PITCH ROOM
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Re: PITCH ROOM
PHIL you honor us with these
Re: PITCH ROOM
OK, here's a pitch from Agathe, verbatim just now:
"What if I had a band called Apples
and the names of the people were
Banana
Cherry
Watermelon
and
Orange
?"
"What if I had a band called Apples
and the names of the people were
Banana
Cherry
Watermelon
and
Orange
?"
Re: PITCH ROOM
wow this board is already changing lives
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Who plays what instrument? Can I venture a guess?
Banana on bass
Cherry on drums
Watermelon on guitar and keys
and Orange just wailing and occasionally turning knobs.
Banana on bass
Cherry on drums
Watermelon on guitar and keys
and Orange just wailing and occasionally turning knobs.
Re: PITCH ROOM
In all seriousness though, when was the last time anyone put in a piece of gum? I have a feeling that no one on this board has done a gum since quar. Steve doesn’t count since he is gum.
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Re: PITCH ROOM
I'm not a huge chewer of gum but I'll usually take an offered piece if it ain't cinnamon.
Definitely no gum during quar.
Definitely no gum during quar.
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Re: PITCH ROOM
I have put in a gum during quarantine but it doesn't count apparently because I am gum. I'm pretty sure I chewed some while we took a Sunday drive after not using the car for many weeks and we drove to the airport to check it out and it was empty and I chewed gum in the car.
Re: PITCH ROOM
I’ve had no quar gum
I read yesterday about how you can slice a piece of red cedar sap off the tree and it becomes gum and I will try it if I ever see that kind of tree
I read yesterday about how you can slice a piece of red cedar sap off the tree and it becomes gum and I will try it if I ever see that kind of tree
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I don't love how I do gum and generally abstain. BUT did you know that cinnamon gum is only done in North America? I always bring home a stash of cinnamon gum from trips and I put one in the other day on my way to stock up on items because I realized I had not brushed my teeth!
@alexshred420: Yes! Up with cinnamon gum! (I almost called it cinnamon zub!)
@alexshred420: Yes! Up with cinnamon gum! (I almost called it cinnamon zub!)
Re: PITCH ROOM
COULD YOU IMAGINE
A zub but GUM
Gum zub
A zub but GUM
Gum zub
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Re: PITCH ROOM
Can’t wait to describe gum to my children
Re: PITCH ROOM
team cinnamon gum here!!
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Re: PITCH ROOM
also shoutout to Clove Gum
Is it cinnamon? No
Is it similar? Yes
Is it cinnamon? No
Is it similar? Yes
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Clove zub. But it's gum.
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cinnamon zub make my tongue hurt
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GUYS: pitch = resin = GUM!
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♫ WOKE UP THIS MORNING, GOT YOURSELF A GUM ♪
Re: PITCH ROOM
♫ THEN LOOKED INTO THE MIRROR, AND BY GOD DAD, YOU'RE GUM! ♪
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Re: PITCH ROOM
a pack of gum but instead of individually wrapped sticks of gum the whole thing is just one big piece of gum. also the package (made of gum) says "spearmint" but the flavor is "juicy fruit"
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Re: PITCH ROOM
Pitch: sheets of gum, from the factory, before they cut them into strips, so you can cut your own desired shape
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Re: PITCH ROOM
“Raw gum”
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Re: PITCH ROOM
Steve, remember when we were in Chicago and took a photo of the two of us in front of Wrigley Field because it was “the house that gum built” or something?
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Re: PITCH ROOM
You can also visit the Wrigley Mansion in Pasadena! It's opulent! And made of 100% delicious Wrigley's gum.
