Friday, October 13, hell will officially freeze over as Kat and Joe hit the airwaves again with a new improved version of KatSoup. Details to come.
And here we are, talking about CHEESE:

| Curious Sayings/Words From wikipedia The moon is made of green cheese The Moon is made of green cheese” is a statement referring to a fanciful belief that the Moon is composed of cheese. In its original formulation as a proverb and metaphor for credulity with roots in fable, this refers to the perception of a simpleton who sees a reflection of the Moon in water and mistakes it for a round cheese wheel. It is widespread as a folkloric motif among many of the world’s cultures, and the notion has also found its way into children’s folklore and modern popular culture. The Scottish tale of the wolf fishing with his tail for the moon reflection is one such iteration. “The Tale of the Fox’s Tail” One day the wolf and the fox were out together, and they stole a dish of crowdie. Now the wolf was the biggest beast of the two, and he had a long tail like a greyhound and great teeth. The fox was afraid of him and did not dare to say a word when the wolf ate most of the crowdie and left only a little at the bottom of the dish for him, but he determined to punish him for it; so the next night when they were out together the fox said, “I smell a very nice cheese, and (pointing to the moonshine on the ice) there it is too.” “And how will you get it?” said the wolf. “Well, stop you here till I see if the farmer is asleep, and if you keep your tail on it, nobody will see you or know that it is there. Keep it steady. I may be some time coming back.” So the wolf lay down and laid his tail on the moonshine in the ice, and kept it for an hour till it was fast (definition=stuck). Then the fox, who had been watching him, ran to the farmer and said, “The wolf is there; he will eat up the children — the wolf! the wolf!” Then the farmer and his wife came out with sticks to kill the wolf, but the wolf ran off leaving his tail behind him, and that’s why the wolf is stumpy-tailed to this day, though the fox has a long brushy tail. |