The title is "Share your Cs and Ds"... meaning that C and D can be whatever you want them to be, and she would like us to come up with our own answers. At least that's what I interpreted it as. I'm not sure what Shan and Jeremy Vanandel were talking about.
I love Angela's comment: "I don't know what Shan and Jeremy Vanandel were talking about"
Neither do I as my interpretation is the same as Angela's essentially... but I have my little theory. It's one about some people being so insecure that they are happy to have people envy them or think they are smart so they are always "having a blast" and always "get" all jokes... Good for you guys, but the rest of us just don't care...
Else: C & D - the one with BS is hilarious indeed...
Crimson Feet-- In the other graphs, the A and B are shown to equal some object or event or whatever. In this one, to preserve the integrity of the format, they equal C and D, and we are supposed to supply C and D. If we just said, "A is 'x' and B is 'y', it wouldn't fit with the usual format. Explained badly, but I think you can see...
absolutely. Although it was an attempt at being discreet on the issue - my original idea for D was to read "Ashley Olsen knowing this first hand (and mouth and naughty bits)" but I couldn't deal with the emotional backlash this would have began with my childhood memories of the Olsen twins.
This site is a little project that lets me make fun of some things and sense of others.
I use it to think a little more relationally without resorting to doing actual math.
43 comments:
I think I get this one, but if I say so it might ruin it. I think D is the type of joke you wouldn't make in front of your parents.
I get it. I just don't want to spoil the excitement for everyone else.
D = one of my dogs licking the inner ears of my other dog. All day long.
I don't get it. :( Someone spoil it for me.
C = Your friend stepping in a pile of BS
D = Stepping in a pile of BS
C = That's what she said
D = That's what your mom said last night
c = some of the stuff on youtube
d = the rest of the stuff on youtube
C = Cartoon Network at night
D = Cinemax at night
C = a Halloween cake in the shape of Grandpa's head.
D = A Halloween cake in the shape of Grandpa's head with his dentures sticking out of it.
So the answer is that it's subjective?
The title is "Share your Cs and Ds"... meaning that C and D can be whatever you want them to be, and she would like us to come up with our own answers. At least that's what I interpreted it as. I'm not sure what Shan and Jeremy Vanandel were talking about.
It would also seem that C is just a little bit *more* than D... but enough to make the difference....
I love Angela's comment:
"I don't know what Shan and Jeremy Vanandel were talking about"
Neither do I as my interpretation is the same as Angela's essentially... but I have my little theory.
It's one about some people being so insecure that they are happy to have people envy them or think they are smart so they are always "having a blast" and always "get" all jokes... Good for you guys, but the rest of us just don't care...
Else: C & D - the one with BS is hilarious indeed...
P
Yes, I think some of us are ooh-ing and ah-ing a little too loudly over the Emperor's new clothes.
To me, it's about the different meanings of the word "funny," as in, "Does this look/smell/taste funny to you?"
C is a sweater on your wiener dog and D is a sweater on the cheese you forgot in the back of the refrigerator.
You attend a wedding and discover that you are wearing the same dress as
C= a good friend you haven't seen in months
D= a seventy year old transvestite
Some of my best friends are 70 year old transvestites.
C = x
D = b
;)
aw, shit. Algebra. I might have known it would come to this.
C = *Happy Birthday, Mr. President*
D = *Happy Birthday, Atty. General Reno*
C: A child playing in the mud naked
D: A grown man playing in the mud naked
C= Tarts
D= Farts
C=Making fun of your ex.
D=Remembering why you called him "Leaky Sponge".
C = old rubber chicken gag
D = gagging on old, rubbery chicken
Couldn't this easily have been "Share your As and Bs" ? Whats the implication of C & D?
C = Something About Mary
D = Something About Mary
C - How Dan Savage came up with the term santorum
D - santorum
Crimson Feet--
In the other graphs, the A and B are shown to equal some object or event or whatever. In this one, to preserve the integrity of the format, they equal C and D, and we are supposed to supply C and D. If we just said, "A is 'x' and B is 'y', it wouldn't fit with the usual format.
Explained badly, but I think you can see...
C = Someone getting hit in the crotch with a golf ball on America's Funniest Home Videos
D = Someone getting hit in the crotch with a golf ball in real life
or
D = Bob Saget. Period.
In the realm of Bob Saget...
C = Lance Armstrong only having one testicle
D = Ashley Olsen knowing this first hand
The classic guy example.
C = your friend getting whacked in the nuts
D = Getting whacked in the nuts.
C=Your cell phone landing in someone else's lap
D=Your cell phone landing in the toilet
C=The pictures taken at the party.
D=The same pictures, ten years later.
@jared:
Was that pun in "D" intentional?
@ anon
absolutely. Although it was an attempt at being discreet on the issue - my original idea for D was to read "Ashley Olsen knowing this first hand (and mouth and naughty bits)" but I couldn't deal with the emotional backlash this would have began with my childhood memories of the Olsen twins.
Great blog!
C = screwing up a chemistry lab
D = screwing up a biology lab
Seas, end this.
She didn't simply say share your A's and B's, because then it would look like she hadn't indexed anything. Anyway, here are my two cents:
C = Loud but harmless
D = Silent but deadly
c = 2girls1cup reactions on youtube
d = 2girls1cup.com
hahahaha ewwww @5
C = My uncle's mustache
D = Mustache rides on my uncle
I love the rubber chicken one. XD
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