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Difference between revisions of "Lawrence Whelk"
(Created page with "Decent gastropoidal pun on real long-time bandleader and accordionist [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Welk Lawrence Welk] (1903–1992). ==1989== The joke's got to h...") |
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+ | [[Image:Whelk_Lawrence_SCUBAPRO_Diving_and_Snorkeling.png|frame|right|alt=Lawrence Whelk, illustration by Anita Schettino|Lawrence Whelk, illustration by Anita Schettino. Yes, yes, I can see that it's a fish and not a snail at all. Please don't email me about it.]] | ||
Decent gastropoidal pun on real long-time bandleader and accordionist [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Welk Lawrence Welk] (1903–1992). | Decent gastropoidal pun on real long-time bandleader and accordionist [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Welk Lawrence Welk] (1903–1992). | ||
Latest revision as of 11:47, 12 March 2019
Decent gastropoidal pun on real long-time bandleader and accordionist Lawrence Welk (1903–1992).
1989
The joke's got to have been around for some time, but the earliest use I can find is 1989, from the pun-stuffed, noir parody short story "Gone Fission," by Gary Gentile, in the Fall 1989 issue of SCUBAPRO Diving and Snorkeling magazine.
Just then the band struck up a number. It was a sea chantey. According to the playbill on the drum fish, the lead sinker was a gastropod named Lawrence Whelk. He was accompanied by a quick picking guitarfish, a fiddler crab whose apron was on crooked, and a striped bass who was actually a tenor.
They played a lively tuna.
1997
The joke was part of the title of a 1997 art print by Carol Lummus: "Saturday Night with Lawrence Whelk."
2013
Cartoonist Dan Piraro used the gag in his Bizarro comic strip of Feb. 5, 2013.