I'm breaking protocol tonight.
When I started this blog, I resolved only to post responses to exact quotes that appeared in my search stats in the form of a question. And, while the phrase above appears often in my search stats, I've never seen it in the form of a question. I decided to break the rule and post about it anyway, because I'm convinced that it's intended as a question. Here's why: That's the whole joke. It makes sense for ONE LINE of a joke to appear in search stats...maybe someone couldn't remember exactly how it went, or needed to find out the punch line. But in the case of "Two guys walk into a bar, and the third one ducks", that's all she wrote. There is no more. It's the set-up and the punchline all rolled into one...so what could a person who Googled the WHOLE JOKE be looking for?
Finally, after dozens of people had arrived at one of my blogs by Googling this joke in its entirety, I decided that they were looking for an explanation.
So here it is. (Be warned, I am no artist. There is a reason I deal so exclusively in words. Still, I think that if in fact you're sitting there scratching your head over "two guys walk into a bar and the third one ducks", this will clear it up for you.)
6 comments:
Ohhh... NOW I get it. ;) Thanks for that delightful illustration.
Extraordinary prowess in the use of artwork, Tiffany.
very innovative
i would like to say . I love your blog great Post.
aha duh... im sooo stupid :L
Actually, I had this quote, as well as others of a similar sort, and was trying for more.
(ie "Build it and they will complain." or "a broken pencil is pointless") I cannot remember what these quotes were called.
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