"I invented pants!"

Anyone else rolling on the floor over this Snickers Commercial?

Pretty funny commentary on the current crop of candidates... Setup is a guy is walking into a voting booth and *poof* a cartoon Elephant and Donkey show up on his shoulders, similar to the typical Angel and Devil gag...

Anyhow, the Elephant is obviously supposed to be Dubya, and the Donkey is Gore, and the dialog is just funny as hell...
http://www.snickers.com/video/

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Kevin Jon Schlossberg
SysOp and Administrator for BladeForums.com
www.bladeforums.com
 
Damnit, don't remind me! Every time I try to tie an English lesson to the election in any way, I immediately get five raised hands. I sigh with deep resignation and call on someone, who inevitably says:
"Hey, Mr....hey, you know wha....I was watching and there was a .... 'I invented pants, and then the'......Mr. Gwinn, did you see that commercial where the elephant goes 'I wear the same pants as my dad?'"

Generally I throw the heaviest book available at hand directly at the head of the offending student and go on. But I think I'm going to have to try something new, that seems a tad subtle for them.

But I love the little darlings, don't get me wrong.....
 
Excellent.

Absolutely hilarious.

'Scuse me, I'm on the Internet. Must do this the right way.

ROFLMAO

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"People who say snickers are bad are lucky enough never to have been in a situation where someone has kicked down your door and threatened to starve your son and your sixty-five-year-old mother."

[This message has been edited by papercut (edited October 18, 2000).]
 
Do do do doo
Do do do doo
Do do do doo
Do do do doo(Twilight Zone theme music)

I just saw this commercial for the first time right before I sat down at the computer!
Loved it!

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Shoot straight & make big holes, regards, Richard at The Shottist's Center

[This message has been edited by 45King (edited October 20, 2000).]
 
I didn't know where else to put this:

JIM LEHRER: Welcome to the second presidential debate between Vice
President Al Gore and Gov. George W. Bush. The candidates have agreed on these rules: I will ask a question. The candidate will ignore the question and deliver
rehearsed remarks designed to appeal to undecided women voters.

The opponent will then have one minute to respond by trying to frighten senior citizens into voting for him. When a speaker's time has expired, I will whimper softly while he continues to spew incomprehensible statistics
for three more minutes.

Let's start with the vice president.

Mr. Gore, can you give us the name of a downtrodden citizen and then tellus his or her story in a way that strains the bounds of common sense?

GORE: As I was saying to Tipper last night after we tenderly made love the way we have so often during the 30 years of our rock-solid marriage, the downtrodden have a clear choice in this election.

My opponent wants to cut taxes for the richest 1 percent of Americans. I, on the other hand, want to put the richest 1 percent in an ironclad lockbox so they can't hurt old people like Roberta Frampinhamper, who is
here tonight.

Mrs. Frampinhamper has been selling her internal organs, one by one, to pay for gas so that she can travel to these debates and personify problems for me. Also, her poodle has arthritis.

LEHRER: Gov. Bush, your rebuttal.

USH: Governors are on the front lines every day, hugging people, crying with them, relieving suffering anywhere a photo opportunity exists. I want to empower those crying people to make their own decisions, unlike my opponent, whose mother is not Barbara Bush.

LEHRER: Let's turn to foreign affairs. Gov. Bush, if Slobodan Milosevic were to launch a bid to return to power in Yugoslavia, would you be able to pronounce his name?

BUSH: The current administration had eight years to deal with that guy and didn't get it done. If I'm elected, the first thing I would do about that guy is have Dick Cheney confer with our allies. And then Dick would present
me several options for dealing with that guy. And then Dick would tell me which one to choose.

You know, as governor of Texas, I have to make tough foreign policy decisions every day about how we're going to deal with New Mexico.

LEHRER: Mr. Gore, your rebuttal.

GORE: Foreign policy is something I've always been keenly interested in. I served my country in Vietnam. I had an uncle who was a victim of poison gas in World War I. I myself lost a leg in the Franco-Prussian War. And
when that war was over, I came home and tenderly made love to Tipper in a way that any undecided woman voter would find romantic.

If I'm entrusted with the office of president, I pledge to deal knowledgeably with any threat, foreign or domestic, by putting it in an ironclad lockbox. Because the American people deserve a president who can comfort them with simple metaphors.

LEHRER: Vice President Gore, how would you reform the Social Security system?

GORE: It's a vital issue, Jim. That's why Joe Lieberman and I have proposed changing the laws of mathematics to allow us to give $50,000 to every senior citizen without having it cost the federal treasury a single penny until the year 2250.

In addition, my budget commits $60 trillion over the next 10 years to guarantee that all senior citizens can have drugs delivered free to their homes every Monday by a federal employee who will also help them with the
child-proof cap.

LEHRER: Gov. Bush?

BUSH: That's fuzzy math. I know, because as governor of Texas, I have to do math every day. I have to add up the numbers and decide whether I'm going to fill potholes out on Rt. 36 east of Abilene or commit funds to reroof
the sheep barn at the Texas state Fairgrounds.


LEHRER: It's time for closing statements.

GORE: I'm my own man. I may not be the most exciting politician, but I will fight for the working families of America, in addition to turning the White House into a lusty pit of marital love for Tipper and me.

BUSH: It's time to put aside the partisanship of the past by electing no one but Republicans.

LEHRER: Good night.
>
 
I don't get any TV reception where I am so this is the first I have seen of this. All I can say is ROFLMAO.
 
:D ROTF&LMFAO

He-larious!

Just remember, Gore will target you out of both your "promised" tax cut and your second ammendment rights to K&BA.

Bush's tax cuts leave no American behind
& just maybe Bush won't mess with the OUR second ammendment civil rights.
 
ROFLMAO ! :D

I love that commercial.

My wifes sister is a Demicrap and looks down her nose at gun ownership.

I simply remind her that Al Gore invented the gun...



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SHOOT,COMMUNICATE AND MOVE ON OUT !
 
Byron, that is a howl. LHOL. Off-topic, though, my fav commercials lately have been the guy who fails the Budweiser Clydesdale wagon simulator by chasing after the naked chick on the horse, and the goofy guys in Taco Bell singing "My Chalupa!", esp. the one who goes "my, my, my, my, my, my - WHOO!".
 
Futo,

YES!! :D
The Taco Bell commercial is hillarious...

(my, my, my, my, my, my, WHOOO!)




[This message has been edited by GIT_SOME.45 (edited October 21, 2000).]
 
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