Showing posts with label best caption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label best caption. Show all posts

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Best Caption Time ... once again

Take a look at this most interesting photo from more than 30 years ago. Can you identify the handsome young man in the photo? Why was he smiling so sweetly? What was he doing? What was he thinking? Does he still have such sexy legs?

The usual rules apply. Put in what YOU think is the best caption for this photo. Attractive no-prizes apply for the most creative captions.



Ahh, the good old days. As the song goes ... "Those were the days my friend, we thought they'd never end" ... da da da da ...

x

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Caption Time Again

You all know the rules.

Attractive "no prizes" (including no-London-return-flights, no-pocket-camcorders, and no-free-hotel-stays) for the best caption that explains what our friend was doing or saying ...



Photo 1



Photo 2

Enjoy yourself ...

Friday, November 13, 2009

Caption Time Again ...

Here's an interesting chap in an interesting outfit ...




The best and most creative captions will receive the usual "no-prize".

An even bigger "no-prize" if your input is given in rhyme.

Over to you guys.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Another 50 Year Old Classic ...

We're not the only ones turning FIFTY. Here's another classic some of us may be familiar with ...

Any of you guys ever owned a Mini Minor? Well, do you know it was first launched in 1959 too? I always thought the car looked cool, and not just because I loved the movie "The Italian Job" and not because Mr Bean drove one.

And some of you at least might have discovered the power of this little vehicle in attracting interest from the opposite sex back in those days, as is reaffirmed by the article below.




Our friend RC recently brought this article to my attention.

LONGBRIDGE, England: The Mini might be 50 years old, but the love for the little British car showed no signs of waning as thousands of "Minimaniacs" gathered earlier this month to celebrate the anniversary.

"They come from everywhere: Australia, Japan, Germany, France ... We have 450 Miniclubs from all over the world," marvelled Glenys Price, one of the organisers of the meeting in Longbridge, central England, where it all began.

About 5,000 "Minimaniacs", driving Minis of every colour and model, set up camp opposite the old factory that produced the first Minis in an industrial suburb of Birmingham, swapping advice, stories and spare parts.

"Oh yes, the passion's stll alive. It was a young people's car but the fathers passed on to their son and now the grandchildren have one," Price said, ahead of the Aug 27 anniversary of the Mini going on the market in 1959.

Mathieu Faucon, 25, arrived with his father Michel at the event, and admits that it was "love at first sight" for him and the little cars.

Despite their tendency to break down - causing critics to describe them as less a car, more a tin can on wheels - he says he "caught the bug" from his father and now owns three of the little cars.

"It's true, you have to enjoy being a mechanic," Faucon said, admitting he spent hours under the bonnet.

His father Michel Faucon,60, bought his first Mini in his 20's and recalls fondly how "having a Mini was the coolest thing" - especially when it came to attracting women.

Despite also admitting its flaws, he says: "It weaves its way everywhere, you feel like you're going fast. Normal cars are so mundane."

"You are so close to the ground, it's like a go-kart. You can feel everything through the steering wheel. In the back, too," chipped in a  family friend, 26-year old Mathieu Duval.

When production stopped in 2000, Minis only became more collectable. A new version was released in 2001 following BMW's takeover of Rover, but for many fans, "the big one", as they call it here, simply cannot compete.

"Since they stopped making it, the passion's gone to the roof," said John Griffin, the 46-year old secretary of the London and Surrey Mini Owners' Club.

Holger George, the 55-year old president of a German group which incorporates 40 clubs from around the country, dismissed the new car, saying: "It has nothing to do with the old Mini."

With its basic construction, the original car is a dream for a mechanic, says Holger, who is here with his 15-year-old step son. "You can do everything yourself, it's very adaptable. It's a real toy for adults," he said.

Some Mini fans are more flexible, however, including Barry Tilbury, a member of the London and Surrey club who owns 16 cars - including a new Mini.

"It's my investment, it's like putting your money in a bank," he said.

In a tent nearby, two little blonde boys sing the song from "The Italian Job", the cult movie starring Michael Caine which put Minis centre stage.

Aged just nine and six years old, they "already have the passion", said their father, Mattias Wahlstedt, 39.

He proudly introduces himself as president of theMini Seven Club Sweden, "the first Mini club in the world, created in 1961, six months before the English one".

How to describe the allure of the Mini?

"Kids don't recognise a Saab from a Volvo but they always recognise a Mini," Wahlstedt said.

[AFP]


Here's another view of the Mini model. Observe the colour, the curves, the classiness ...





Finally here's the car chase scene from "The Italian Job" that some of you may remember. After watching this, you will have new-found respect for the Mini ...


Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Best Caption Contest

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Here's a fascinating candid shot from a long time ago.
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What in the world was our friend doing?
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Apart from identifying the person, your challenge is to submit the most creative caption for this picture.
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I'll carry over the mystery prize from the "What & Where is this in Kuching?" contest, since there were obviously no winners for that challenge :-) Deadline 31st July.
xx