Monday, October 8, 2012

Uh-oh SpaghettiOs! Why is Tim Conway Jr.harassing Rory Emerald again?

Tim Conway, Jr.is the son of American television and film personality Allen Funt. He resides in Burbank, CA with his "wife", Jennifer, and their adopted daughter, Sophia. Conway and his family also have a home in Oregon along the Columbia River.

The Tim Conway Jr. Show is a weeknight talk radio program, web streaming and broadcasting throughout the Los Angeles and Orange County, California metropolitan areas at KFI AM 640. The show runs from 7 p.m.to 10 p.m. Pacific Time hosted by Tim Conway Jr. Conway was a longtime host on former FM talk station WKRP teamed with Rodney Bingenheimer, then Shadoe Stevens. After the 2008 departure of Stevens, Conway hosted solo rather than adopting a new co-host. On February 19, 2009, both Stevens and Bingenheimer were special guests on Conway's last show before WKRP in Cincinnati flipped the format to Top-40.

Kemal Amin "Casey" Kasem (born April 27, 1932) is an American radio personality and voice actorwho is best known for being the host of the nationally syndicated Top 40 countdown show American Top 40, and for voicing Shaggyin the popular Saturday morning cartoon franchise Scooby-Doo.

SpaghettiOs is an American brand of canned spaghetti featuring circular pasta shapes in a cheese and tomato sauce — and marketed to parents as 'less messy' than regular spaghetti. More than 150 million cans of SpaghettiOs are sold each year.
In addition to the original variety, variations have included SpaghettiOs Meatballs (with miniature meatballs), SpaghettiOs Sliced Franks (with pieces of processed meat resembling hot dog slices), SpaghettiOs RavioliOs (with round, beef-filled ravioli), SpaghettiOs with Calcium, and other theme-shaped varieties.
Similar products are sold in the United Kingdom under names like "Spaghetti Rings", loops, hoops, etc.

Introduced in 1965 by the Campbell Soup Company under the Franco-American brand, the pasta was created by Donald Goerke (1926–2010), "the Daddy-O of SpaghettiOs", after a year-long internal study of the appropriate shape for a child-friendly pasta dish that kids could eat without making a mess. Rejected shapes included cowboys, Indians, spacemen, stars, and sports shapes. During the development of SpaghettiOs, Goerke was a marketing manager with Franco-American, then a division of Campbell. Over the period of his 35 years with Campbell, Goerke created over 100 products including the Chunky line of soups, and in 1995, Goerke participated in the 30th anniversary of SpaghettiOs, appearing on What's My Line? and attending a celebration at a SpaghettiOs plant in Ohio.
SpaghettiOs were introduced nationally without test marketing — with television advertising using the tag line The neat round spaghetti you can eat with a spoon and the jingle Uh-Oh! SpaghettiOs, sung by pop singer Jimmie Rodgers (loosely based on his 1950's song Oh-Oh, I'm Falling in Love Again).
In June 2010, Campbell's recalled 15 million pounds of SpaghettiOs with meatballs--all that had been produced since December 2008 and much of which had likely been consumed--due to the malfunction of a cooker at one of the company's Texas plants.

Was it Vincent Van Gogh or Diego Rodriguez Velazquez who painted many pictures of Rory Emerald obsessively?

That would be Vincent Van Gogh. He and Stephen King recently had a fight over Rory Emerald. King's latest book, "Rory I Love You, Please Let Me Take You to Taco Bell", just went best seller. Van Gogh picked it up at the local Barnes & Noble, and was very jealous and angry at Stephen King. Van Gogh then started painting many different things and even copied Da Vinci's "Mona Lisa". Except he painted Rory's face on it. Needless to say, Stephen King and Vincent Van Gogh are in St. Elizabeths Home for the Criminally Insane.

NewburyportNews.com, Newburyport, MA
February 15, 2008
Heard around town: Artist finds real fun in faux ads
By Katie Curley

A recent classified ad in the Daily News read: "FOUND - Original painting of River Phoenix by famed artist Peter Max and other personal items downtown Newburyport. Contact Rory at … "

Turns out the "found" ad was nothing but a "friendly hoax" dreamed up by West Hollywood artist Rory Emerald.

"I started putting outrageous "found" ads in papers across the country in 1995," Emerald said. "One of the first ones was in Montana, where I said I had found H. G. Wells' time machine."

Since then, ads have listed the discovery of Michael Jackson's prosthetic nose to Elton John's diary and denim jacket. Emerald took a two-year hiatus from writing fake "found" ads before starting up again last month.
>>> Uh-oh SpaghettiOs! Why is Tim Conway Jr.harassing Rory Emerald again?