Lewis and Clark Abbott and Costello Ben and Jerry Sid and Nancy Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Batman and Robin Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid Hatfields and McCoys Stiller and Meara Johnson and Johnson Harold and Maude Romeo and Juliet Cheech and Chong Siskel and Ebert Laverne and Shirley Lenny and Squiggy Donny and Marie Laurel and Hardy Mork and Mindy Rowan and Martin Burns and Allen Smith & Wesson Heckler & Koch Simon and Garfunkel Sonny and Cher Starsky and Hutch Penn and Teller Brooks and Dunn Thelma and Louise Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Siegfried and Roy Hall and Oates Black & Decker Jay and Silent Bob Martin and Lewis Hansel and Gretel Shields and Yarnell Barnes and Nobel Bang & Olufsen Abercrombie and Fitch Simon & Simon Porgy and Bess Barnum and Bailey Masters and Johnson Briggs & Stratton Ozzie and Harriet Will and Grace Simon and Schuster Rodgers and Hammerstein Sears and Roebuck Procter and Gamble
This post was edited by Flint Ironstag at February 23, 2019 4:25 PM MST
I love that "Car Talk" if it's the one I've heard on the radio. I am someone who is terribly inept about knowing things about cars and these two guys make learning about cars engaging and fun and funny. (Not the learning always has to be fun).
Weird, I thought of Lucy and Ethel without ever giving Fred a thought. I always found him the least funny -- practically unfunny -- of those main four characters. I like the show a lot but never found him funny. Don't know why. :)
Lennon and McCartney Rodgers and Hammerstein Gilbert and Sullivan
Why is the lyricist always named before the composer?
Also Jack and Jill
Jack and Jill went up the hill To fetch a pail of water Silly Jill forgot the Pill And now they've got a daughter
This post was edited by Slartibartfast at June 12, 2024 7:12 PM MDT
I've often wondered that myself. But the rhyme doesn't mention a well, they could be collecting the water from a spring and want to get it where it's clean?