Snark! The Herald Angels Sing

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Snark! The Herald Angels Sing Page 6

by Lawrence Dorfman


  phrase is, a few sheets in the wind.

  —H.L. MENCKEN

  Brandy, n. A cordial composed of one part thunder

  and-lightning, one part remorse, two parts bloody

  murder, one part death-hell-and-the-grave and four

  parts clarified Satan.

  —AMBROSE BIERCE

  There ain't no devil, it's just god when he's drunk.

  —TOM WAITS

  I do like Christmas on the whole…. In its clumsy

  way, it does approach Peace and Goodwill.

  But it is clumsier every year.

  —E.M. FORSTER

  Christmas is a time for remembering. So that's me, f**ked.

  —OZZY OSBOURNE

  You've Had Too Much Holiday Cheer When…

  1. You strike a match and light your nose.

  2. A duck quacks—and it's you.

  3. You tell your best joke to a plant.

  4. The fish bowl looks like a punch bowl.

  5. You mistake the closet for a bathroom.

  6. When you leave a party, the door locks behind you.

  7. You ask for an ice cube and put it in your pocket.

  8. While mimicking the biggest bore in the room, you realize it's actually you in the mirror.

  Remember: During the holidays, you're not

  drunk…you're mulled. And people always notice

  when you linger under the mistletoe.

  —ROBERT MCCAMMON

  First you take a drink, then the drink takes a drink,

  then the drink takes you.

  —F. SCOTT FITZGERALD

  Come, woo me, woo me; for now I am in a holiday

  humor, and like enough to consent.

  —WILLIAM SHAKSPEARE

  I have the same resolution every year: I decide to drink

  heavily. Because I know I can do it, which will build up

  my self-esteem.

  —BETSY SALKIND

  Christmas Fact

  “Wassail” comes from the Old Norse vesheill—to be of good health. This evolved into the tradition of visiting neighbors on Christmas Eve and drinking to their health…until you pass out. It's also the sound you make as you projectile-vomit a heady mix of nog, gin, wine, and beef jerky.

  New Year's is a harmless annual institution, of no

  particular use to anybody save as a scapegoat for

  promiscuous drunks, and friendly calls and

  humbug resolutions.

  —MARK TWAIN

  Christmas Toasts

  May your Christmas be full of friends and booze and no socks.

  A merry Christmas to all my friends except two or three.

  To a fruity, flatulent Christmas!

  Merry Stressmas!

  Forgive us our Christmases as we forgive them that Christmas against us.

  There is a remarkable breakdown of taste and

  intelligence at Christmastime. Mature, responsible

  grown men wear neckties made of holly leaves and

  drink alcoholic beverages with raw egg yolks and

  cottage cheese in them.

  —P.J. O'ROURKE

  Nourishment

  (FOOD)

  IN WHICH THE AUTHOR REVELS IN THE CONSUMPTION

  OF MASS QUANTITIES OF SUGAR AND CARBS—

  REVEALS THE OPENING OF OLD WOUNDS BETWEEN

  MOUTHFULS OF MASHED POTATOES—AND MAKES

  THE DISCOVERY OF BRUSSEL SPROUTS WRAPPED IN A

  NAPKIN AND ROLLED INTO A BALL—FOOD AS A MEANS

  OF SURRENDER

  THE HOLIDAYS ARE ABOUT EATING. End of story. For weeks on end, there are sweets and pies and chocolate and turkeys the size of doghouses and stuffing and wheelbarrows of potatoes and…and …and…all as far as the eye can see. And all devised to make you forget about logic in the name of celebration.

  The Christmas dinner might be both the worst and the best part of the holiday. More so than the everyday preparation of food, this dinner takes so much work …hours/days/months of buying, mixing, prepping, and is gone in a matter of minutes. Except for leftovers. Lots and lots of leftovers.

  You can't make everyone happy. “What happened to the carrots you used to make with the little marshmallows?” “This turkey's too big/not big enough/too dry/not cooked enough…” “Why didn't you do your usual stuffing?”

  “I hate…[pick one—or more] yams/cranberries/brussel sprouts/figs.”

  People who spend the year watching their weight let it all go during the season.

  “Hey, it's the holidays. You're dead a long time. I'm gonna just eat what I want and diet be damned. I'll start again in January.” Which you never do.

  Snark can help.9

  Nothing says holidays like a cheese log.

  —ELLEN DEGENERES

  Thanksgiving is a magical time of year when families

  across the country join together to raise America's

  obesity statistics. Personally, I love Thanksgiving

  traditions: watching football, making pumpkin pie, and

  saying the magic phrase that sends your aunt storming

  out of the dining room to sit in her car.

  —STEPHEN COLBERT

  9 Snark as a digestive.

  I finally finished eating the gingerbread man. The last

  thing I ate was his foot and on the way down my gullet,

  he actually kicked me.

  —GROUCHO MARX

  Hey kids! I made your favorite cookies: Christmas

  trees for the girls and bloody

  spearheads for Bart.

  —MARGE, THE SIMPSONS

  Thanksgiving, man…Not a good day to be my pants.

