Pappy
Living the Dream
It is mostly baby oil, Vaseline and stuff in lava lamps, whatever that is.
- A bus driver in Asia used WD-40® to remove a python, which had coiled itself around the undercarriage of his bus.
- Police officers used WD-40® to remove a naked burglar trapped in an air conditioning vent.
- Crayola® Stain Removal Tips recommends using WD-40® to remove (regular) crayon marks from a variety of surfaces.
- The WD-40® Book, featuring many user testimonials and the wacky humor of Jim & Tim, The Duct Tape GuysTM, was published in 1997. The familiar blue and yellow can has been featured in other books ranging from The Big Damn Book of Sheer Manliness (General Publishing 1997) Polish Your Furniture With Pantyhose (Hyperion 1995) to WD-40® for the Soul: A Guide To Mending Everything
- Leslie Nielsen portrayed agent Dick Steele (a.k.a., Agent WD-40®) in the 1996 movie Spy Hard
- As The Duct Tape Guys say, “You only need two tools in life, Duct Tape® and WD-40®. If it’s not stuck and it’s supposed to be, Duct Tape it. If it’s stuck and it’s not supposed to be, WD-40® it.”
- It works good for removing paint stained hands and of course for squeaky doors.
- Some fishermen claim that they spray it on their fish hooks, they catch more fish.