#Gerald Nachman
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The Chappelle Complex
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Gerald Nachman: Nachman's Rule
“Nachman’s Rule: When it comes to foreign food, the less |authentic the better.”—Gerald Nachman.
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Funny Cooking Quotes
Enjoy reading this collection of funny cooking quotes which may bring a smile to your face. Remember, food must be enjoyed, so enjoy these lines curated by the Nowily review team.
A party without cake is just a meeting. — Julia Child
I don't even butter my bread. I consider that cooking. —Katherine Cebrian
There is such a buildup of crud in my oven there is only room to bake a single cupcake. —Phyllis Diller
The two biggest sellers in any bookstore are the cookbooks and the diet books. The cookbooks tell you how to prepare the food, and the diet books tell you how not to eat any of it. —Andy Rooney
It's so beautifully arranged on the plate—you know someone's fingers have been all over it. —Julia Child commenting on nouvelle cuisine
When compelled to cook, I produce a meal that would make a sword swallower gag. —Russell Baker
Life is too short to stuff a mushroom. —Storm Jameson
The most remarkable thing about my mother is that for thirty years she served the family nothing but leftovers. The original meal has never been found. —Calvin Trillin
I prefer my oysters fried; that way I know my oysters died. —Roy G. Blount, Jr.
God sends meat and the devil sends cooks. —Thomas Deloney (1543-1600)
There is no sincerer love than the love of food. —George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)
I was 32 when I started cooking; up until then, I just ate. — Julia Child
The most dangerous food is wedding cake. —American proverb
Poets have been mysteriously silent on the subject of cheese. —G. K. Chesterson (1874-1936)
Recipe For Chili: Put a pot of chili on the stove to simmer. Let it simmer. Meanwhile, broil a good steak. Eat the steak. Let the chili simmer. Ignore it. —Allan Shivers, former governor of Texas
Nachman's Rule: When it comes to foreign food, the less authentic the better. —Gerald Nachman
Isn't there any other part of the matzo you can eat? —Marilyn Monroe (1926-1962) after having eaten matzo ball soup three times in a row
No one is lonely while eating spaghetti. —Robert Morley
A louse in the cabbage is better than no meat at all. —Pennsylvania Dutch proverb
I will not eat oysters. I want my food dead—not sick, not wounded—dead. —Woody Allen
The only time to eat diet food is while you're waiting for the steak to cook. — Funny cooking quote by Julia Child
We didn't starve, but we didn't eat chicken unless we were sick, or the chicken was. —Bernard Malamud (1914-1986)
Eating an artichoke is like getting to know someone really well. —Willi Hastings
When men reach their sixties and retire, they go to pieces. Women go right on cooking. —Gail Sheehy
Only Irish coffee provides in a single glass all four essential food groups: alcohol, caffeine, sugar, and fat. —Alex Levine
In Mexico we have a word for sushi: bait. —Jose Simon
Part of the secret of success in life is to eat what you like and let the food fight it out inside. —Mark Twain (1835-1910)
I prefer Hostess® fruit pies to pop-up Pop-Tarts® because they don't require so much cooking. —Carrie Snow
You know why the French hate us? They gave us the croissant. And you know what we did with it? We turned it into a croissandwich. —Denis Leary
The trouble with eating Italian food is that five or six days later you're hungry again. —George Miller
For more great cooking content to inspire your next meal, check out Nowily today.
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Watch:
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel - A housewife in the 1950s seemingly has it all but her life takes a surprising turn when she decides to become a stand-up comic.
Read:
We Killed: The Rise of Women in American Comedy by Yael Kohen - An oral history tracing the careers and achievements of comediennes from the past half century that challenges opinions about why women cannot be effective comedic entertainers and includes coverage of celebrities ranging from Joan Rivers and Lily Tomlin to Mary Tyler Moore and Tina Fey.
Enter Talking by Joan Rivers - Joan Rivers describes her bitter and bizarre rise to stardom, from her earliest memories that she belonged onstage, through her independent struggle in Manhattan, to the evolution of her one-person show and the winning of public and critical acclaim.