  —KEVIN JAMES

  The best way to thaw a frozen turkey? Blow in its ear.

  —JOHNNY CARSON

  The Christmas dinner was fairly ghastly…the

  turkey was passable, but there were no sausages with

  it, no rolls of bacon and no bread sauce, and the roast

  potatoes were beige and palely loitering.

  —NOËL COWARD

  The turkey has practically no taste except a dry fibrous

  flavor reminiscent of warmed-up plaster of Paris and

  horsehair. The texture is like wet sawdust and the

  whole vast feathered swindle has the piquancy of a

  boiled mattress.

  —WILLIAM CONNOR

  Last Thanksgiving, I shot my own turkey. It was

  fun. Shotgun going, “Blam! Blam!” Everybody at the

  supermarket just staring. Why track them when you

  know where they are?

  —KENNY ROGERSON

  I love Thanksgiving turkey…it's the only time in

  Los Angeles you see natural breasts.

  —ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER

  A number of other truly remarkable things show up in

  holiday dinners, such as…pies made out of something

  called “mince,” although if anyone has ever seen a mince

  in its natural state, he did not live to tell about it.

  —P.J.O'ROURKE

  Consider Christmas—could Satan in his most

  malignant mood have devised a worse system of

  graft and buncombe than the system whereby several

  hundred million people get a billion or so gifts for

  which they have no use, and some thousands of shop

  clerks die of exhaustion while selling them, and every

  other child in the Western world is made ill from

  overeating—all in the name of Jesus?

  —UPTON SINCLAIR

  Dear Lord, I've been asked, nay commanded, to thank

  Thee for the Christmas turkey before us…a turkey

  which was no doubt a lively, intelligent bird…a social

  being…capable of actual affection…nuzzling its

  young with almost human-like compassion. Anyway,

  it's dead and we're gonna eat it. Please give our r
espects to its family….

  —BERKE BREATHED

  Christmas Pudding: festering gobs of adamantine suet

  that the Brits think of as fun food.

  —JOE QUEENAN

  You may be an undigested bit of beef, a blot of mustard,

  a crumb of cheese, a fragment of underdone potato.

  There's more of gravy than of grave about you, whatever

  you are!

  —CHARLES DICKENS

  Grammy Moon's famous plum duff is a pudding boiled in

  a cloth bag. She had a secret ingredient. She'd soak it for

  hours in rum, then ignite it in a blinding flash. As soon as

  she came out of the kitchen with no eyebrows, we knew

  dessert was ready. To this day, the smell of burning hair

  puts me in the holiday spirit. Merry Christmas!

  —DAPHNE, IN FRASIER

  I celebrated Thanksgiving in an old-fashioned way. I

  invited everyone in my neighborhood to my house, we

  had an enormous feast, and then I killed them and took

  their land.

  —JON STEWART

  Women used to make great mince pies and fake

  orgasms. Now we can do orgasms, but have to fake

  mince pies. Is this progress?

  —ALLISON PEARSON

  You can tell it's the Christmas season. Stores are selling

  off their expired milk as eggnog.

  —DAVID LETTERMAN

  The holidays can turn into a year of overeating. There

  are some who gain 20 or 30 pounds over the year. Their

  mind-set is “Why not keep going?”

  —LESLIE FINK

  “Never, ever ask a former clergyman to say the blessing

  over a holiday dinner. Not if you like your dinner

  warm, anyway.”

  —MARY KAY ANDREWS

  “Thanksgiving dinners take eighteen hours to prepare.

  They are consumed in twelve minutes. Half-times take

  twelve minutes. This is not coincidence.”

  —ERMA BOMBECK

  The Best Christmas Cake Ever

  Ingredients:

  1 cup butter

  1 cup sugar

  4 large eggs

  1 cup dried fruit

  1 teaspoon baking powder

  1 teaspoon baking soda

  1 tablespoon lemon juice

  1 cup brown sugar

  1 cup nuts

  1 or 2 quarts of aged whiskey

  Before you start, sample the whiskey to check for quality. Good, isn't it?

  Now go ahead. Select a large mixing bowl, measuring cup, etc. Check the whiskey again as it might be just right. To be sure the whiskey is of the highest quality, pour 1 level cup into a glass and drink as fast as you can.

  Repeat.

  With an eclectic mixer, beat 1 cup of butter in a large fluffy bowl.

  Add 1 teaspoon of sugar and beat the hell out of it again. Meanwhile, at this parsnicular point in time, wake sure the whixey hasn't gone bad while you weren't lookin’. Open second quart if nestessary.

  Add 2 large eggs, 2 cups fried druit an'beat'til high. If druit gets shtuck in peaters, just pry the monsters loosh with a drewscriver.

  Example the whikstey again, shecking confistancy, then shitf 2 cups of salt or destergent or whatever, like anyone gives a schit.

  Chample the whitchey shum more.

  Shitf in shum lemon zhoosh. Fold in chopped sputter and shrained nuts.

  Add 100 babblespoons of brown booger or whushevers closhest and mix well.

