We used to say "Heavy" but you might be too young to remember that one.Deep!!![]()
We used to say "Heavy" but you might be too young to remember that one.Deep!!![]()
no I remember it well.. at 67... however here it was only Hippies who said ..''Heavy''.. heavy on the emphasis..We used to say "Heavy" but you might be too young to remember that one.
Yes, my ex-husband's family was like that regarding religion.Yes with all joking aside, plenty people are snobs regardless of whether they have money.. it just means they feel superior to someone or something.. or even a situation...
This song was playing in the background the first time a boy said to me "can I take it out?"The Beatles ............ "She's so Heavy .............. " (I want you.........I want you soooooo ba a a a ad............I want you ou ou.........I want you so ba a a ad she's driving me mad she's driving me mad)
I said I missed feeling snobby, but that was my first reaction to a question I had never thought about before. Yeah, it felt good thinking I was hot stuff, but obviously, I never actually missed it until the topic came up, and on further consideration, I get a certain satisfaction about having a more realistic view about myself. Maybe I could be snobby about that. Ha!Old age sure is an equalizer! @JustDave
Gary, they lied.I don't know.
Been called a lota things
Never heard that one
I have, however, been called adorable
Hah!Gary, they lied.
Yep. Last week's episode of "Fear Thy Neighbor" was about a couple of families close to where I grew up in West Virginia and it reminded me of some of the poor kids I went to high school with. They didn't actually have addresses so if you asked where they lived they would say, "Up a holler." While we were the "Green Lanes," kids.Someone who thinks someone else might be a snob may be dealing with their own passive-aggressive tendencies and lack of self confidence as to their own perceived set of short comings and insecurities.
There's a sit-com on British television called "Keeping Up Appearances." The central character is an eccentric and snobbish middle class social climber, name of, Hyacinth Bucket, portrayed by the talented, Patricia Routledge, who insists that her surname is pronounced "Bouquet".Yes with all joking aside, plenty people are snobs regardless of whether they have money.. it just means they feel superior to someone or something.. or even a situation...
I think most Americans are familiar with Hyacinth going by previous comments on here...There's a sit-com on British television called "Keeping Up Appearances." The central character is an eccentric and snobbish middle class social climber, name of, Hyacinth Bucket, portrayed by the talented, Patricia Routledge, who insists that her surname is pronounced "Bouquet".
Hyacinth Bucket is so snobbish that if she had to have a colostomy bag it would have to be a Louis Vuitton.
It's been my limited experience that people with old money are much nicer and more at ease with their situation than people with new money.In a hotel bar one evening I fell into conversation with a rather 'Rustic' gentleman. He said he had a farm and told me about the rather ridiculous rules that allowed him to claim grants for growing certain crops, but the market value was so low that he just ploughed them up. Then he asked me who I worked for, and when I told him, he asked if I knew a certain person. Yes, he was my boss' boss. He then told of how they had grown
up in the same small village and how his friend had been a talented footballer and was heading for a career in football, but obviously changed his mind.
Back in the office I sent the boss an email relating this encounter. He replied that yes, he had seriously consider football as a career and it was a surprise that his old friend was a farmer. Then he added, did he tell you that he's a multi-millionaire ? I'd never have guessed it, he just seemed a nice ordinary guy.
In another incident, On a transatlantic flight, I found myself sitting beside the CEO of a large company. I expressed surprise that he was sitting in economy, but he said that he expected his staff to travel in economy, so it was only correct that he should do the same.
I've met a number of people who were rich or held senior positions, and been pleasantly surprised at how polite and approachable they were.