It's featured in Wayne's World, so if you've seen that recently, you're not mad.
Spike ,'The Cautionary Tale of Numero Cinco'
Natter Five-O: Book 'Em, Danno.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I've heard it here in OH, bon bon. No idea where the closest store might be, though.
Such a good example of how advertising sometimes misses the mark. You remember the commercial, not the product.
Haven't. However this [link] suggests it is entirely possible that I am not mad.
That wiki article is awse.
According to the company, this phone number is one of the ten most recognized phone numbers in the United States, and the jingle is among the 7 most recognized in the US. ([1][5] Prior to the 800 number, the company had the same telephone number locally in the Chicago area, "five eight eight, two three-hundred", which aired frequently on Chicago superstation WGN-TV. The melody has covered by such artists as Pearl Jam. On the May 12, 2006 episode of Late Night With Conan O'Brien, La Bamba dressed up as the Empire Today spokesperson and the audience started singing the jingle.
Heh.
That New Yorker thing is hysterical. Hysterical like lady parts! (Um, that's the root of the word, right?)
I know Ellen DeGeneres has done bits about 800-588-2300 Empire on her show, so I'm guessing it's national at this point.
It's on here. It proves once again that I could remember phone numbers if I could just put them to music. They install carpet and windows, but the commercial doesn't make you want to hire them.
867-5309
There was this health-food-ish organic bakery that I worked at that sold vegetable soda. Like, celery and stuff. I actually tried some. Yes, it was as bad as it sounded.
Umm I love Dr. Browns Cel-Ray tonic. I have a feeling that the taste for it has to be acquired young.
It proves once again that I could remember phone numbers if I could just put them to music
Bob was talking to an acquaintance last night who placed tenth at the national memory championships last year-- he recalled 60 40-digit numbers, I think. Apparently the trick he learned is associating an animal with each two-digit number.
What I thought was REALLY interesting is that these memory tricks-- they also have to put together names and faces, memorize cards and stuff-- don't help with general memory. His memory is no better, he just as a skill that he can use to memorize things.