property of ones
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Dallas, TX</pre> | Dallas, TX</pre> | ||
| - | '''STRONG BAD:''' ''{typing}'' Aw, Dan, you dodged a bullet, man. Because lemme tell you...a One that is not cold, is scarcely a One at all. Allow me to demonstrate with one of my bogus mathematical theorems. I call it "The Property of Ones". It goes like this: The ONE<sup>itude</sup> is directly proportional to the Cold<sup>itude</sup> of the ONE. So you got that, Dan? The colder it is, the more of a one it is. Because you don't want to end up with a Cold None. I wouldn't wish that on anybody. But now in foreign lands, they've been known to drink ''{The bottle of "Not So Cold One" appears.}'' Not So Cold Ones, ''{Then, a bottle of "Room Temp-A-Ture One" appears.}'' Room Temperature Ones and even, ''{And finally, a bottle of "Wrm ne" appears.}'' Warm Ones. Whoah! But where I come from, it's CUH-HOLD ONES. Though I have to admit, on certain evenings in late spring, a Cool One can be very refreshing. ''{stops typing}'' Ooh... that's a good one. | + | '''STRONG BAD:''' ''{typing}'' Aw, Dan, you dodged a bullet, man. Because lemme tell you...a One that is not cold, is scarcely a One at all. Allow me to demonstrate with one of my bogus mathematical theorems. I call it "The Property of Ones". It goes like this: The ONE<sup>itude</sup> is directly proportional to the Cold<sup>itude</sup> of the ONE. So you got that, Dan? The colder it is, the more of a one it is. Because you don't want to end up with a Cold None. I wouldn't wish that on anybody. But now in foreign lands, they've been known to drink ''{The bottle of "Not So Cold One" appears.}'' Not So Cold Ones, ''{Then, a bottle of "Room Temp-A-Ture One" appears.}'' Room Temperature Ones and even, ''{And finally, a bottle of "Wrm ne" appears.}'' Warm Ones. Whoah! But where I come from, it's CUH-HOLD ONES. Though I have to admit, on certain evenings in late spring, a Cool One can be very refreshing. ''{stops typing}'' Ooh... that's a good one. |
| - | + | '{A picture of three "Cold One" bottles with the text below saying "A One That Isn't Cold, Is Scarcely A One At All" appears on the screen. [[The Paper]] comes down.}'' | |
== Fun Facts == | == Fun Facts == | ||
Revision as of 22:51, 22 September 2004
Contents |
Screenshot
Summary
Strong Bad Email #39
Strong Bad talks about cold ones.
Features: Strong Bad
Transcript
STRONG BAD: {singing} Gimme some of this and gimme some of thiiiiis... gimme some of this. {stops singing}
Hey Strong Bad, How's it hanging? Last weekend I almost drank a one that was not cold. Has this ever happened to you? Dan Waters Dallas, TX
STRONG BAD: {typing} Aw, Dan, you dodged a bullet, man. Because lemme tell you...a One that is not cold, is scarcely a One at all. Allow me to demonstrate with one of my bogus mathematical theorems. I call it "The Property of Ones". It goes like this: The ONEitude is directly proportional to the Colditude of the ONE. So you got that, Dan? The colder it is, the more of a one it is. Because you don't want to end up with a Cold None. I wouldn't wish that on anybody. But now in foreign lands, they've been known to drink {The bottle of "Not So Cold One" appears.} Not So Cold Ones, {Then, a bottle of "Room Temp-A-Ture One" appears.} Room Temperature Ones and even, {And finally, a bottle of "W�rm �ne" appears.} Warm Ones. Whoah! But where I come from, it's CUH-HOLD ONES. Though I have to admit, on certain evenings in late spring, a Cool One can be very refreshing. {stops typing} Ooh... that's a good one.
'{A picture of three "Cold One" bottles with the text below saying "A One That Isn't Cold, Is Scarcely A One At All" appears on the screen. The Paper comes down.}
Fun Facts
- In the introduction of this email, Strong Bad may be singing to the Falco tune of "Rock me Amadeus".
