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Search "Snyder" returned 7 Jokes
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Steve Hofstetter's National Lampoon Sports Minute
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Dan Snyder Laments Season

By: Steve Hofstetter's National Lampoon Sports Minute (C)
Submitted: Nov 5, 2009
Category: Sports  
From Hot Topic

Washington Redskins

20 Jokes

Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder told reporters that the team is letting everybody down. Except, of course, Nationals fans.


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Keith Alberstadt
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Watchmen Buzz

By: Keith Alberstadt (C)
Submitted: Feb 27, 2009
Category: Entertainment  Staff Pick!

Watchmen Buzz

"Watchmen" director Zack Snyder said the movie is a lot like his other hit "300".  Primarily because that's how old the average fans will be when they finally get a date.



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Kevin Fitzgerald
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Redskins Sign Former Raider CB Hall

By: Kevin Fitzgerald (C)
Submitted: Nov 7, 2008
Category: Sports  
From Hot Topic

Washington Redskins

20 Jokes

No way Al Davis & Dan Snyder are both wrong.


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Chad Reiling
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Aaargh, you get an A, matey

By: Chad Reiling (C)
Submitted: Apr 29, 2007
Category: News  
From Hot Topic

School

933 Jokes  35 Videos

Stacy Snyder has filed a federal lawsuit against Millersville University for denying her an education degree and teaching license because of a picture on her myspace page. The photo in question showed Snyder holding a drink, with the caption “Drunken Pirate.”

Finally, a teacher willing to give even the fat ugly kid with no friends a shot at sleeping with her.

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Doug Chagnon
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Bitin' a Cop

By: Doug Chagnon (C)
Submitted: Mar 12, 2007
Category: News  
From Hot Topic

Cop

1359 Jokes  15 Videos

A man who police say tried to eat a bank robbery note and then bit a police officer is facing felony charges. Leland Snyder, 24, of Muskegon, loves bacon.

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Phil Hall
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Alice of Wonderland in Paris

By: Phil Hall (C)
Submitted: Oct 12, 2006
Category: Blogs  
From Hot Topic

Oscar

62 Jokes

One of my primary media affiliations is with Film Threat (www.filmthreat.com).  I have a weekly column there called The Bootleg Files, which celebrates classic and kooky movies that can only be found on bootlegged videos and DVDs.  I was particulary with last week's column, which focused on a truly inane 1966 animated film.  Reprinted courtesy of Film Threat, here is my column:

When it comes to animation, one can have a lively debate regarding which person deserves the title of the greatest animator of all time. However, there won’t be much of a debate regarding the worse animator of all time: Gene Deitch.

Gene who? Well, you may not recognize the name but you will know his work: he was responsible for those sloppy, creepy, utterly unfunny Tom and Jerry and Popeye cartoons in the early 1960s. Deitch actually managed to work with two highly respected animation studios, UPA and Terrytoons, before leaving Hollywood in 1960 to move to Prague. That career switch was rather weird, given that Prague was far behind the Iron Curtain and many Czechoslovakians would’ve rather immigrated to America. But Deitch’s reverse journey came at the request of another Yank expatriate in Prague, film distributor William L. Snyder, who ran Rembrandt Films from the Czechoslovakian capital with the purpose of exporting cheaply-made local movies to unsuspecting American theaters. With Deitch in Prague, Snyder was able to ensure the Americanization of his products.

One of the earlier Snyder-Deitch productions, the fey animated short “Munro,” won an Oscar. But that was their sole artistic triumph. Their Tom and Jerry output and their Popeye cartoons won nothing but contempt – both series were abruptly cancelled due to poor audience reaction. Not willing to be sunk by bad reviews, Snyder and Deitch decided to upgrade from short subjects to feature films, and that leads us to “Alice of Wonderland in Paris.”

If you are expecting anything similar to the Walt Disney odyssey through Wonderland, forget it – the two films have nothing in common except the word “Wonderland” in their respective titles. And as for Lewis Carroll, forget it – he’s never mentioned. In fact, it’s hard to determine just who the Alice of the movie is supposed to be. She’s clearly not the naïve British lass of Victorian times. In this offering, she’s a bourgeois American who wears a bouffant hairdo and a mini-skirt. She’s supposed to be a little girl, but she sounds like a middle aged housewife (Norma MacMillan did the voice for the character).

