That would be the one and only Mr. Bryan who said, and I quote, "Hey, I resent that! I ain't no lady or gentleman" the last time I started a video off with "ladies and gentlemen."
Yeah Kevin, I'm kind of unnerved by honorifics such as "ladies and gentlemen" because I don't even qualify as a "people" most days. 🤪 I sort of joke, of course. In any case, special references in video introductions are funny but not necessary. 😁
Stupid "coincidence": Punisher is one of the few comics I read as a kid. 1990. Sixth Grade. Another kid told me I just had to read the thing. There was this real creep of a teacher who did not like me. The feeling was mutual. Guess whose class I got busted reading the thing in. Funny thing is I read other stuff during his joke of a class all the time. The one time I got caught was with someone else's material. I remember liking it well enough though. Have a nice weekend!
@@BryanM.R.-prionic1 I think I liked the idea of the punisher more than the comics themselves, or the movies for that matter. But yeah at least he helped get you through that class 😆. I have a great “got caught by the teacher” story but maybe for another time.
@@Maeve_Ever_Books Cool!! I always liked Venom and Carnage as villains. In fact, in an upcoming Coffee and a Comic Venom will return with Carnage (I think).
Oh yeah, forgot to mention I was eye-stalking your bookshelves and noticed an Oxford Very Short Introduction. May I ask which one? I have several stacks of the things. They've partially replaced my recreational encyclopedia reading problem.
@@BryanM.R.-prionic1 Absolutely!! You can eye stalk the shelves anytime and ask whatever you’d like. I have the Oxford Very Short Introduction for Social Psychology by Richard Crisp. I actually thought about using this as my textbook, believe it or not. Still am considering it. Maybe the students would actually read the book if they can fit it in their back pocket!! Crisp is the editor of the Journal of Applied Social Psychology.
@DrL_Reads Social Psychology. I should have guessed. 😂 And sure, I can believe it. I haven't read that one yet, and even if I had, I wouldn't know enough about the field to evaluate its suitability as a text. However, many entries in the Oxford VSI series are unintimidating, affordable, and yet effective. I've read a few covering more familiar territory that I could gladly use as a text in some bizarre scenario where I've been tasked with teaching a survey course for unknown but almost certainly quantum fluctuation reasons. It's always quantum fluctuation. 🙄
Venom and punisher? Sick!
@@Already-Overbooked It was a good one! Definitely worth the read!
And Brian…i wonder which Brian/Bryan you are refereeing too!
That would be the one and only Mr. Bryan who said, and I quote, "Hey, I resent that! I ain't no lady or gentleman" the last time I started a video off with "ladies and gentlemen."
Yeah Kevin, I'm kind of unnerved by honorifics such as "ladies and gentlemen" because I don't even qualify as a "people" most days. 🤪 I sort of joke, of course. In any case, special references in video introductions are funny but not necessary. 😁
Stupid "coincidence": Punisher is one of the few comics I read as a kid. 1990. Sixth Grade. Another kid told me I just had to read the thing. There was this real creep of a teacher who did not like me. The feeling was mutual. Guess whose class I got busted reading the thing in. Funny thing is I read other stuff during his joke of a class all the time. The one time I got caught was with someone else's material. I remember liking it well enough though. Have a nice weekend!
@@BryanM.R.-prionic1 I think I liked the idea of the punisher more than the comics themselves, or the movies for that matter. But yeah at least he helped get you through that class 😆. I have a great “got caught by the teacher” story but maybe for another time.
I love Venom!!
@@Maeve_Ever_Books Cool!! I always liked Venom and Carnage as villains. In fact, in an upcoming Coffee and a Comic Venom will return with Carnage (I think).
@ Can’t wait!!
Oh yeah, forgot to mention I was eye-stalking your bookshelves and noticed an Oxford Very Short Introduction. May I ask which one? I have several stacks of the things. They've partially replaced my recreational encyclopedia reading problem.
@@BryanM.R.-prionic1 Absolutely!! You can eye stalk the shelves anytime and ask whatever you’d like. I have the Oxford Very Short Introduction for Social Psychology by Richard Crisp. I actually thought about using this as my textbook, believe it or not. Still am considering it. Maybe the students would actually read the book if they can fit it in their back pocket!! Crisp is the editor of the Journal of Applied Social Psychology.
@DrL_Reads Social Psychology. I should have guessed. 😂 And sure, I can believe it. I haven't read that one yet, and even if I had, I wouldn't know enough about the field to evaluate its suitability as a text. However, many entries in the Oxford VSI series are unintimidating, affordable, and yet effective. I've read a few covering more familiar territory that I could gladly use as a text in some bizarre scenario where I've been tasked with teaching a survey course for unknown but almost certainly quantum fluctuation reasons. It's always quantum fluctuation. 🙄