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Does anyone know where this comes from?
I'm trying to find the root of the cultural reference: "I'm here all week, try the veal". this has some variations that I know of including
"I'm here all week, try the fish". "I'm here till <insert chosen day of week here>, try the veal/fish/beef etc". I've searched for over 2 hours online and can't find any reference to the originator. |
Well first of all, where does veal come from?:p
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Cue canned laughter...:rotfl:
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Never heard it... Aussie thing?
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Standard MC/stand-up comic line as far as I know
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Sounds like a Basil Fawlty line.
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I'm here all week, try the veal substitute. Some kind of Japo-Danish combination.
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It was made up by some people who have no lives... Bada BING, I'm here till Monday, be sure to try the Spam!
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"Carnegie: Basil..the little... Polly: Ratatouille. The chef calls the ratatouille Basil, because he puts quite a lot of basil in it. Manuel: (horrified) He put Basil in ratatouille? Polly: Yes... Manuel: Aaahh! (he runs into the kitchen, followed by Polly, still clutching her net) Sybil: (to Mr Carnegie) He's from Barcelona." :lol: :lol: :lol: :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: :lol: :lol: :lol: |
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I still can't find anyone who knows for sure what it's origins are. |
The earliest I have heard the phrase, "Try the veal" was by the great comedien Jackie Mason in the early 1960s. He was a one-liner type standup comic in the US. http://www.jackiemason.com/
I am not sure if he originated the phrase though, but whenever I hear the phrase I recall Jackie's voice. Another comic it could be attributed to is Henny Youngman. He is the classic," Take my wife, PLEASE" one-liner guy. |
thanks Gildor. It's a couple of leads anyway.:up:
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I'm sorry it 0400, what's funny about veal? or being here all week?
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