Monday, November 26, 2018
Cranberry Chicken
I'm still in Thanksgiving mode! I love turkey and cranberry sauce and I love chicken and cranberry sauce too! Here's an easy recipe for the crock pot from the cookbook Fix-It and Forget-It to keep you thinking about all that yummy Thanksgiving food. Enjoy!
Cranberry Chicken
3-4 lbs. chicken pieces
1/2 t salt
1/4 t pepper
1/2 cup diced celery
1/2 cup diced onion
16 oz. can whole cranberry sauce
1 cup BBQ sauce
Combine all ingredients in slow cooker. Cover and bake on HIGH for 4 hours, or LOW for 6-8 hours.
Cooking can't get much easier than that. Sound good to you?
Thanks for visiting and have a great week!
Monday, November 19, 2018
Happy Thanksgiving!
Happy Thanksgiving! I'm taking today off but will be back next week. Hope you'll be enjoying family and lots of great food come Thursday!
Monday, November 12, 2018
A History of Veterans Day
To all veterans being celebrated today, thank you for your service!
For those of us who aren't veterans, have you ever wondered about the origin of Veterans Day? I have, so here's some history about it from History.com:
Veterans Day originated as “Armistice Day” on Nov. 11, 1919, the first anniversary of the end of World War I. Congress passed a resolution in 1926 for an annual observance, and Nov. 11 became a national holiday beginning in 1938. Unlike Memorial Day, Veterans Day pays tribute to all American veterans—living or dead—but especially gives thanks to living veterans who served their country honorably during war or peacetime.
When Is Veterans Day?
- Veterans Day occurs on November 11 every year in the United States.
- In 1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower officially changed the name of the holiday from Armistice Day to Veterans Day.
- In 1968, the Uniform Holidays Bill was passed by Congress, which moved the celebration of Veterans Day to the fourth Monday in October. The law went into effect in 1971, but in 1975 President Gerald Ford returned Veterans Day to November 11, due to the important historical significance of the date.
- Great Britain, France, Australia and Canada also commemorate the veterans of World War I and World War II on or near November 11th: Canada has Remembrance Day, while Britain has Remembrance Sunday (the second Sunday of November).
- In Europe, Great Britain and the Commonwealth countries it is common to observe two minutes of silence at 11 a.m. every November 11.
Was any of this information new to you? Thanks for visiting and have a great week!
Monday, November 5, 2018
Mae West: How She Got Away With It
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Mae West |
Her career spanned seven decades and she was an actress, singer, playwright, screenwriter, comedian and sex symbol.
She’s best known for her lighthearted use of, shall we say, suggestiveness.
Here are some of Mae West’s most memorable lines:
"Between two evils, I always pick the one I never tried before."
"Anything worth doing is worth doing slowly."
“Don’t ever let a man put anything over on you except an umbrella.”
"He’s the kind of man a woman would have to marry to get rid of."
"I believe that it’s better to be looked over than it is to be overlooked."
"Opportunity knocks for every man, but you have to give a woman a ring."
"A dame that knows the ropes isn’t likely to get tied up."
"Give a man a free hand and he’ll run it all over you."
"A woman in love can’t be reasonable – or she probably wouldn’t be in love."
"When women go wrong, men go right after them."
She’s best known for her lighthearted use of, shall we say, suggestiveness.
I watched a documentary about her recently and it mentioned
that if she’d been slimmer and more glamorous, like Marlene Dietrich for
instance, she probably could not have gotten away with the lines that made her
famous.
She wasn’t particularly beautiful and her figure
was rather matronly, but she certainly had a way with words that kept bringing
audiences into the movie theaters of the Depression era 1930s.
When presented with a script, she’d re-write all
her lines which certainly seemed to pay off at the box office.
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Marlene Dietrich |
Up until 1934, movies were not censored. But even after they were, Mae West still
continued to write provocative dialogue (curtailing it only slightly) to the
delight of her audiences. However, in the late 1930’s the Censorship Office
cracked down on Mae West’s unique use of words. And after that, the magic of
her movie performances disappeared.
When her cinematic career ended, she wrote books and plays and went
on to perform in Las Vegas, the United Kingdom, and on
radio and television.
As far as her
opinion on censorship, she said, “I believe in censorship. I made a fortune out
of it."
Here are some of Mae West’s most memorable lines:
"Between two evils, I always pick the one I never tried before."
"Anything worth doing is worth doing slowly."
“Don’t ever let a man put anything over on you except an umbrella.”
"He’s the kind of man a woman would have to marry to get rid of."
"I believe that it’s better to be looked over than it is to be overlooked."
"Opportunity knocks for every man, but you have to give a woman a ring."
"A dame that knows the ropes isn’t likely to get tied up."
"Give a man a free hand and he’ll run it all over you."
"A woman in love can’t be reasonable – or she probably wouldn’t be in love."
"When women go wrong, men go right after them."
I've only seen one Mae West movie, 1933's She Done Him Wrong. All I can say is that there will never be another Mae West! Have you seen any of her films? Thanks for visiting and have a great week!
Monday, October 29, 2018
Prosthetic Masks
Not long ago, I stumbled upon a topic that broke my
heart. Halloween is coming up and lots
of kids will be wearing masks as a part of their costumes. I remember those
days and loved disguising myself behind a mask.
But what if you actually needed a mask to be seen in
public, or just by your family and friends?
That’s the dilemma several soldiers from WW I faced as they returned
from the trenches.
WW I took the lives of more than 9 million soldiers,
but many returned home blinded or with missing limbs. Then there were those who suffered the only
injury in the UK that provided a full pension, facial disfigurement.
Medicine had advanced by the time of the outbreak of
WW I. Lives could be saved, but saving
faces destroyed by trench warfare was a difficult undertaking.
According to Olga Khazan in The Atlantic, "The iconic trenches of World War I were themselves an "unforeseen enemy.” The
unceasing machine-gun fire led to a fate that was, at the time, almost as bad
as death. Western front soldiers who popped their heads above their trenches
would come back down with a nose, jaw, or even an entire face missing."
The most advanced cosmetic surgery during this time
was fixing a cleft lip. So doctors were faced with severe challenges.
There were some crude successes of facial reconstruction,
but the task of repairing a broken face beyond repair was left the creation of
a mask to cover the injuries.
There was a woman sculptor named Anna Coleman
Ladd that made some of the best masks. She, along with artist Francis Derwent
Wood, helped hundreds of disfigured veterans re-adjust to society.
Ladd would take plaster casts of a soldier's
face and try to re-create an identical cheekbone or eye-socket on the opposite
side. Then, using copper, she’d create a full or partial mask. Then it would be painted to match the skin.
The entire mask weighed only about half a pound, and was either hung from a set
spectacles or tied with strings to the veteran’s head.
In France alone, 3000 soldiers would have
required these masks, but Ladd only made 185.
The masks were not long lasting and would fall
apart after only a few years. But it’s
assumed that the men who wore them, wore them to the grave, and none of those
masks are in existence today.
There are some excellent articles on the
prosthetic masks of WW I (such as this one from Smithsonian), but the photographs included on the subject are not for the faint of
heart. So if you should do some looking, just be prepared.
Is this something you'd ever heard of? Thanks for visiting and have a great week!
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