Saturday, December 15, 2007

Unquotable Quotes - Part 35

Gordon is grossly over-used.
— Darth Teddy to Kahuna, critiquing Gordon's substantial presence in UQ34.

Gah, I feel like Old MacDonald of farm fame: EIEIOO and a blank tile.
— Kahuna to Darth Teddy, expressing frustration at a highly bogus hand of tiles during an intercontinental game of Scrabble.

Now, when are you leaving your buffalo government and moving to Australia?
— Her Royal Highness, attempting to entice Kahuna to kangaroo politics.

I should take a large polar bear to swat the attendees of my next meeting.
— Kahuna to Gordon, pondering the rare use of an unarmed bear[1].

Very soon she'll request business class.
— Kahuna, on learning that Gordon's offspring had turned up and requested laptop seating.

Of course this might be a new commode design; Richard Branson has those tilting trains: the Pendolinos; this could be the tilting bog.
— Kahuna to Gordon, on unexpectedly encountering pitch, roll and yaw at sea level while answering a call of nature.

Just in case, I have checked the airline off my preferred list.
— Gordon to Kahuna, on learning of Nepal Airlines sacrificing goats to fix a mechanical problem.

She now effectively executes a short message service and small object deliveries.
— Gordon to Kahuna, revealing his offspring's new solution offerings.

Just wait till she implements MIME support.
— Kahuna, warning Gordon of the things to come.

Perhaps someone should release a rottweiler in parliament.
— Gordon to Kahuna, proposing to deal with the root cause of the domestic dog tax.

Yes, intelligence reported that you lunched at Ahmedinejad's.
— Kahuna, on Gordon lunching at an Iranian restaurant.

Oh you noticed by the phallic style?
— Kahuna, on Gordon's prompt identification of Timmy the Ambidextrous in a photograph.

Did you talk to the other Kahuna? The real one?
— Vandoofus to Kahuna, blatantly disregarding the One Kahuna Policy.

You might as well look for a private waterfall at those prices.
— Gordon, commenting on the high cost of Kahuna's bathroom renovation.

Have you finished paying for your dentist's new yacht yet?
— Kahuna, querying the state of Gordon's nautical endodontics.

Er no, we decided not to fund his yacht.
— Gordon to Kahuna, disclosing plans to bail on his dentist.

Try not to hump in the produce aisle.
— Kahuna, learning of a grocery shopping spree by Darth Teddy.

What else is the produce aisle for?
— Darth Teddy to Kahuna, offering a dubious interpretation grocery shopping.

I'm sure Darth Teddy will teach you all the naughty stuff.
— Kahuna, expressing confidence to Fluke about being appropriately indoctrinated by Darth Teddy.

You've been pointing the camera in the same direction as your anaconda.
— Kahuna, taking Darth Teddy to task for upskirt photographs during the Notting Hill Carnival.

This is a direct violation of our non-proliferation treaty.
— Kahuna, taking Gordon to task for unilaterally raising his speaker count to 65.

Well I need speakers: Placido Domingo et al., don't do house calls.
— Gordon, justifying his high speaker count to Kahuna.

You mean they are showing football?
— Darth Teddy to Kahuna on being told that in-flight entertainment on the Pope's new airline would be religious in nature.

I can't quite picture The Vatican Cardinals, no.
— Kahuna to Darth Teddy, downplaying the possibility of Benedict XVI mooting a soccer team.

It looks like you're quite capable of doing yourself a serious injury without my help.
— Kahuna, noting Darth Teddy's latest run-in with a cricket ball.

Indeed, it shows that I have a cute butt, that I have conquered most of Europe and that you have a squirrel fetish.
— Darth Teddy to Kahuna, arriving at a highly unorthodox conclusion from the daily strip of Jef Mallet's Frazz that ran on August 25th 2007[1].

Yes, your competitive sporting escapades are well known across Europe.
— Kahuna, taking a dubious view about Darth Teddy's activities across the continent.

By my own admission I am irresistible.
— Darth Teddy's Corollary to Ohm's Law.

My pointy end has been the pleasure of many a fair maiden.
— Darth Teddy's Pointy Teddy Hypothesis.

I couldn't bug you the last two days and am just making my presence felt.
— The Baroness to Kahuna, catching up for lost time.

Your demise by means of a pitchfork-wielding mob of dissatisfied guests is long overdue.
— Kahuna, announcing displeasure at the continued presence of the Baroness.

That idiot has never photographed a human in its life.
— Kahuna to Darth Teddy, on the Ex-Dictator.

This could spell doom for Durex.
— Kahuna, voicing concern that Darth Teddy would be in hibernation.

Ah, the board of directors of Durex will sigh with relief.
— Kahuna, on receiving new information that Darth Teddy would merely be taking a nap.

I can just picture Al Pacino starring in the story of your life: The Scent of a Bottle.
— Kahuna, discovering Darth Teddy hovering around thirteen crates of JD sent to Bartus Maximus.


[1] Kahuna's unusual interpretation of the second amendment has been extensively documented.

[2] This strip, which sadly is no longer available online, depicts a conversation between a kid at Bryson Elementary and Frazz. The kid says, "People love squirrels. People don't like rats. Never dismiss the public relations value of a cute backside." Frazz responds with, "I won't be commenting, please," and the kid adds, "That, and not wiping out the bulk of Europe with the plague."

6 comments:

Big Kahuna said...

Latest update: The Frazz strip referred to can now be seen online here at comics.com.

Bartman said...

Oi! Where's this crate of Jack Daniels I'm supposed to have received??

Big Kahuna said...

Gadzooks, you've not received them yet? Come to think of it, Teddy did have his eye on them. I fear the worst...

Darth Teddy said...

bah ... it was only a crate ... and i wasn't in a mood to share

Big Kahuna said...

I believe thirteen crates are unaccounted for X-( Incidentally, Friday the 13th is just about the corner again.

Big Kahuna said...

Incidentally, the Frazz comic strip referred to is now available online here as comics.com has decided to put their historical archive on the web.