Like a Lampshade in a Whorehouse: My Life in Comedy by Phyllis Diller - The stand-up comedian discusses her decision to start a professional career in her late thirties, her two difficult marriages, her extensive cosmetic surgery, and her numerous film, television, and stage performances.
Seriously Funny: The Rebel Comedians of the 1950s and 1960s by Gerald Nachman - Presents the stories of the groundbreaking comedy stars of the 50s and 60s, including how each shaped comedy and culture.
Erotic Stories for Punjabi Widows by Balli Kaur Jaswal - Nikki, a 22-year-old modern Punjabi woman, decides to teach a writing workshop for Punjabi widows two days a week in London’s Southall area. When her students find a book of erotic stories she bought as a gag gift they decide they want to learn English by writing their own steamy tales despite the risk of cultural disapproval if found out.
The Secret Life of Violet Grant by Beatriz Williams - Defying the privilege of her 1960s Fifth Avenue family to pursue a job with a style magazine, recent college graduate Vivian Schuyler discovers a secret about an aunt she never knew who at the dawn of World War I fled her oppressive marriage to pursue an audacious goal.
#Watch This Read That#books#reading#booklr#the marvelous mrs. maisel#women in comedy#stand up comedy#fiction#tv series
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Julia Meade Kunz (December 17, 1925 – May 16, 2016) Film and stage actress who was a frequent pitch person in live commercials in the early days of television in the 1950s.
Meade came to public attention in 1953 as the public face of the Lincoln division of the Ford Motor Company. She did live commercials on The Ed Sullivan Show for such products as Kodak cameras and Life magazine for years, earning recognition from TV Guide as the "favorite salesgirl" of the program's host. Meade told Life magazine in 1960 that "I tackle commercials as though I were playing the queen in Hamlet". Meade's pitch work involved doing live commercials that ran for up to five minutes, becoming most closely associated with her promotions of Lincoln automobiles, with her work for the car company described by Gerald Nachman as "part auto dealer, part chic sexpot".
Meade and Zachary Scott were co-hosts of Spotlight Playhouse, a summer anthology program on CBS in 1959. In 1969-1971, Meade hosted the syndicated program Ask Julia Meade, a daily broadcast "in which she answered ... letters from the viewers" about family matters. In the mid-1970s, she had another syndicated program, Julia Meade and Friends, on cable television. She was a regular on Club Embassy on NBC in 1952 and on The Dennis James Show on ABC, 1952-1954. She also was a host of Playhouse 90 and appeared as a panelist on What's My Line? and Get the Message. (Wikipedia)
#Julia Meade#Obit#Obituary#TV#O2016#Commercials#The Ed Sullivan Show#Ask Julia Meade#Julia Meade and Friends#Club Embassy#The Dennis James Show#Playhouse 90#Spotlight Playhouse
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The 61 books posted on JewishBookWorld.org in May 2020
Here is the list of the 61 books that I posted on this site, JewishBookWorld.org in May 2020. The image above contains some of the covers. The bold links take you to the book’s page on Amazon; the “on this site” links to the book’s page on this site.
