Four questions, actually, all simple, all based on photos from the past year. Free subscriptions to this blog to anyone who answers all the questions correctly. (For legal reasons, I should probably point out that subscriptions to this blog are always free.) Okay, here’s the first:
QUESTION 1: What did the deceased former Treasury secretaries call for?
Ready for number 2, which my friend Don sent?
QUESTION 2: Do employees check whether the kids really have gas before handing over free food? If so, how?
Moving on:
QUESTION 3: Can we ever trust Dovere’s pool report again?
Last one, which I admit is somewhat personal because I wrote the book on the left:
QUESTION 4: What logical thread unites these three items?
I am looking forward to your answers. Stay safe!
1) “Put your finger in the water, won’t you cool my tongue, ’cause I’m tormenting in the flame!”
2) They have all seen the Pillsbury Dough Boy and know the drill.
3) We must, etymologically speaking.
4) They all relate to the fundamental question of why chickens have never been asked to comment on America’s favorite pastime and how this situation occurred.
(Why I was never a good student, QED)
Free subscription for you, David! I especially like your fourth answer.
With the books, I can reconcile your book and the baseball one–sentences and questions–but the children/chickens book has me confused even on its own! Beyond that, I can’t beat David’s answers.
I am most confused by Amazon’s “frequently bought together” label. Frequently? More than one person chose that combination? A little hard to believe.
1. Feel the burn
2. The ends justify the meals
3. Click on the Baseball book, then the Oyster book, and you get Napoleon’s hemorrhoids. He too felt the burn.
4. They all relate to . . . well, I think you get the idea.
Brilliant! I especially like the second answer.
Well, I don’t have answers to the questions, but an observation, although it has nothing to do with the subject, on the first photo: the guy on the left looks so like Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones.
Now that you mention it, I see it also. Perhaps economics is more aligned with rock than I thought!