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Is There No Irony in Thailand? Then,...What about Scotland?

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My Dearest Loungers,

(I no longer need to call you friends, since you, indeed, have always been my friends.)

 

How long have you lived in Thailand?

 

Have you lived in Thailand long enough to realize that there actually EXISTS irony here among our friends born in this land?

 

Years ago on TV, I occasionally read posts written by TV writers which seemed to argue that Thai people have no humor, or that Thai people do not understand humor.

 

This is so obviously not the case.

 

Thai people are good examples of those with the finest and most refined sense of humor.

Yet, most assuredly, Thai humor is different from (different “to” (speaking in the UK vernacular)) certain forms of western humor.

 

I know a very nice Thai woman, not too young and not too old, whose humor is right up my alley. She is super smart, though, admittedly, she grew up on a farm.  Hers is a case of the best of both worlds: She is just as kind and unprepossessing as any farm girl.  And yet, her understanding of humor is most decidedly on the level of any girl from NYC or Glasgow.

 

Speaking of Scotland and the Scottish people who are among my friends here in the Lounge, Scottish humor I give a 9.8 out of 10, in terms of deliciousness. And the Irish, I give them a 9.8 out of 9.9, which is to say, slightly higher, percentage wise.  Their fine humor is probably a  product of their climate and their history, and maybe the baroness of some of the landscape where they are born.

 

If ever there were two very good places to learn about irony, then Scotland and Ireland are these.

 

Almost forty years ago to this very day, an Irish client of mine from the company Oriflame visited me in Asia. I drove him around the Isle of Formosa for four hours, as a matter of courtesy, just to allow him the opportunity to see the monotonous sights. This guy had the gift of gab beyond anything you might imagine. His spoken sentences displayed not only intelligence but also a finely honed command of the King’s English.  He was a gift from heaven for me, and such a pleasant respite from my dreary existence on such a dreary island, one almost totally devoid of intelligent or, even, intelligible humor.

 

This guy from Ireland, which is the custom of the Irish, brought me two wonderful gifts, a bottle of Bushmills and an outstanding cassette tape of the Chieftains. How might he have known that I loved, so much, single malt and Celtic music?

 

One of my greatest hopes is that, some day, before I die, I will be able to visit both Scotland and Ireland, hopefully Scotland first.

 

I have heard that trout fishing in Scotland is second to none, though more expensive than trout fishing in Colorado.

 

Some day, maybe, I will actually visit both Scotland and Ireland, two places I have dreamed about visiting since getting hooked on films in my youth which were produced many years before I was born.

 

Speaking of trout, there is one beautiful scene from a movie which seems to have remained with me, beautifully choreographed, in my opinion.

 

And speaking of trout, again, the word trout in English has so many connotations and slang meanings.  I know this.  And this is why I mentioned this term here.

 

Still, I know that you will, down deep, appreciate this beautiful clip from an otherwise less than stellar film, some might say.

 

Irony, in its finest, should be subtle.

Irony, at its best, should not be easily understood by the masses.

Irony, in fact, should be almost unidentifiable when first encountered in a sentence.

Irony is just no good when everybody knows, immediately, exactly what one is implying.

 

Love this scene, and, someday, lord willing, I will see one just as good in Scotland….

 

 

Regards,

G.

 

 

 

I am not sure about irony, but you can get tinnies in Scotland.

  • Author
4 hours ago, StreetCowboy said:

I am not sure about irony, but you can get tinnies in Scotland.

Is a tinny the same as a coffyn? 

 

By the way, I wonder, concerning a more wondrous question, whether or not Goggle Search is already past its prime, like Brody? 

 

Miss Jeane Brody was well meaning while in her prime. 

 

And then, she let her pride get the better of her. 

 

When a search engine becomes overly ad-driven, then the search engine becomes nothing more than a marketing tool for advertisers. 

 

While searching for the term tinny, I was offered up things like brassieres of tin. 

 

I am tired of fighting 5th-Avenue ad men who do no harm. 

 

Milo MINDERBINDER is not my friend. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3 hours ago, GammaGlobulin said:

Is a tinny the same as a coffyn? 

 

By the way, I wonder, concerning a more wondrous question, whether or not Goggle Search is already past its prime, like Brody? 

 

Miss Jeane Brody was well meaning while in her prime. 

 

And then, she let her pride get the better of her. 

 

When a search engine becomes overly ad-driven, then the search engine becomes nothing more than a marketing tool for advertisers. 

 

While searching for the term tinny, I was offered up things like brassieres of tin. 

 

I am tired of fighting 5th-Avenue ad men who do no harm. 

 

Milo MINDERBINDER is not my friend. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Milo Minderbinder was everyone's friend so long as the price was right, and the payment came through on time; until he was someone else's friend.

  • 2 weeks later...

Irony, of it's base form, is an Asian invention. 

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