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I literally have never said the flavor "juicy fruit" in a way that sounded like it was a juicy piece of fruit. Juicy fruit has always come out of my mind's mouth as one word, 'juicyfruit.' It is blowing my mind that it is supposed to be flavored like an unnamed juicy hunk of fruit.Evan.V.N.S.J. wrote: ↑Mon Apr 20, 2020 10:44 am a pack of gum but instead of individually wrapped sticks of gum the whole thing is just one big piece of gum. also the package (made of gum) says "spearmint" but the flavor is "juicy fruit"
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Re: PITCH ROOM
juicy FRUIT
JUICY fruit
Juice Fruice
Froot
JUICY fruit
Juice Fruice
Froot
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THE TASTE
THE TASTE
THE TASTE
ITS GONNA MOVE YA
THE TASTE
THE TASTE
ITS GONNA MOVE YA
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Here's a good Juicy Fruit song (maybe the best):
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=5tYgzD6FuYc
The chorus goes "Sara loves her Juicy Fruit!" I sing it very often, but instead of Sara I usually say David. But you never know
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=5tYgzD6FuYc
The chorus goes "Sara loves her Juicy Fruit!" I sing it very often, but instead of Sara I usually say David. But you never know

Re: PITCH ROOM
get your skis shined up
grab a stick of
Juicy Fruit
the taste is gonna move you
move you up
move you out
the taste is gonna move you when you pop it in your mouth
Juicy Fruit
is gonna move ya
it's got a taste
that gets right through ya
grab a stick of
Juicy Fruit
the taste is gonna move you
move you up
move you out
the taste is gonna move you when you pop it in your mouth
Juicy Fruit
is gonna move ya
it's got a taste
that gets right through ya
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Just watched!
"Take a sniff, pull it out, the taste is gonna move ya when you pop it in your mouth"
"Take a sniff, pull it out, the taste is gonna move ya when you pop it in your mouth"
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From the golden 80s years when "skiing" was a huge aspect of advertising
skiing was so 80s. Why??
The 80s was when my hometown of Telluride blew up. Until then it had been a fairly sleepy town of around 1,000 people, certainly with a major tourist economy, but not the wild celebrity mansion festival zone it has become today. It all began in the late 80s I believe when we were featured in a Visa commercial, which we all found bizarre and hilarious. Little did we know what was coming!
And now the skiing tourist economy seems as big as ever, but you never see skiing in commercials anymore really. All those gum commercials featuring chairlifts. Also I feel like there were a lot of skiing movies in the 80s (and movies with important skiing scenes, like Better off Dead). What was it about?
skiing was so 80s. Why??
The 80s was when my hometown of Telluride blew up. Until then it had been a fairly sleepy town of around 1,000 people, certainly with a major tourist economy, but not the wild celebrity mansion festival zone it has become today. It all began in the late 80s I believe when we were featured in a Visa commercial, which we all found bizarre and hilarious. Little did we know what was coming!
And now the skiing tourist economy seems as big as ever, but you never see skiing in commercials anymore really. All those gum commercials featuring chairlifts. Also I feel like there were a lot of skiing movies in the 80s (and movies with important skiing scenes, like Better off Dead). What was it about?
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You're FROM Telluride? The name of that town only conjures up the fancy kids from elementary school who went on skiing trips. I can literally hear the word Telluride coming out of Katie Atkinson's 8 year old mouth. I have not heard that name uttered since 1989, probably for the above-stated reasons.
Re: PITCH ROOM
I just took a stroll down Colorado Ave on google maps. That town is charming as all getout.
Re: PITCH ROOM
Hahahaha! Yes I grew up there. We moved there from Texas when I was 7 years old, on what was basically a random whim of my parents, who wanted to live a hippie lifestyle but who got in way over their heads (house on rural mesa with no telephone lines, not on the power grid, and on a dirt road the county didn't maintain in winter thus we had to ski or snowmobile up and down from the highway, etc. Also no running water during the winters until the mid 90s when we finally got a well dug)
It is a very interesting mix of people, or at least it was in the 80s-90s (I haven't been back since college as my parents moved to a different tiny rural Colorado town with a ski resort). It has an interesting history (Wikipedia takes a surprisingly long view of the matter: "The Telluride region was shaped over millions of years by changes in the climate and various rock formations. Originally an inland sea, the area was underwater until a mountain building episode called the Laramie Orogeny pushed up the land 70 million years ago.") Anyway it was a mining town in the 19th century. In the 30s this guy Senior Mahoney who was a miner basically invented the ski mountain (it seems like ancient history but I KNEW HIM, he was still alive and I went to school with his grandkids) when he created a primitive ski lift (a car engine with a tow rope). Swedish miners in the late 19thc had brought the concept of skiing to the region, and all the miners would ski down from the mountain when the workday was done, which was probably pretty fun (Wikipedia says they skied directly to Popcorn Alley, which was at that time full of brothels). Senior Mahoney went on to become the first manager of the official ski mountain. What a career!