  Greash ubben and turn the cakey pan to 350 decrees. Now pour the whole mesh into the washin’ machine and set on sinsh shycle.

  Check dat whixney wunsh more and pash out.

  Merry Cishmash!

  If you're at a Thanksgiving dinner, but you don't like

  the stuffing or the cranberry sauce or anything else, just

  pretend like you're eating it, but instead, put it all in

  your lap and form it into a big mushy ball. Then, later,

  when you're out back having cigars with the boys, let

  out a big fake cough and throw the ball to the ground.

  Then say, “Boy, these are good cigars!”

  —JACK HANDEY

  Christmas is a major holiday. Hanukkah is a minor

  holiday with the same theme as most Jewish holidays.

  They tried to kill us, we survived, let's eat.

  —ANONYMOUS

  Turkey: A large bird whose flesh, when eaten on certain

  religious anniversaries, has the peculiar property of

  attesting piety and gratitude.

  —AMBROSE BIERCE

  I came from a family where gravy was

  considered a beverage.

  —ERMA BOMBECK

  After a good dinner, one can forgive anybody,

  even one's own relatives.

  —OSCAR WILDE

  Here I am, 5 o'clock in the morning, stuffing

  breadcrumbs up a dead bird's butt.

  —ROSEANNE BARR

  Every Christmas, I feel like a child. But we

  always get turkey.

  —TERRY JONES

  The worst gift is a fruitcake. There is only one

  fruitcake in the entire world, and people

  keep sending it to each other.

  —JOHNNY CARSON

  It took me three weeks to stuff the turkey.

  I stuffed it through its beak.

  —PHYLLIS DILLER

  Women have fun baking for Christmas. Jewish women

  burn their eyes and cut their hands grating potatoes

  and onions for latkes on Hanukkah. Another reminder

  of the suffering through the ages.

  People are so worried about what they eat between

  Christmas and the New Year. They really should be

  worried about what they eat between the New Year

  and Christmas.

  Can I refill your eggnog for you? Get you something to

  eat? Drive you out to the middle of nowhere and leave

  you for dead?

  —CLARK GRISWOLD, CHRISTMAS VACATION

  We're having something a little different this year for

  Thanksgiving. Instead of a turkey, we're having a swan.

  You get more stuffing.

  —GEORGE CARLIN

  My cooking is so bad my kids thought Thanksgiving

  was to commemorate Pearl Harbor.

  —PHYLLIS DILLER

  You know that just before the first Thanksgiving

  dinner there was one wise, old Native American

  woman saying, “Don't feed them. If you feed them,

  they'll never leave.”

  —DYLAN BRODY

  Recovery

  (HANGOVER)

  IN WHICH THE REVELERS CONSUME MASS QUANTITIES

  OF ANALGESIC PRODUCTS—WINCINGLY RECALL

  CONVERSATIONS AND DEEDS THAT SHOULD NEVER

  HAVE HAPPENED AND CAN'T BE UNDONE—AND THE

  EVENTUAL OATH OF “NEVER AGAIN” IS HEARD

  ONCE MORE

  THE DAY AFTER…YOU MIGHT want to take a deep sigh of relief; but remember, the shit never ends. Now you will be looking straight into the jaws of exchange lines, longer than they ever were to buy stuff; using gift cards in stores with no inventory; boxing up the ornaments, trying to hit the “under” in the breakage betting; tossing the tree, seeing who can be first or who can be last; pulling even more fruitcake wrapped in napkins from the folds of the couch; dieting, even as the fridge is full of food gifts and leftovers.

  Finally, after the last toast, it's back to work, glorious work…ah, sanctuary!

  The day after Christmas is like the day after the senior prom, everybody asking each other, “What did you get?”

  Given the choice, where would you rather be this

  Christmas—in your kitchen with your hand shoved

 
up a turkey's bottom, or somewhere as far away from

  tinsel, turkey, and tree as possible? Simply tell everyone

  you're going away, buy a boatload of TV dinners

  and DVDs, take the phone off the hook, close the

  curtains…and wake up on December 27th.

  —BERNICE DAVISON

  Next to the presidency, detrimming a tree has to be the

  loneliest job in the world. It has fallen to women for

  centuries and is considered a skill only they can do, like

  replacing the roll on the toilet tissue spindle, painting

  baseboards, holding a wet washcloth for a child who is

  throwing up, or taking out a splinter with a needle.

  —ERMA BOMBECK

  The day after Christmas: when we all have

  two more ugly sweaters.

  —CRAIG KILBORN

  I love Christmas. I get a lot of wonderful presents I

  can't wait to exchange.

  —HENNY YOUNGMAN

  Much like sex, the event ends with a sad flatulent

  realization that these things are better imagined than

  enacted, better anticipated than performed.

  —STEPHEN FRY

  Many people look forward to the New Year for a new

  start on old habits. Good resolutions are simply checks

  that men draw on a bank where they have no account.

  —OSCAR WILDE

  New Year's Day: Now is the accepted time to make

  your regular annual good resolutions. Next week you

  can begin paving hell with them as usual.

 

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