Rockerduck wrote:"I should fall flat on my face five times!"
Rockerduck wrote:Hint #1: "You're a thousand years behind your [time], unca Donald!"
Egg wrote:I like the hypno-gun story (WDC 145) very much. It shows how people can be weary for something they fear the most themselves. Barks had a lot of such behaviour obversations in his work. I like the point that Donald is an easy-believer and that therefore the hypno-gun is working on him.Rockerduck wrote:"I should fall flat on my face five times!"Rockerduck wrote:Hint #1: "You're a thousand years behind your [time], unca Donald!"
The knight story, again. (WDC 198)
"Don't! Don't make me walk the plank! Let me go back to Burbank!"
(which story?)
Robb_K wrote:I'm becoming senile - even losing long-term memory! It's no fun getting old!
Egg wrote:"Ah! Home from school! Come in here! I have a job for you!"
(which story)
Doctor Witchie Britchie wrote:"What were the only two consecutive stories in which Barks inserted a time continuation of events that connected the two stories? (e.g. an action continuation not just a reference back to former events)."
Are you referring to the detective story where the nephews capture a bank robber and the following "water ski contest" ten-pager in which Donald attempts to borrow the reward money they recieved for capturing the robber?
Egg wrote:There's also a connection between 'All at Sea' and 'The Status Seeker', the latter refering to the first.
Doctor Witchie Britchie wrote:OK, Egg, here comes a new quote:
"The greedy monsters are carrying off whole CAKES and joints of beef!" (which Barks story?)
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