Oh anyway but my point is that when I lived there the town was an interesting mix of millionaires who had come there to swan about in glorious natural beauty and hang out at the ski lodge (Oprah famously had a house there at that time, also Tom Cruise, but that was kind of it re: celebrities although many celebrities did come there for the Film Festival and just generally for ski vacations (Arnold Schwarzenegger patted my friend Jill on the butt and everyone talked about it for like a year) and just regular working class people who worked construction and such. A lot of people had this seasonal lifestyle where they worked construction in the summer and then worked as Ski Patrol in the winter. I also know people who make their livings now as caretakers for the various epic mansions that nobody lives in. And so the public school (at that time, K-12 in one building, tiny tiny school) was a mix of rich kids and poor kids for sure. The resort courted the good feeling of the townspeople (who despite of course knowing that much of their livelihood was predicated on the tourist economy were nonetheless extremely grouchy and prickly about the big money and constant tourist nonsense generated by the ski resort) via this truly amazing practice: every single child in the Telluride school district, from kindergarten until they graduated high school, received a FREE SEASON PASS to the mountain. This was a major thing for a lot of people, my family included, who would not or could not have paid for such a thing on their own. It was attached to this vague idea of us "working" for the mountain, like in the summer you'd have this one really boring-ass week where you all had to go up on the mountain and "pitch rocks" or one summer I had to seal like 50,000 envelopes for the tourist office or something. Total make-work to justify then giving us tens of thousands of dollars worth of ski passes. But after that you got your season pass and so everyone in the town grows up skiing very intensely. I went to school with people who went on to being in the Olympics etc. But my point is that it generated a weirdly classless version of ski culture--one result of growing up in Telluride is that I didn't associate skiing with wealth until I went off to college. For us it was very mundane and obvious--all winter long, every single person I knew went skiing all day every Saturday and Sunday, AND back then they also CLOSED THE SCHOOL every single Thursday and Friday after lunch so we could all go to practice (we were all on ski teams). I thought this was totally normal, in fact I complained about it as I would rather have stayed in school on those afternoons but you literally weren't allowed to; now I see that this is fucking bizarre. I'm sure they don't do it anymore. Also on really good powder days it was just taken as a given that school would be closed so everyone could go enjoy the fresh-ass wicked pow pow
MEMORIES OF CHILDHOOD
Also very randomly this popped up on my news feed and I was like !!!
https://www.theatlantic.com/science/arc ... ty/608590/
It is a very interesting mix of people, or at least it was in the 80s-90s (I haven't been back since college as my parents moved to a different tiny rural Colorado town with a ski resort). It has an interesting history (Wikipedia takes a surprisingly long view of the matter: "The Telluride region was shaped over millions of years by changes in the climate and various rock formations. Originally an inland sea, the area was underwater until a mountain building episode called the Laramie Orogeny pushed up the land 70 million years ago.") Anyway it was a mining town in the 19th century. In the 30s this guy Senior Mahoney who was a miner basically invented the ski mountain (it seems like ancient history but I KNEW HIM, he was still alive and I went to school with his grandkids) when he created a primitive ski lift (a car engine with a tow rope). Swedish miners in the late 19thc had brought the concept of skiing to the region, and all the miners would ski down from the mountain when the workday was done, which was probably pretty fun (Wikipedia says they skied directly to Popcorn Alley, which was at that time full of brothels). Senior Mahoney went on to become the first manager of the official ski mountain. What a career!
