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The Miscellaneous Thought Thread

TP2000

Well-Known Member

Do I even want to know what this is?

I'm no prude, and I might have been known to pay a decent cover charge or a two-drink-minimum to get into a bar like this in the late 70's. But using a 21st century lens and sensibility towards this visual??? Nope. You couldn't pay me now.

Please tell me these folks were not on the Disney payroll, and that they just wandered in off Harbor Blvd. after pre-gaming in a Honda Civic parked behind the International House of Pancakes.
 

Disney Irish

Premium Member
Do I even want to know what this is?

I'm no prude, and I might have been known to pay a decent cover charge or a two-drink-minimum to get into a bar like this in the late 70's. But using a 21st century lens and sensibility towards this visual??? Nope. You couldn't pay me now.

Please tell me these folks were not on the Disney payroll, and that they just wandered in off Harbor Blvd. after pre-gaming in a Honda Civic parked behind the International House of Pancakes.
Its a scene from the classic Mel Brooks movie Space Balls with Chewie photo shopped over one of the characters played by John Candy (or in this case supposed to be a stand-in)
 

TP2000

Well-Known Member
Its a scene from the classic Mel Brooks movie Space Balls with Chewie photo shopped over one of the characters played by John Candy (or in this case supposed to be a stand-in)

Oh, phew! I thought maybe TDA was charging a two-drink-minimum at Oga's Cantina for this vignette. I wouldn't put it past them, with their current standards. :cool:

Still, I like the idea of this quartet getting themselves ready in a Honda Civic behind the International House of Pancakes.

That's Showbiz!
 

DLR92

Well-Known Member
My gosh, yes! It's just so early in the season to get this type of rain. We got a nice soaking here this afternoon, about half an inch, which for La Jolla is practically Biblical. Looking at a weather gauge a few streets over from my old place up in OC, they had 1.95 inches today. Over 2 inches all over Anaheim Hills, etc., etc.

Disneyland really got doused too. Landscaping loves a good natural rain, no matter how good the gardeners are at watering.

And over two feet of snow in the southern Sierras today! Have we mentioned it's only mid October?! ❄️⛷️
I’m sure much of tropical plants are appreciating the rain. I can remember smelling pothos vines are melting in the summer heat around Pirates and the Treehouse.
I believe we are in La Niña season. So another dry spell for the winter storms.
 

TP2000

Well-Known Member
I believe we are in La Niña season. So another dry spell for the winter storms.

Yes, it's a "weak" La Nina, and La Nina used to mean a warm and dry winter for SoCal and all of the Southern states. But now, since the weather and climate seems so hard to predict even though people now pretend they can predict it, La Nina can mean anything. So can El Nino. Because the "experts" need to cover all their bases, now that we all have access to Google. Thus, you get statements like this...

Welcome to La Nina where anything can happen including inches of rain across SoCal.

Whereas, traditionally, for those of us who have lived west of the Rockies for many decades, a La Nina winter meant a wet Northwest and a dry Southwest. Until it suddenly doesn't mean that anymore in 2025. The traditional definition of La Nina was just memory holed, and now La Nina means an early, wet, cold winter for SoCal. And me drinking hot tea on a chilly, drizzly patio in mid October! Which is also what El Nino brings. And also what San Diego used to only be in January. Or something.

I can't keep up. 🤣

Screenshot 2025-10-14 11.12.52 PM.png
 

Disney Irish

Premium Member
Yes, it's a "weak" La Nina, and La Nina used to mean a warm and dry winter for SoCal and all of the Southern states. But now, since the weather and climate seems so hard to predict even though people now pretend they can predict it, La Nina can mean anything. So can El Nino. Because the "experts" need to cover all their bases, now that we all have access to Google. Thus, you get statements like this...



Whereas, traditionally, for those of us who have lived west of the Rockies for many decades, a La Nina winter meant a wet Northwest and a dry Southwest. Until it suddenly doesn't mean that anymore in 2025. The traditional definition of La Nina was just memory holed, and now La Nina means an early, wet, cold winter for SoCal. And me drinking hot tea on a chilly, drizzly patio in mid October! Which is also what El Nino brings. And also what San Diego used to only be in January. Or something.

I can't keep up. 🤣

View attachment 887779
You forget I’ve lived in California for ~50 years so I’ve seen all different types of weather patterns including snow in places where it hardly ever snows during La Niña years.
 

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