fortune index all fortunes
| #621 | | It's difficult to see the picture when you are inside the frame.
| | #622 | | It's from Casablanca. I've been waiting all my life to use that line. -- Woody Allen, "Play It Again, Sam"
| | #623 | | "It's kind of fun to do the impossible." -- Walt Disney
| | #624 | | It's more than magnificent -- it's mediocre. -- Sam Goldwyn
| | #625 | | It's not easy, being green. -- Kermit the Frog
| | #626 | | It's not the valleys in life I dread so much as the dips. -- Garfield
| | #627 | | IV. The time required for an object to fall twenty stories is greater than or equal to the time it takes for whoever knocked it off the ledge to spiral down twenty flights to attempt to capture it unbroken. Such an object is inevitably priceless, the attempt to capture it inevitably unsuccessful. V. All principles of gravity are negated by fear. Psychic forces are sufficient in most bodies for a shock to propel them directly away from the earth's surface. A spooky noise or an adversary's signature sound will induce motion upward, usually to the cradle of a chandelier, a treetop, or the crest of a flagpole. The feet of a character who is running or the wheels of a speeding auto need never touch the ground, especially when in flight. VI. As speed increases, objects can be in several places at once. This is particularly true of tooth-and-claw fights, in which a character's head may be glimpsed emerging from the cloud of altercation at several places simultaneously. This effect is common as well among bodies that are spinning or being throttled. A "wacky" character has the option of self-replication only at manic high speeds and may ricochet off walls to achieve the velocity required. -- Esquire, "O'Donnell's Laws of Cartoon Motion", June 1980
| | #628 | | James Joyce -- an essentially private man who wished his total indifference to public notice to be universally recognized. -- Tom Stoppard
| | #629 | | James McNeill Whistler's (painter of "Whistler's Mother") failure in his West Point chemistry examination once provoked him to remark in later life, "If silicon had been a gas, I should have been a major general."
| | #630 | | Jane and I got mixed up with a television show -- or as we call it back east here: TV -- a clever contraction derived from the words Terrible Vaudeville. However, it is our latest medium -- we call it a medium because nothing's well done. It was discovered, I suppose you've heard, by a man named Fulton Berle, and it has already revolutionized social grace by cutting down parlour conversation to two sentences: "What's on television?" and "Good night". -- Goodman Ace, letter to Groucho Marx, in The Groucho Letters, 1967
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