How watch TV on a boat?
He has no idea of what it's like to spend a weekend on a boat...since he has
no boat.
Oh, he might go to a boat show somewhere (if he can collect enough aluminum
cans to pay the admission) and drool over the boats that others will some
day own, but he will never be an owner. The closest Hairy gets to boating is
occasionally posting ridiculous fabricated tales of imaginary boats he owns
and the fictional times he has spent on the water.
It's not Hairy's fault...it's those damn politicians that are constantly
scheming against him.
I wish he would invest a little of his recycling income on a good aluminum
foil beanie to deflect some of the bad signals his addled brain receives...
"Comcast News" wrote in message
news:cyaSc.240120$IQ4.232352@attbi_s02...
Harry,
It sounds like he actually uses his boat and enjoy spending the night on
the
boat. What kind of boat do you own and when was the last time you used
it?
"Harry Krause" wrote in message
...
bomar wrote:
Sams Club has a couple neat little flat screen televisions that would
look
great mounted in our cabin. The base on the ones I examined are
nothing
more
than weight to keep it from tipping over, it would be a cinch to
remove
it.
Add a set of rabbit ears to set on the deck, plug it into a small
inverter
and we would be good to go.
It must really suck to be out on a boat and worried about how many
channels you could pull in with your "rabbit ears...on the deck."
--
"There's an old saying in Tennessee - I know it's in Texas, probably in
Tennessee - that says, fool me once, shame on - shame on you. Fool me -
you can't get fooled again." -George W. Bush, Nashville, Tenn., Sept.
17, 2002
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