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JessiCapri

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Viewing 15 posts - 1,126 through 1,140 (of 3,758 total)
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  • in reply to: Music. What I’m listening to… #186606
    JessiCapri
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      Blue Christmas (Not the Blue Christmas that immediately comes to mind)

      in reply to: Music. What I’m listening to… #186604
      JessiCapri
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        KWS ~~ Trouble Is

        in reply to: Music. What I’m listening to… #186603
        JessiCapri
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          KWS ~ I’m a King Bee

          in reply to: Interesting History… Did you Know… #186593
          JessiCapri
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            Wow, I had no idea about the origin story of Rudolph the Red-Nose Reindeer! If you aren’t familiar with it either, read below:

            As the holiday season of 1938 came to Chicago, Bob May wasn’t feeling much comfort or joy. A 34-year-old ad writer for Montgomery Ward, May was exhausted and nearly broke. His wife, Evelyn, was bedridden, on the losing end of a two-year battle with cancer. This left Bob to look after their four-year old-daughter, Barbara.

            One night, Barbara asked her father, “Why isn’t my mommy like everybody else’s mommy?” As he struggled to answer his daughter’s question, Bob remembered the pain of his own childhood. A small, sickly boy, he was constantly picked on and called names. But he wanted to give his daughter hope, and show her that being different was nothing to be ashamed of. More than that, he wanted her to know that he loved her and would always take care of her. So he began to spin a tale about a reindeer with a bright red nose who found a special place on Santa’s team. Barbara loved the story so much that she made her father tell it every night before bedtime. As he did, it grew more elaborate. Because he couldn’t afford to buy his daughter a gift for Christmas, Bob decided to turn the story into a homemade picture book.

            In early December, Bob’s wife died. Though he was heartbroken, he kept working on the book for his daughter. A few days before Christmas, he reluctantly attended a company party at Montgomery Ward. His co-workers encouraged him to share the story he’d written. After he read it, there was a standing ovation. Everyone wanted copies of their own. Montgomery Ward bought the rights to the book from their debt-ridden employee. Over the next six years, at Christmas, they gave away six million copies of Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer to shoppers. Every major publishing house in the country was making offers to obtain the book. In an incredible display of good will, the head of the department store returned all rights to Bob May. Four years later, Rudolph had made him into a millionaire.
            .
            Now remarried with a growing family, May felt blessed by his good fortune. But there was more to come. His brother-in-law, a successful songwriter named Johnny Marks, set the uplifting story to music. The song was pitched to artists from Bing Crosby on down. They all passed. Finally, Marks approached Gene Autry. The cowboy star had scored a holiday hit with “Here Comes Santa Claus” a few years before. Like the others, Autry wasn’t impressed with the song about the misfit reindeer. Marks begged him to give it a second listen. Autry played it for his wife, Ina. She was so touched by the line “They wouldn’t let poor Rudolph play in any reindeer games” that she insisted her husband record the tune.

            Within a few years, it had become the second best-selling Christmas song ever, right behind “White Christmas.” Since then, Rudolph has come to life in TV specials, cartoons, movies, toys, games, coloring books, greeting cards and even a Ringling Bros. circus act. The little red-nosed reindeer dreamed up by Bob May and immortalized in song by Johnny Marks has come to symbolize Christmas as much as Santa Claus, evergreen trees and presents. As the last line of the song says, “He’ll go down in history.”

            in reply to: Interesting History… Did you Know… #186592
            JessiCapri
            Participant

              WWII DUTCH RESISTANCE FIGHTER WHO HELPED DOWNED ALLIED PILOTS….AUDREY HEPBURN.
              Most people know her as a film actress, but she worked with Dutch resistance groups during the war to defeat the Nazis. The 15-year-old Hepburn delivered a Dutch resistance newspaper. “I stuffed them in my woolen socks in my wooden shoes, got on my bike and delivered them,” she said. Paper was in short supply, you see, so each edition was printed on paper smaller than a napkin. Hepburn’s age and ability to speak English made her uniquely qualified to avoid suspicion. So the 15-year-old future star could slip into an area of downed Allied pilots to pass messages and bear food packages. If she had been caught, though, it would have been disastrous.

              in reply to: Kissing #186591
              JessiCapri
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                in reply to: Things that make you smile & giggle #186590
                JessiCapri
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                  in reply to: ASS Fetish #186588
                  JessiCapri
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                    in reply to: SHIBARI #186581
                    JessiCapri
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                      in reply to: SHIBARI #186579
                      JessiCapri
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                        in reply to: SPANKING! #186578
                        JessiCapri
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                          in reply to: Erotic & Sensual Domination #186577
                          JessiCapri
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                            in reply to: Erotic & Sensual Domination #186575
                            JessiCapri
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                              @Kissmedeeply Which? Sorry but my spouse and Master Vaughan does not share me. Have a wonderful holiday season!

                              in reply to: Dance, Dance, DANCE! #186066
                              JessiCapri
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                                in reply to: Joy of the Day #186006
                                JessiCapri
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                                Viewing 15 posts - 1,126 through 1,140 (of 3,758 total)