Ginger or Mary ann
I thought they were both refreshing.
they were, but you can only vote for one...
welcome to A2k, 2fast4u!
I wanted to be Ginger, too, ehBeth. Forget the "aw, shucks" stuff...I wanted to dazzle 'em.
Always did wonder how many trunks she must've brought on board the Minnow. I'm surprised it didn't sink.
NO WIMMINS ! ! !
This is mins' lusting thread, just go away an' divorce somebody, 'k?
Why, Mary Ann, of course. Though that Ginger did have some hot shoulders. Damn...
Th Professor was the smartest guy on the island, and he had a thing for Mary-Ann. I believe that says it all.
The Professor was a nerd. None of the guys on the island were good enough for Ginger.
Hey, doglover. I'm still a good looking woman for my age...and don't even ask.
I could have been a contenda'
Goodnight folks. Gotta do stuff that I don't want to do.
What bugs me about these discussions is that most guys pick Mary Ann and you ask them why and they say stuff like, 'Mary Ann seems sweet', or ' Ginger was too high maintenance'. But the question is not which one would you rather marry, or even have a nice dinner with, is it?
Of course it's not, and when it comes to good, sturdy fun, the farmgirl leaves the hollywood wannabe in the dust . . .
bromeliad wrote:What bugs me about these discussions is that most guys pick Mary Ann and you ask them why and they say stuff like, 'Mary Ann seems sweet', or ' Ginger was too high maintenance'. But the question is not which one would you rather marry, or even have a nice dinner with, is it?
Just to address that, it's still Mary-Ann.
Farmgirl. That explains why I didn't, and don't, want to be anything like Mary Ann. Pig-tail wearin' critter that she is. <shudder>
You know, I was thinking about that farm-girl thing. If the milkmaids didn't get small pox, they would have been the ones with the smooth skin, right?
And there are the pastoral notions, too.
Hey, patio. That would be cowpox. Had it not been for those milk maids, Edward Jenner would never have developed his vaccine.
Had it not been for open-pail milking, we wouldn't have had Tuberculosis either. Now we just have mad-cow disease and bird flu.
cavfancier wrote:Had it not been for open-pail milking, we wouldn't have had Tuberculosis either. Now we just have mad-cow disease and bird flu.
The biggest vectors for tuberculosis in human history before 1900 were city livery stables . . .
I knew I was wrong, but I couldn't help goofing around. Still Mary Ann though.