Posted on 06/29/2005 10:32:25 PM PDT by Coleus
lol, I was friends with this guy is HS and his family/extended family were strange. Leave it at that.
One of the great Italian American writers. Too bad nobody reads him anymore...like Puzo, they only know him for the Godfather, which was only a so-so book -- but he also wrote one of the great immigrant books of the twentieth century -- Fortune Pilgram, which I'd put up there with any other immigrant book.
That's a good kinda strange, if you ask me. Honestly, I never understood that exagerated outrage italian americans have. It's part of our cultural heritage, it's not an indictment of any italian in particular.
And it's sexy and dangerous - like I said, if I were to sit down and write myself a sterotype, it would look a lot like the Italian/Gangster one. ;-)
Every immigrant group gets its turn at crime, just like they get their turn at sports and entertainment. And, I might add, contributing something along the lines of food to the American appetite.
Exactamundo, as the Fonz (another great fictional Italian-American) would say! ;-)
have you ever heard the "Jerky Boys"? I like the pranks they do with the character Frank Rizzo, they are hilarious! :D "This is Frank, FRank RIzzo! Open your ears wacky a*S!" :D cracks me up every time :D
...and then they move out to the 'burbs, the kids wear Polo and grow soft.
Hey, I'm 1/4th Welsh. When is it gonna be OUR time ? ;-)
...yo...howze you doin'...?
Welsh? Tough one. If you have any Irish in you, well, they already had their time.
Scots-Irish, partly, but that ain't really Irish.
I first heard the Jerky Boys back in the mid 1980s, back when they were underground audiotapes passed along from friend to friend. I love those guys, too, and no later incarnation of the gimmick (Crank Yankers, for example) comes anywhere close.
My favorites are The Egyptian Magician, The fruity guy calling the baloon store, and anything with Sol or Frank Rizzo. That being said, I like them all! GREAT comedy!
No kidding!
Sorry to say, your forefathers made the mistake of not being jammed into ghettos, engaging in violent street brawls and organizing themselves into brutal criminal enterprises. They quite sensibly arrived and said, "Hey, where can we grow something to eat or sell?" and then left the cities.
Ralph Lauren = Ralph Liphshitz
hehe Sol! he was funny :D but i think Frank was my favorite. "what were those things, those.. fava... fava beans???" LOL
Tony Curtis is just a kid named Bernie Schwartz from the Bronx, after all - and a fellow Las Vegan these days, like me! ;-)
My German cousin (I'm 1/2 that) ran one of this country's (then) largest cities and just missed out on getting elected to the Senate. Half the family lived in the sticks and the others in the cities. All that "race mixin'," couldn't make up their minds. :-P
Holy crap! He's still alive?
Haha! Did you ever hear the one where Frank calls NYC radio and music personality Juggy Gayles? Frank calls him up at home and talks about the 'old times,' like how Frank Sinatra still owes him some money, how they used to 'finger' each other in the backrooms of the Brill Building, and speaking prominently of the classic tune 'The Hucklebuck.'
It's very funny on 2 levels - its hilarious on its face, but the references to the oldschool nyc music and radio scene make it a classic for fans of the scene! WILD!
The Jerky Boys are number 1 - all the others are imitators. Did you ever see their movie?
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