i get some weird free standard def movie channel over broadcast tv with the crappy digital hd antenna i bought a few months back. (im getting my satellite reconnected tomorrow after six months without. they made me an offer i couldnt refuse that being pay us exactly how much we want.) and though i just saw the last couple of minutes of this it certainly caught my attention. how have i never heard of the magic christian other than its probably not very good?


- dave 4-04-2014 3:25 am

I saw the whole thing a couple of times and can only remember the last couple of minutes.
- steve 4-04-2014 4:54 am [add a comment]


RAQUEL WELCH!!!
- Skinny 4-04-2014 5:39 am [add a comment]


  • She now reps Foster Grant reading glasses....

    Talk about a brand turn a round....

    In the 60's FG was the #1 sunglass company than lost and someone bought it in the 90's and brought it up sold it up and its #1 again....

    Meaninngless except the founder lived in my hometown (we were the plastic city of the world so why not) but he (Sam Foster) was the only one in Leomineter, MA with a Rolls:>)

    While many different industries established themselves in Leominster, it was the comb industry that particularly flourished. By 1853, there were already 146 employees working in 24 different comb factories across the town.[2] By the mid-1800s, however, the natural materials used to make combs, such as animal horns and hooves were diminishing rapidly, and thus an alternative material was needed.[7] The solution would come in a new material called celluloid invented in 1868. The new plastic would revolutionize the comb industry and give Leominster the nicknames the “Comb City.” The versatility of celluloid would also give manufactures the opportunity to expand too many different products outside of combs.

    The second invention to revolutionize plastic production in Leominster was the development of modern injection molding. Samuel Foster, a Leominster resident of German ancestry, learned about an injection molding machine invented in Germany in the early 1920s.  Foster soon requested a similar machine be made in his Foster Grant manufacturing factory in Leominster.  The new technology would pay great dividends for the plastic industry in the city and the country. The largest plastic manufacturer in the city was the Viscoliod Company founded by Bernard Wendell Doyle in 1901.  In 1914, the Viscoloid Company pioneered making toys out of pyroloxlyin plastic, and by 1923 the company was the largest employer in Leominster.  Viscoloid would be sold to The DuPont Company in 1925, and renamed the Dupont Viscoloid Company. Soon the city would be coined the “Pioneer Plastics City” for its important history in the plastics industry.  Leominster also boasted large manufactures Standard Tool Company, Selig Manufacturing Co. Inc, C.E. Buckle, Inc. and the Whitney Carriage Company, which was once the largest manufacturer of baby carriages in the world.

    In 1956, the plastic pink flamingo lawn-ornament was invented in Leominster for Union Products. The famous lawn-ornament was designed by Don Featherstone, and was modelled after pictures of flamingos in National Geographic.


    - Skinny 4-04-2014 5:47 am [add a comment]


    • Notable Leominster people

      John Chapman, better known as Johnny Appleseed, American pioneer nurseryman
      Robert Cormier, author of I Am the Cheese and The Chocolate War
      Paul DiGiovanni, guitarist of popular rock band Boys Like Girls
      Paul Fusco, internationally known photojournalist
      Diego Fagundez, professional soccer player for the New England Revolution
      Matthew Kelly, drummer for popular punk band Dropkick Murphys
      Adrian Nicole LeBlanc, author of Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble and Coming of Age in the Bronx
      Lou Little, football player and coach in the 1940s and 1950s
      Alex Marcoux, award-winning author and scientist
      James Nachtwey, award-winning war photographer
      Mark Osowski, former NBA assistant coach for the New Orleans Hornets, the Golden State Warriors, and the Cleveland Cavaliers
      Anthony Russo, former NFL wide receiver for the Seattle Seahawks
      R. A. Salvatore, fantasy/science-fiction author
      John J. Taylor, former US Congressman
      Oskari Tokoi, Finnish-American socialist politician and newspaper editor
      David I. Walsh, former Governor of Massachusetts and U.S. Senator

      Michael Wheeler chief boorer of the DMT


      - Skinny 4-04-2014 6:05 am [add a comment]


      • pretty sure that title belongs to me

        Correct me if I'm wrong but your official appellation was and is:

        BIG WHEEL TURNING BY THE GRACE OF GOD

        Montrachet Montrachet, bitches.

        at least the Portland contingent still has some eggs in this henhouse

        Prostit!
        - anonymous (guest) 4-13-2014 8:46 pm [add a comment] [edit]


      • pretty sure that title belongs to me

        Correct me if I'm wrong but your official appellation was and is:

        BIG WHEEL TURNING BY THE GRACE OF GOD

        Montrachet Montrachet, bitches.

        at least the Portland contingent still has some eggs in this henhouse

        Prostit!
        - anonymous (guest) 4-13-2014 8:46 pm [add a comment] [edit]



      Magic Christian       was on the radar back in the day due to the Beatles and Python connections, and the soundtrack with Badfinger and Thunderclap Newman. I saw it in the 70’s at the Elgin (now the Joyce dance theater) which was a seedy revival house with a smoking section. Thanks to that feature my memory is a bit hazy.


- alex 4-04-2014 2:44 pm [add a comment]





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