??If you don??t like change, you??re going to like irrelevance even less.?
~?ÿEric Shinseki
"If you don't like change, leave yours here"
On the tip jar at the Portland airport espresso stand - at the job you're likely to have if you don't embrace and adapt to change!
I like Yogi'isms.
I like Yogi'isms.
Hey Booboo, lets go get some pic-a-nic baskets.?ÿ
I like Yogi'isms.
Hey Booboo, lets go get some pic-a-nic baskets.?ÿ
Not that Yogi dumba$$, Yogi Berra.
Yogi Berra was a brilliant man. Yogi Bear was pretty good also.
Who names their baby, Booboo? ?ÿOops, perhaps, but not Booboo.
Yogi possessed great wit...and was a helluva good ball player.?ÿ I'm not sure I'd consider him brilliant, but he was probably the only wisdom-laden Italian-American sage that hailed from "La Collina" in St. Louis.?ÿ The man could think up wise and lofty thoughts....and then instantly butcher them in?ÿhis?ÿspoken delivery.?ÿ?ÿ And probably like us all,?ÿI somehow still understand what he was saying.
When you come to a fork in the road, take it...or It??s like d??j?ÿ vu all over again.
And his pi??ce de r??sistance:?ÿ You wouldn??t have won if we??d beaten you.
Definitely light years ahead of Karl Malone...
Carl who?
Carl who?
Now there is a name I've not heard in a long time...
"Television news is like a lightning flash. It makes a loud noise, lights up everything around it, leaves everything else in darkness and then is suddenly gone."?ÿ - Hodding Carter II (1907-1972)
?ÿ
My favorite Yogi'ism
"It ain't over till it's over"
Is he also the one who said "It ain't over until the fat lady sings!"?
Is he also the one who said "It ain't over until the fat lady sings!"?
I don't think so.
Generally speaking, they sing at the beginning of a baseball game (and sometimes @ the 7th inning stretch), but not at the end.
??¯
Loyal
?ÿ
Attribution is unclear. Don Meredith used it in the early 1970s as a color commentator.
I think it was me, that said it first...
Opera reference. ?ÿYes/No?
Yes it's a reference to Wagner operas
The thing that ain't over until the fat lady sings is an opera.?ÿ
From about as far back as I can remember (usually in response to "what difference does it make?"):
"It's the difference between right and wrong"?ÿ
My Dad, T.C. Carroll 1915-1997
Me. "What's the difference?"
T.C. Carroll "It's the difference between right and wrong!"