OK, am I the only one that thinks something is wrong with the fact that the seats on a bicycle are made by La-Z-Boy?!?!!? That seems counter-productive to actually getting out and exercising.
Are you supposed to leave this thing in your living room and sit on it when your watching football?
Hey, remember, Terry, that my mom was born in 1917. I got to know LOTS of "old" songs. I got woken up most mornings with her singing: "Lazy bones, sleeping in the sun"!
Wake up, wake up, the sun is on the rise, And it's time, it's time, it's time to fertilise! Increase the yields from your fields, Watch your profits swell. You never lose when you choose Smith Douglas Fertiliser, with Krell.
I may have the additive name wrong. However, that jingle was always on the radio in the AM when and where I was a kid. Musicological research has shown it to be a popularisation of an Ashkenazic chant from morning prayer by the universally loved Rabbi Reisenschein.
6 comments:
OK, am I the only one that thinks something is wrong with the fact that the seats on a bicycle are made by La-Z-Boy?!?!!? That seems counter-productive to actually getting out and exercising.
Are you supposed to leave this thing in your living room and sit on it when your watching football?
Jeff
LOL! I never clicked lose enough to SEE that. What a hoot!!! Doesn't look nearly as comfortable as my blue recliner! :)
I'm just amazed that any of you kids know that old song, which even to ME is an old song!
Hey, remember, Terry, that my mom was born in 1917. I got to know LOTS of "old" songs. I got woken up most mornings with her singing: "Lazy bones, sleeping in the sun"!
yeah...the LayZboy thing was my first comment when I saw the seats, I had a good laugh, but they're quite comfortable!
Wake up, wake up, the sun is on the rise,
And it's time, it's time, it's time to fertilise!
Increase the yields from your fields,
Watch your profits swell.
You never lose when you choose
Smith Douglas Fertiliser,
with Krell.
I may have the additive name wrong. However, that jingle was always on the radio in the AM when and where I was a kid. Musicological research has shown it to be a popularisation of an Ashkenazic chant from morning prayer by the universally loved Rabbi Reisenschein.
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