a while and occupied many a fantasy of Jack Elam.

So blake knows that pose too?

Chip S. said...

I know her!

That's Lesley Anne Rapey McRape.

Trooper York said...

Man plastic surgery can fuck you up.

Trooper York said...

She is doing great on the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.

Chip S. said...

Everybody loves a downy nest.

chickelit said...

Featherbedding the question

Chip S. said...

Shoulda said "Susan Sarandown."

esprit d'escalier

Darcy said...

I find Lesley Anne Warren far more appealing. But my vote doesn't count, I know.

It's funny, but I've had people ask me what current actors I find attractive I really struggle to name one or two. I like real people.

Not saying that if Robert Mitchum in his prime were to ever speak to me I wouldn't melt into a puddle, though. But look how far I had to go back to name one?

Chip S. said...

I'm saving a huge amount of time by staying the fuck away from TOP.

Productivity is off the charts!

The Dude said...
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Chip S. said...

Just don't drive like James Dean.

The Dude said...
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Darcy said...

Wasn't Robert Mitchum also in a movie where the ending involves a crazy chick tampering with the brakes on a car and they go careening over a cliff to their deaths?

I don't know that I would get in a car with Mitchum. Oh, that's bunk. I so would.

Chip S. said...

You mean Angel Face?

Seems like half the cast goes over the cliff.

Darcy said...

Yeah! That's the one. I liked it.

chickelit said...

Wow, Chip's link is real spoiler. Don't read if you've never seen "Angel Face."

Troop's got a bunch of boy's locker room threads up. Darcy, you'd better get on in there before they start snapping towels.

Darcy said...

Yeah. I kind of spoiled the ending first! Which is a shame. It was kind of a surprise ending. :)

ndspinelli said...

It's not just a boy's locker room, Bruce. We have a girly man also.

You know Bruce, I was primarily a jock in high school. But, I socialized w/ other groups also. My neighborhood friends were greasers. I didn't know how to work on cars like them, but I enjoyed driving fast in their GTO's and Super Bee's. I also hung out w/ the artsy group because I loved going into Hartford and NYC to watch more obscure flicks. I got some shit from the jocks but I didn't give a shit. To each their own.

I surmise you were the smart geek crowd? I didn't hang out w/ them but unlike most, I never game them any shit.

chickelit said...

You got me a bit wrong, Nick. I never hung around the smart crowd in high school, at least not at first. I always liked smart individuals, though. My first two years I was a drummer in rock band, man, and also played defensive tackle in JV football. The band thingie got me more female attention and since I wasn't a real athlete, I dropped the sports. Halfway through high school, I saw my dad lose his job as a printer, and I "smartened-up" and started taking school seriously. I made up a lot of lost time. The geeks in high school never accepted me, except for the valedictorian who asked me to senior prom.

ndspinelli said...

Well Bruce, you're very smart whatever your social group. And, as you learned, chicks dig musicians. In our youth it was all about spreading the seed..well within a lubricated receptacle anyway.

AllenS said...

Bruce, I spent almost 35 years in the publishing business. Did you father work with hot metal while printing?

chickelit said...

Initially, yes. He started at Madison Newspapers in 1960s when they still used linotype technology. By the time he left in 1977 he had moved to the composing room where he "pasted-up" stories and advertisments. This was all replaced slowly by CRT technology and eventually to what we have today.

AllenS said...

I started working at West Publishing in St. Paul, MN in 1965, and hot metal was the way type was made. The pots that melted the lead for the linotype machines had to be repacked with asbestos every so often. Space bands had to be cleaned with graphite a couple of times a day. The cleaning solution of choice was benzine.

It's a wonder any of us are still alive.

The Dude said...
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ndspinelli said...

Wow, AllenS! I worked a case involving the newspaper in Monroe, Wi. I learned a lot about those pots and even had one in my evidence closet. It seemed from my investigation that the biggest risk was when you cleaned those pots @ the end of the day w/ a wire brush. The pots were manufactured by a big company in Milwk., I forget the company.

The case I worked was filed by the widow. The printer died from mesothelioma. She was a nice woman. You can't sue your employer in Wi. except for rare reasons. The widow got the work comp limits[5 years then] but we helped get her a nice 6 figure settlement. This was back in the 80's. I learned a lot about linotype. That was one of the most fascinating aspects of immersing yourself in civil litigation cases..particualrly large $ cases. You learn a lot of stuff. I always liked that old tv show Hot Dog where they showed you different shit was made.

AllenS said...

I love machinery. I love to work on things, tear things apart, fix what's wrong and put it back together again. I had to take off the hydraulic cylinder from the dozer and put in a gasket kit because the oil was running out of the piston rod. Someone had already taken it apart, because some of the gaskets were missing. The cylinder is obsolete and John Deere had only one seal kit left in stock.

The Dude said...
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