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Thread: The embodiment of a man.
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03-21-2009, 06:34 AM #1
The embodiment of a man.
I have seen several threads addressing this exact question, but I am not asking for the definition of a man as we see it. No, I am asking for a name and a picture of the Man that embodies all of your ideals of what a man is!
Let me exclude Jesus right off the top as he is an easy pick for many of us here and rather hard to attain his lofty state.
Let me start:
Gary Coopers character in "High Noon" epitomizes what I believe a man is!
Ronald Reagan is another man as I see it! I realize that there are some here that don't think highly of President Reagan but he did stand up for what he believed in!
So, who do you see as embodying the essence of what a man is?
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elbonator (03-22-2009)
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03-21-2009, 06:41 AM #2
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Thanked: 416John Wayne was always a hero of mine!
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03-21-2009, 06:45 AM #3
Great choice Doc! I have quite a few I would like to post myself but I'll leave room for other members who want to post.
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03-21-2009, 06:47 AM #4
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Thanked: 416as was
Canada Bill Jones was born in a gypsy tent in Yorkshire, England. He moved to Canada where he learned his trade from Dick Cady, a veteran three-card monte player. By the time he left Canada for the rich pickings in the pre-war South, Bill was an expert at the game. Two decades of experience on the southern rivers, and Canada Bill became the greatest monte sharp to ever "pitch the broads."
"Canada Bill was a character one might travel the length and breadth of the land and never see his match, or run across his equal. Imagine a medium-sized, chicken-headed, tow-haired sort of a man with mild blue eyes, and a mouth nearly from ear to ear, who walked with a shuffling, half-apologetic sort of a gait, and who, when his countenance was in repose, resembled an idiot. For hours he would sit in his chair, twisting his hair in little ringlets. His clothes were always several sizes too large, and his face was as smooth as a woman's and never had a particle of hair on it. Canada was a slick one. He had a squeaking, boyish voice, and awkward, gawky manners, and a way of asking fool questions and putting on a good natured sort of a grin, that led everybody to believe that he was the rankest kind of a sucker-the greenest sort of a country jake. Woe to the man who picked him up, though. "-George Devol, Forty Years a Gambler on the MississippiOne of the most famous and most often quoted of all gambling stories, is about the time that Canada Bill had to spend the night in Baton Rouge, and searched all over town until he finally found a Faro game in the back room of a barbershop. George Devol found him there and saw immediately that the dealer was cheating using a "two-card" (rigged) box. He begged Bill to quit the game. "Can't you see this game is crooked?" Devol asked. "Sure I know it, George," sighed Bill with resignation, "but it's the only game in town." The punch line of this story has become a familiar part of our popular culture.
Canada Bill once wrote to the general superintendent of the Union Pacific Railroad. In his letter he offered $25,000 a year for the exclusive rights to run a three-card monte game on the trains. He promised to limit his victims to commercial travelers from Chicago and Methodist preachers. The railroad official politely declined the offer.
In the mid-seventies, as the railroads went the way of steamboats for the sharpers, Bill began a grand tour of racetracks around the country. He made so much money at monte and other swindles that he could have retired a dozen times. Unfortunately, Canada Bill couldn't stay away from Faro and short cards. This ironically confirms Bill's often quoted claim that "Suckers have no business with money, anyway."
Canada Bill Jones died in 1880 in Reading, Pennsylvania. He was destitute, and buried at public expense. One of the gamblers who stood by as they lowered Canada Bill into the ground offered to bet $1000 at two to one odds that Bill wasn't in the casket. There were no takers. One gambler within earshot said, "I've seen Bill get out of tighter holes than that before.
When the western gambling fraternity learned of his death, a group of them from Chicago raised money among themselves to recompense the city of Reading for the funeral expenses, and had a gravestone erected for Canada Bill. But Canada Bill's real monument is his "rube act" creation-which proved so devastating a tool in the hands of the many sharpers who followed him.
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03-21-2009, 07:04 AM #5
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Thanked: 369It's gotta be this guy:
Bill Brasky-Brasky Buddies - AOL Video
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03-21-2009, 07:10 AM #6
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03-21-2009, 09:42 AM #7
In order for me to really delineate the true picture of man I would have to show pictures of all men. So instead I have chosen a few who represent different aspects of a man.
Please don't feel disparaged if your picture is not here, mine is not either (but only because I don't have one of myself).
First up is a Taliban warrior, fighting for what he believes in.
The second picture is Gandhi not fighting for what he believes in (or is he? ).
Third person to win a spot is Richard Simmons, for being a man and for liking manly things (I'm not even kidding here).
And fourth but certainly not least (no man is less than any other! Well... you could argue that Lance Armstrong is less of a man but I won't go there), we have the Vitruvian man!
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03-21-2009, 10:07 PM #8
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Thanked: 278No one man embodies all of my ideals of what a man is, it isn't possible because some ideal traits are opposites.
Imagine a combinations of:
Isaac Newton for intelligence, advancement of science and generally changing the world for the better;
Muhammad Ali for strength / sporting prowess;
Evel Knievel for sheer crazy recklessness;
Horatio Nelson for military dominance;
Mikhail Gorbachev for peace / ending the Cold War (or at least stopping us from being destroyed during it).
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03-22-2009, 04:06 AM #9
Nothing needs be said.
Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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03-22-2009, 04:55 AM #10
Well, since you went and excluded Jesus how about this man? He does embody all of my ideals of what a straight razor man is
I will also steal one of Gary Cooper's characters in the film "Sergeant York" - I don't know how realistic it was a picture of the actual Sergeant York but the character in the film embodies many of my ideals of what a man is
Here's an idea for your next thread: Post a photo of the woman that embodies all of our idealsFind me on SRP's official chat in ##srp on Freenode. Link is at top of SRP's homepage