Oh anyway but my point is that when I lived there the town was an interesting mix of millionaires who had come there to swan about in glorious natural beauty and hang out at the ski lodge (Oprah famously had a house there at that time, also Tom Cruise, but that was kind of it re: celebrities although many celebrities did come there for the Film Festival and just generally for ski vacations (Arnold Schwarzenegger patted my friend Jill on the butt and everyone talked about it for like a year) and just regular working class people who worked construction and such. A lot of people had this seasonal lifestyle where they worked construction in the summer and then worked as Ski Patrol in the winter. I also know people who make their livings now as caretakers for the various epic mansions that nobody lives in. And so the public school (at that time, K-12 in one building, tiny tiny school) was a mix of rich kids and poor kids for sure. The resort courted the good feeling of the townspeople (who despite of course knowing that much of their livelihood was predicated on the tourist economy were nonetheless extremely grouchy and prickly about the big money and constant tourist nonsense generated by the ski resort) via this truly amazing practice: every single child in the Telluride school district, from kindergarten until they graduated high school, received a FREE SEASON PASS to the mountain. This was a major thing for a lot of people, my family included, who would not or could not have paid for such a thing on their own. It was attached to this vague idea of us "working" for the mountain, like in the summer you'd have this one really boring-ass week where you all had to go up on the mountain and "pitch rocks" or one summer I had to seal like 50,000 envelopes for the tourist office or something. Total make-work to justify then giving us tens of thousands of dollars worth of ski passes. But after that you got your season pass and so everyone in the town grows up skiing very intensely. I went to school with people who went on to being in the Olympics etc. But my point is that it generated a weirdly classless version of ski culture--one result of growing up in Telluride is that I didn't associate skiing with wealth until I went off to college. For us it was very mundane and obvious--all winter long, every single person I knew went skiing all day every Saturday and Sunday, AND back then they also CLOSED THE SCHOOL every single Thursday and Friday after lunch so we could all go to practice (we were all on ski teams). I thought this was totally normal, in fact I complained about it as I would rather have stayed in school on those afternoons but you literally weren't allowed to; now I see that this is fucking bizarre. I'm sure they don't do it anymore. Also on really good powder days it was just taken as a given that school would be closed so everyone could go enjoy the fresh-ass wicked pow pow
MEMORIES OF CHILDHOOD
Also very randomly this popped up on my news feed and I was like !!!
https://www.theatlantic.com/science/arc ... ty/608590/
Re: PITCH ROOM
This is impressive. Skiing sounds terrifying to me. I do not think I could survive falling down a mountain. I think it is one of those things you need to learn early enough in life, before fear settles in.
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When I look back on skiing I can't believe I did it. Hurtling down a mountain at max speed so nonchalantly, often eating a bagel with one hand and holding both my poles in the other. I haven't skied in twenty years and do not wish to
Re: PITCH ROOM
Can you ski on gum?
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that's all I've ever skied on
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Pitch: Fresh gum powder, for skiing.
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gum powder you put in a gun that shoots gum
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You went back after college: WITH ME! I liked it a lot. I remember the co-op being great.
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Oh yeah I guess that was after college. You met Dusky!
Were you there for bluegrass festival? Was that when we ate so many veggie hot dogs from that hot dog cart?
Were you there for bluegrass festival? Was that when we ate so many veggie hot dogs from that hot dog cart?
Re: PITCH ROOM
Gum(my) hotdogs.
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I also went back with you post-college. In fact, we lived there the whole summer of 2005.
We did not use gum to ski but we did see gum around.
We did not use gum to ski but we did see gum around.
Re: PITCH ROOM
oh yeah
dang I guess "college" was longer ago than I thought
dang I guess "college" was longer ago than I thought
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I tried to downhill ski for the first time at 15 and it was so scary and hard- I suddenly understood and appreciated my parents cross country ski habit that had embarrassed me for so many years.
Growing up here all the cool kids went on the ski bus each weekend, and instead I went x-country skiing with my mom and dad in their full woolen socks and knickers getup!
Growing up here all the cool kids went on the ski bus each weekend, and instead I went x-country skiing with my mom and dad in their full woolen socks and knickers getup!
Re: PITCH ROOM
Ritchey, the highlight of my very disastrous Colorado trip last summer was seeing a photo of your parents pinned to the wall at the dank sandwich shop in Gunnison! V. cool valued customers!