In this go-round, Alice is already famous (the book “Alice in Wonderland” is spotted on a table). But Alice is bored – she wants to go to Paris. Her obsession with Paris is so strong that she begins to wear a miniature replica of the Eiffel Tower on her head. “Getting to Wonderland was easy,” she rues. “All I had to do was fall down the rabbit hole. But let’s face it – it takes money to get to Paris!”

With uncommonly good timing, a talking French mouse riding a bicycle appears. He’s Francois and he’s on a mission to survey people about the best French cheeses. How he wound up in Alice’s bedroom is a mystery (he was riding through the Parisian sewers, took a wrong turn at Notre Dame, and emerged through a mousehole in another country). Alice is a ninny when it comes to the subject – she only likes cheeseburgers and cottage cheese with jelly – but she humors Francois with the hope that he can take her to Paris. Francois shrinks Alice to mouse-size by having her eat a slice of cheese made with the magic mushroom that shrunk her in Wonderland. (Personally, I prefer the magic mushrooms that Willie Nelson has on his tour bus, but I’m not in this movie.) The newly tiny Alice gets on Francois’ bicycle and they pedal off to Paris. Alice agrees with a comment her father once made: “It’s always best to travel on business.” Huh?

From here, the film conveniently forgets its inane set-up and swings into an anthology of short stories. Francois and Alice take turns prefixing each tale with a “let me tell you about...” opening, and from there the film switches gears into different stories. There are two adventures from the once-popular Madeline series of kiddie books: one has Madeline tolerating Pepito, the boorish son of the Spanish ambassador (he nearly gets killed when his attempt to feed a cat to a pack of dogs goes awry) and the other has Madeline and Pepito running away to join a gypsy circus (when their guardians come searching for them, the gypsies sew the children into a vaudeville lion costume and lock them in a cage – and they like it!).

Other stories involve “Anatole,” a Parisian mouse who becomes the vice president of a cheese company; “The Frowning Prince,” a bizarre comedy about a young royal who is incapable of smiling; and “Many Moons,” a charming James Thurber fantasy about a lunar-obsessed princess which is turned to muck here thanks to some of the tackiest animation ever put on film.

In between stories, Francois tries to gauge Alice’s opinions on cheese. He takes her to a cheese factory and stuffs her with cheese, causing her to turn green. Alice, for her part, wants to meet the storybook character Madeline. One might think an American girl in Paris, circa 1966, would rather meet Alain Delon – but never mind. The magic mushroom spell that shrank Alice abruptly wears off and she shoots back to normal height. But in doing so, she suddenly acquires aerodynamic skills and takes off into flight. Alice soars high into the clouds, waving goodbye to Paris and to all of the storybook characters that turned up in the course of the film. Alice then wakes up and finds herself home – it was all a dream! Oh bloody shit!

The animation in “Alice of Wonderland in Paris” is so horrible that one could imagine the entire film was put together on a lunchbreak. There’s no particular fun in denigrating the work: the ineptitude of Deitch’s artistic vision makes the film a clumsy, unappealing heap. But one could excuse crappy animation if the story was acceptable, yet that’s not the case here. The rickety structure of this production suggests the Attention Deficit Disorder School of Storytelling. And forget about the voice performances: old reliables like Carl Reiner, Howard Morris and Allen Swift were hired but they couldn’t work any magic.

“Alice of Wonderland in Paris” runs a scant 52 minutes, which is very short for a theatrical release; it may have been originally designed for TV. When the film turned up in theaters in early 1966 (via a small distributor called Childhood Productions), its ru


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Laurie Kilmartin
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In-N-Out Founder Remains In, Forever

By: Laurie Kilmartin (C)
Submitted: Aug 6, 2006
Category: News  

Esther Snyder, co-founder of the In-N-Out Burger restaurant chain, has died at the age of 86. She was honored by an anonymous teenage boy who, after blacking out the "B" and the final "R" in Burger, slowly slid his left index finger "in" and "out" of his right fist.


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