Monday, January 6, 2014

Porky Pigasso

Searching for more items related to "Pig" and "art", I located this old video that's  must watch:

http://www.220.ro/trailer/01-I-Haven-T-Got-A-Hat/aMv3Eu3pAH/

After this I decided to check out another pig familiar to me in my youth... from the tv series "Green Acres", Arnold the pig.  Note the following excerpt from Arnold's wiki page that stands out:
 He was an accomplished abstract painter (dubbed "Porky Picasso")
Well, we are on a "Pig Art" theme... butt shouldn't he have been dubbed "Porky Pigasso"?!  Note the following from Picasso's wiki page re:
Pablo Picasso (Spanish: [ˈpaβlo piˈkaso]; 25 October 1881 – 8 April 1973)
Again, yet another addition to the "Targeting Family Birthdays" pattern-cluster, given that 3 members of my partners family were born on this day (two being siblings).  This date and October 26 have cropped up a number of times in the last couple of weeks.    Note this next excerpt from Arnold's wiki page:
One storyline had Arnold inheriting millions of dollars as the sole descendant of the favorite pig of a pork-packing magnate, distinguished by his ability to predict the weather with his tail. There was some doubt to the pig's ability when during the claims process for the money, his demonstration predicted snow in the middle of warm weather.
There's something about the "tail"... and the letter "Q" , which is phonetically identical to the word "queue/cue", note the etymology:
  • queue (n.) Look up queue at Dictionary.comlate 15c., "band attached to a letter with seals dangling on the free end," from French queue "a tail," from Old French cuecoe "tail" (12c., also "penis")...
  • queue (v.) Look up queue at Dictionary.com"to stand in a line," 1893, from queue (n.). Earlier "put hair up in a braid" (1777). Related: Queuedqueueing. Churchill is said to have coined Queuetopia (1950), to describe Britain under Labour or Socialist rule. 
  • cue (n.1) Look up cue at Dictionary.com
    "stage direction," 1550s, from Q, which was used 16c., 17c. in stage plays to indicate actors' entrances, probably as an abbreviation of Latin quando "when" (see quandary) or a similar Latin adverb. Shakespeare has it as both Q and cue.
    cue (n.2) Look up cue at Dictionary.com
    "billiard stick," 1749, variant of queue (n.). Cue ball first recorded 1881.
Now it makes Tou much sense-- the "pig tail"... another name for braids!!

The other thing that stands out with the excerpt is that Arnold's relative predicted snow in the middle of warm weather.  Interesting considering that the inner twin have voiced as part of their concern and as part of the reason for coming out and communicating to us today, as having something to do with the next glacial episode, an event that's expected to occur once again... and should this be the case, such great volumes of snow will accumulate that even the warmer weather of Spring and Summer won't be able to melt it all, hence once again, a good part of North America and Eurasia will become covered with ice miles thick. It seem's that Arnold's ancestors little curly-queue tail prediction is right... and so we're being given a cue and a clue as to what we must do... and this doesn't mean following the direction of the three little pigs... not even a house of bricks can withstand the wallop of this BIG BAD WOLF?! 

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