Friday, April 04, 2014

Overheard in the Office...

RX: "I think everybody will understand 'Elvis' used as a verb."

Me: "'To Elvis your television'?"

RX: "Exactly."

Me: "'Elvis', when used as a verb, means 'to shoot one's television'."

RX: "It's an effective remote control."

Me: "It's a hell of an 'off' button. Especially spectacular in the days of CRTs."

15 comments:

  1. I've always referred to it as "The Elvis Remote".

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  2. It is very satisfying. Everyone should do it once.

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  3. I love the line in the book "Crap Cars" speaking of the 300 Z saying the venerable Z Car had "done an Elvis".

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  4. Too rich for me. I'll stick to Elvising peanut butter and banana sandwiches.

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  5. After seeing some of the crap on TV I'm surprised it isn't done more often.

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  6. I thought "Doing an Elvis" meant dying while on the porcelain throne.

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  7. Robert has the ticket - we've used "Doing an Elvis" in EMS for decades.

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  8. While leaping to one's death from a sitting position in the loo is a classic Elvis, any mindlessly self destructive act performed without regard to loss of dignity or professional standing can be an Elvis.

    Shooting a TV is an Elvis in that it is a mercy killing.

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  9. Yeah, Robert, but on the way there you get flabby and become an all flash, no substance version of your former self.

    And the Z car was briefly killed off to complete the cycle :)

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  10. yep, "to elvis", aka "commode code". to brady down (slow one's heartbeat) to nothing, whilst straining to deliver The Turd That Ate The City. (aren't ER nurses fun conversationalists?)

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  11. Less satisfying with the flat screens.

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  12. For once I take mild issue with Rx.

    Is the term "control" really accurate when it only makes the device do one thing once?

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  13. 1. It works from a distance.
    2. Feedback is definite and immediate.

    Is a detonator for HE an less a "remote control" in that the explosion only happens once?

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  14. I've used the phrase "to Elvis" so, under circumstances I won't elaborate on. Many, thank god, many years ago.

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