I've been accused of being a control freak a few times, maybe even this month! I like to think I have a passion for excellence, not that I have a need to control my universe. My, my….little ole Mahone Bay and Kentville what’s with Nova Scotia and sex? Is something in the town water system?įYI - Hubby and I are on a drilled well.just sayin…. I’ll be looking at people a bit differently, wondering how much whipping is going on behind closed doors, and I don’t mean finishing rugs. Although I really don’t care what consenting adults do, I’ll admit my curiosity has peeked…. I’m not one to cast stones, nor do I live in a glass house, and neither should anyone else considering the pension for rough play around these parts. Exciting stuff considering our size, don’t blink going through our town or you could miss it! I’m not sure how I feel about this designation although it was a chest busting moment when announced that we’ve been voted one of the five best places in Canada to live. I live in Mahone Bay been here all my life. His assistant’s comment? “ They must be tied up”. You could hear the phone book pages turning and then they dialed a number. Terry O’Reilly mentioned that he should call a random number in Mahone Bay to ask what they think of this claim to fame. So there’s a lot of folks in Nova Scotia “gettin a bit of kink on”. And then Kentville, population of 6094 got a mention for ordering the most sex toys per capita than all of Canada. The larger cities barely make the list so I guess the rural communities are having all the fun, says Terry. The postal codes don’t lie, according to online sex store, Pink Cherry, Mahone Bay with its population of under 1000, buys more BDSM (Bondage, Discipline, Submission and Masochism) products per capita than all of Canada. The show is called, “ Under The Influence” with Terry O’Reilly and This particular broadcast was titled Live and Let Buy: Where you live dictates what you purchase. I think when it comes, it may just be something like that.Thursday of last week, while under the weather, my phlegm soaked brain was roused from sleep by hubby shouting that they were talking about Mahone Bay on CBC radio. "We've had a lot of episodes that could have been great last episodes," added Jean, "like Maggie talking, like the behind-the-music parody. Insights into the last episode: Reiss shared that during the first season, Matt Groening already had ideas for how the series would end. Martin remembers his wife and daughter, 2 years old at the time, coming to visit in matching sundresses and then vowing later to never visit again. In fact, their first creative space was "like a heroin den in a bad part of town," O'Brien joked. You'll ruin your career." As it turns out, father doesn't always know best.įrom Harvard to a flophouse? Those early days in the writers' room were magic, as O'Brien said, but far from Hollywood glamorous. Kogen, whose father was also a TV comedy writer, tried to dissuade his son from signing on with the animated juggernaut, saying, "You're nuts. You'd think, with an idea like "The Simpsons," there'd be no hesitation to jump in with both feet, but that wasn't the case. And while the series is intended to be more contemplative and less jokey, with this group of comedic geniuses (Jean, Reiss, O'Brien, and Martin all attended Harvard!) gathered in a spirited round table, the jokes write themselves. Ah, to be a fly on the wall of the writers' room during the early days of " The Simpsons." Well, we'll do you one better: onetime "Simpsons" scribes Al Jean, Mike Reiss, Jay Kogen, Jeff Martin, and Conan O'Brien all gathering on O'Brien's online chat show "Serious Jibber-Jabber" for an in-depth convo about the early days of the iconic animated series, their personal lives, and more.
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