Even Shakespeare and Chaucer cracked wise about cuckolds, who were often depicted wearing horns.
|
|
The two calmed me down and cracked wise about how I had set myself up for failure.
|
|
James Roday and Dulé Hill cracked wise and solved crimes for eight years in "Psych," a silly, hyper-referential procedural.
|
|
The fresh criticism comes after the GOP nominee cracked wise after he was given a Purple Heart by retired Army Lt. Col.
|
|
When a friend once cracked wise about his fitted hat, Mr. Perez returned a withering look — and then never wore the hat again.
|
|
Asked if he was worried that Schumer -- and Schumer alone -- would have Trump's ear, the No. 2 Republican in the Senate cracked wise.
|
|
Before Merida kicked ass in Brave or Princess Anna cracked wise in Frozen, Princess Fiona proved that a damsel need not be in distress.
|
|
"Way back in 2016, when someone cracked wise about a President using military hardware to settle grudges, an audience would laugh," Loeser also wrote.
|
|
The folks who gather at Daphne's, however, are markedly different from the Bostonians who cracked wise during a certain long-running show set in a neighborhood pub.
|
|
He cracked wise about how there are three best-selling authors in his family and how the other two are selling a lot more books than him.
|
|
Sen. Lindsey Graham cracked wise about President Donald Trump's "very stable genius" comment on The View Monday – but then proceeded to compliment Trump's electoral accomplishments and leadership in the White House.
|
|
The hashtag #TrumpRunningMate emerged on the social media site, and Twitter users cracked wise about who - or what - would join Trump's ticket, if he were to win the Republican presidential nomination.
|
|
When I first reported on a set of sigils appearing in various indie games, I cracked wise about Frog Fractions 22, but it wasn't until recently that it seemed possible that was more than a joke.
|
|
He cracked wise about his germaphobia, recounted a run-in with a sick friend using a stand-up comedian's patter, waved around colorful graphs showing America's superiority on virus containment and listed facts he had just learned about the flu.
|
|
Iowans, seemingly overwhelmed by the zaniness, have decided to embrace it: A cartoonist has sketched out caricatures of his predicted caucus winners on live TV, rendering Mr. Sanders as a wild-haired, bucktoothed professor and Mr. Trump as an effete emperor with a oversize tumbleweed mane ("yuge," as he would say.) "This will be — probably — your hairiest caucus of all time," one of the show's anchors cracked wise to the cartoonist.
|
|
Even Shakespeare and Chaucer cracked wise about cuckolds, who were often depicted wearing horns. But in a number of recent studies, researchers have found that our obsession with cuckolded fathers is seriously overblown.
|
|