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Paul: imagine someone thinking of you and buying you flowers
John: ok now imagine a horse as a skeleton with a blue fire mane
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David Ash, ‘Our Kind of Girl - By The Beatles’, Daily Express (21 Nov. 1963)
After the show, after the applause, what kind of girl do the Beatles think about in the loneliness of hotel rooms locked against the fans? [...] So I went and asked them: What is your kind of girl? [...] Paul McCartney, 21, told me: “It would be great to have the sort of girl who would darn my socks and cook apple pies and things.” Now that may sound like Platitude 1 (a) from the pop-star's handbook of ready-made quotes. But this McCartney I think says what he means. He continued: “She'd be attractive, but not the big show-biz personality type of girl, or one who's affected, or a dizzy dumb blonde. “She'd be intelligent - but not fantastically brainy, because I'm not - and interested in all kinds of music. Including mine. “And she'd have to have the right sense of humour. Because we do have what someone called a sense of self-irony. And we laugh at all sorts of off-beat things.”
And physically…? “I like girls to have long hair (it rhymes with 'her'), interesting eyes, and rather high cheekbones. But not turned-up noses. I have one myself, and it's put me right off them. “I don't like Elizabeth Taylor-type looks. And I don't like exaggerated hour-glass figures. The figure doesn't matter all that much. “I like girls in with-it clothes. But some girls look fantastic in just a dirty old sack. Indian girls look great in saris.”
John Lennon was looking around for a scotch. And his face, in serious moments like this, has the fear-neither-God-nor-man quality of a Renaissance painter's aristocrat. At 23, he seems the group's elder statesman. For he is married, with one baby. He talked. Huskily, cryptically. “My kind of girl is, of course, Cynthia. My wife. “I like her looks (she's fair-haired), her cooking; everything about her. I'm an extrovert, and she's the opposite. “We are both indoor types - that's why I don't mind this life, being locked away behind doors. We live at our mum's or our auntie's or hotels. But wherever I'm with her is home. “People have said that every time she comes down to London to see me she is just trying to patch up our marriage. They say, 'You know what they're like in show business.' “But that's not true of us. I don't happen to be showbusiness. I married before I was in it. And I haven't changed my mind since." He added: “Of course, I notice other girls.”
George Harrison - at 20 he's the youngest and (some say) the handsomest - thought he preferred blondes. Smallish ones. Then he decided: "I don't go looking for any special sort of girl. She could be any age from 17 to 40. “I wouldn't like one who was soft (unintelligent). Or one who was terribly intellectual - I wouldn't know what she was on about half the time. “I wouldn't mind if she were arty, hated pop and loved classical music “Oh, yes, and I don't like girls with too much make-up.”
Ringo Starr’s sad eyes gazed thoughtful down at his drumstick-balancing fingers and the four rings on them - none of them with any marital significance. “My girl would be just an ordinary sort of girl, but with just that something different for me,” he said. “I wouldn’t care if she couldn’t cook very well. She could learn. But I don’t like sitting at home, so I’d want a sociable girl who’d come out every time I wanted to go out.”
Not one Beatle mentioned old-fashioned considerations like social status and family connections. In their kinds of girl they all looked for a sense of humour, interest in their work, reasonable dress sense, and a complete lack of pretentiousness.
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he was!
One fun thing about paul mccartney is sometimes he will start talking in sphinx riddles
#this was the last paragraph of the entry for hello goodbye (contrast that with the first paragraph... augh bookends)#i meant to update the post with it days ago#ive been turning over ''a bit crude'' for weeks. i think he meant simplistic?#but yeah not him starting off with ''i'm attracted to the binary'' and ending with ''we were the binary you know ''#beatles#paul#also sorry your icon is grayed out my internet is poor and it didn't load before i screenshotted#wouldn't dare censor bisexual hawkeye
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'Anything you can do I can do better!'
Mad Day Out, 28 July 1968
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🎶 Good morning, good morning 🎶
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going through newspaper archives and i love that in the daily mail from 63-66 they had these cute little mop top doodles to accompany any beatles article
and then you get to 1967
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cant stop wont stop drawing john and yoko
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mister shackleton... it's an honor
#this is my beatles sideblog created because i didn't want my mutuals to kill me when get back came out#but i spend most of my time thinking about boats. and dressing up as ernest shackleton for halloween#personal
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ok well it has been real but i am going to kill you with a hammer now
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One fun thing about paul mccartney is sometimes he will start talking in sphinx riddles
#i mean that sincerely it's like my favorite part of reading the lyrics#sometimes he's like ''oh yeah pinched this lyric from another song and the melody i thought of while driving to see john''#other times he's like ''when you really think about it all any of us are is the sum of everything we aren't subtracted from all that is''#''and i think that's intriguing''#personal#paul#paul mccartney
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John Lennon & Silly Love Songs
This was shared recently in the AKOM Facebook group by a listener. This story has been previously reported in a post by amoralto, but we thought this was also worth sharing!
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this did something to me i fear…… john……..
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i never know how to phrase it but something about the way beatles biographers and people in general view paul's reflexive placating persona and determination to smooth things over as manipulative or duplicitous and john's reflexive barbed persona and habit of lashing out as brave and subversive despite both being equally defensive mechanisms to shield themselves from the world that resulted in them saying things that weren't true says more about how we culturally view kindness or friendliness as inherently untrustworthy or flimsy and anger and carelessness as more believable as someone's true nature than it says about either of them in actuality
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