The Abba Tree by Devora Busheri and Gal Shkedi (on this site)
All My Mother’s Lovers by Ilana Masad (on this site)
American Jewish Thought Since 1934: Writings on Identity, Engagement, and Belief by Michael Marmur, David Ellenson (on this site)
And in the Vienna Woods the Trees Remain by Elisabeth Asbrink (on this site)
Another Side of Paradise by Sally Koslow (on this site)
As I Was Burying Comrade Stalin: My Life Becoming a Jewish Dissident by Arkady Polishchuk (on this site)
Between Religion and Reason: The Dialectical Position in Contemporary Jewish Thought from Rav Kook to Rav Shagar, Part I by Ephraim Chamiel (on this site)
Blessed as We Were by Gerald Stern (on this site)
Blood Memory by Gail Newman (on this site)
A Body Of Her Own: Jewish Women Sharing Intimate Stories About Their Mikveh Rituals by Ella Kanner (on this site)
The Book of V. by Anna Solomon (on this site)
The Boy Who Followed His Father into Auschwitz: A True Story of Family and Survival by Jeremy Dronfield (on this site)
Boynton Beach Chronicles: Tails of Norman by Jerry Klinger (on this site)
Casting Down the Host of Heaven by Cat Quine (on this site)
A Ceiling Made of Eggshells by Gail Carson Levine (on this site)
Child Harold of Dysna by Moyshe Kulbak (on this site)
Cilka’s Journey by Heather Morris (on this site)
Citizenship and Antisemitism in French Colonial Algeria, 1870-1962 by Sophie B. Roberts (on this site)
The Coat by April Grunspan (on this site)
The Collaborator by Diane Armstrong (on this site)
A Companion to Late Ancient Jews and Judaism: 3rd Century BCE – 7th Century CE by Gwynn Kessler, Naomi Koltun-Fromm (on this site)
The Convert by Stefan Hertmans (on this site)
Deaf Republic by Ilya Kaminsky (on this site)
Defenders of the Faith: Studies in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Orthodoxy and Reform by Judith Bleich (on this site)
Designated Hebrew: The Ron Blomberg Story by Ron Blomberg (on this site)
Don’t Tell Ima by Lisa Barness (on this site)
Dressed for a Dance in the Snow: Women’s Voices from the Gulag by Monika Zgustova (on this site)
Embracing Auschwitz: Forging a Vibrant, Life-Affirming Judaism that Takes the Holocaust by Joshua Hammerman (on this site)
Eve and All the Wrong Men by Aviya Kushner (on this site)
Exile Music by Jennifer Steil (on this site)
Hidden Heretics: Jewish Doubt in the Digital Age by Ayala Fader (on this site)
The Interpreter by A.J. Sidransky (on this site)
The Jewish Spy by Hayuta Katzenelson (on this site)
The Jewish Wedding: A Guide to the Rituals and Traditions of the Wedding Ceremony by Dovber Pinson (on this site)
The Jews Of Iraq: 3000 Years Of History And Culture by Nissim Rejwan (on this site)
Judaism, Race, and Ethics: Conversations and Questions by Jonathan K. Crane (on this site)
The King of Chicago: Memories of My Father by Daniel Friedman (on this site)
KOLOT: Raising a Jewish Daughter by Valley Beit Midrash (on this site)
Levinas and the Torah: A Phenomenological Approach by Richard I. Sugarman (on this site)
The Lost Book of Adana Moreau by Michael Zapata (on this site)
Man of My Time by Dalia Sofer (on this site)
Mendelevski’s Box by Roger Swindells (on this site)
The Mystery of the Kibbutz: Egalitarian Principles in a Capitalist World by Ran Abramitzky (on this site)
Never to Be Forgotten: A Young Girl’s Holocaust Memoir by Beatrice Muchman (on this site)
The New Zionists: Young American Jews, Jewish National Identity, and Israel by David L. Graizbord (on this site)
Other Covenants: Alternate Histories of the Jewish People by (on this site)
Pain by Zeruya Shalev (on this site)
Projecting the Nation: History and Ideology on the Israeli Screen by Eran Kaplan (on this site)
Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi: Essential Teachings by Or N. Rose, Netanel Miles-Yépez (on this site)
Rebbe Nachman’s Tales: Stories for Personal Refinement by Bruce D. Forman, Steven J. Kaplan, Shoshannah Brombacher (on this site)
Recipes for a Sacred Life: True Stories and a Few Miracles by Rivvy Neshama (on this site)
Refugees or Migrants: Pre-Modern Jewish Population Movement by Robert Chazan (on this site)
Rescued from the Ashes: The Diary of Leokadia Schmidt, Survivor of the Warsaw Ghetto by Leokadia Schmidt (on this site)
The Secret Music at Tordesillas by Marjorie Sandor (on this site)
Serenade for Nadia by Zülfü Livaneli (on this site)
The Shabbat Treasure by Evelyn Goldfinger (on this site)
Shrapnel Maps by Philip Metres (on this site)
Shuk: From Market to Table, the Heart of Israeli Home Cooking by Einat Admony, Janna Gur (on this site)
Stan Lee: A Life in Comics by Liel Leibovitz (on this site)
Villa of Delirium by Adrien Goetz (on this site)
Vladimir Jabotinsky’s Russian Years, 1900-1925 by Brian J. Horowitz (on this site)
The post The 61 books posted on JewishBookWorld.org in May 2020 appeared first on Jewish Book World.
