Tuesday, May 25, 2010

 

Caption Contest


Comments:
"Thanks for tuning in today on Osler. Today's topic is "Who is my baby's daddy?" We're speaking with Carmen. Now Carmen, you say Ricky is the father even though you were living with Sean at the time.. well we have a surprise for you. Sean, come on out!"
 
"Lamp?"
"I love chair!"
 
This is the chair we would chain PC students to for their daily scourgings. We will start the bidding at $200.
 
Prof. Osler introduces the audience to his imaginary friend, Mrs. Phyllis Levine.
 
"Moments after Prof. Osler kicked Col. Mustard out of the drawing room for failing to have any clue about the assigned case."
 
And over here is where they found the needle in the hay stack. As you can see, the decorators painted the chair rail a lovely harvest gold to recognize the significance of the site.
 
"...and, Ms. Landers, your priceless 1976 Sears Roebuck mid-back solid wood chair is worth...

$18.42!"

[polite applause]
 
The trick only works if you don't pay attention to my left hand.
 
And now, for the final round of Musical Chairs ...
[cue Turkey in the Straw]
 
Bethany Rivers of Sears City, Iowa, COME ON DOWN! You're the next contestant on NAME THAT PANDA.
 
T-Pain, pass the guacamole.
 
Professor Osler broke from his usual rhetoric to belittle the once beloved fabric, velour.
 
Would anyone like to swap seats with me?
 
HAHAHAHA Micah!!!!
 
"The turtle fence should be roughly the height of this chair."
 
Mark Osler memorializes his visit to Lincoln's church by performing his one man show about the life of John Wilkes Booth.

Bet you can't guess what part he is on. . .
 
Mark Osler (center) motions for an audience member to sit in the empty chair. Osler, 63, demonstrated for a local book club how rhetoric is really a form of hypnotism during his presentation "How To Win Friends and Tame Pandas."
 
The electric chair used to be very comfortable...
 
"Are you kidding me?!?!" Osler exclaimed. "This chair has no priors, volunteers weekly at meetings for the sitting-challenged, and you're telling me that the chair is bound to a 40 year sentence for a small piece of crack cocaine found in the crease of the chair's back? I would like the record to reflect that the crease also contained 37 cents-- three dimes, a nickel and two pennies, all of which had multiple fingerprints, none of which matched the chair's. This is an outrage!"
 
And now as the next item in our court ordered liquidation sale, we have this lovely eighteenth century chair.
 
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