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"Nothing fails like success."
Gerald Nachman
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My Year of the Book - Day 52: While re-shelving my Wallace Stegner books yesterday after posting Day 51 of MYOTB, I glanced at the cover of “Remembering Laughter,” and it struck me that the word “laugh” or one of its variants appears on the spines of several of my books. So today, just for (ahem) laughs, I chose to unite a few (certainly not all...too many are currently boxed up) like-minded tomes for a mirthful mash-up. Some have appeared here previously, and some will be featured in the future, but in the meantime, here they are in all their grinning glory: “Remembering Laughter” (1937) by Wallace Stegner (Day 51); “Keep Laughing” (1959) by Morey Amsterdam, a joke book from “The Dick Van Dyke Show”’s human joke machine; “A Gift of Laughter” (1965) an autobio by Allan Sherman, best known for his satirical song parodies (“Hello, Mudda, Hello, Faddah”); “Laughing With Lucy” (2005), a memoir by Madelyn Pugh Davis and Bob Carroll, Jr., two of “I Love Lucy”’s best writers; “Laughter’s Gentle Soul” (1997), a bio of humorist Robert Benchley by Billy Altman; “Laughter is a Wonderful Thing” (1956), an autobio by early screen comedian Joe E. Brown; (for Stan Freberg and Phil Silvers, See Days 33 and 23); “Laughing Matters” (1998), Larry Gelbart’s fine (and signed) memoir of his work on “M.A.S.H.,” “Tootsie,” “Oh, God,” and dozens of other shows; “Dangerously Funny” (2009) by David Bianculli, which tells the “uncensored” tale of “The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour” on CBS; “Seriously Funny” (2003), Gerald Nachman’s fascinating book powered by interviews with comedians and satirists of the 1950s and 1960s; “So Far, So Funny” a 1999 memoir by film comedy writer Hal Kanter; “A Great, Big Silly Grin,” Humphrey Carpenter’s look at the 1960s British satire boom from 2000; and finally, “A Brief History of the Smile” (2004), a look at the meaning and uses of happy faces throughout history by Angus Trumble. So...what other laughs and giggles do you have facing out from your bookshelves? #smile #laughing #laughter #book #booklover #bookgeek #booksofinstagram #bookworm #bookstagram #bibliophile #funny #comedy #comedians #mylibrary #yearofthebook
#bookstagram#yearofthebook#bibliophile#laughing#comedy#mylibrary#smile#booksofinstagram#funny#laughter#bookgeek#book#bookworm#comedians#booklover
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Tweeted
Nothing fails like success. - Gerald Nachman
— Durgesh Gupta (@DurgeshG7) October 27, 2017
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원문 : Nothing fails like success. (Gerald Nachman)
단어)
- nothing : 아무것도[단하나도](~아니다・없다)
- fail : 실패하다,~하지못하다
- like : ~와비슷한
- success : 성공,성과
해석 : 성공만큼 큰 실패는 없다.
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Nothing fails like success.
Gerald Nachman
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“[Will] Rogers on the air and everywhere he spoke, personified the anti-intellectualism that America still harbors.” - Gerald Nachman
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Tweeted
Nothing fails like success. - Gerald Nachman
— Durgesh Gupta (@DurgeshG7) October 21, 2017
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