So they usually make
some Canadian joke about it.
Not exact matches
Tory Agriculture Minister Gerry «wise cracker» Ritz made headlines after
joking about that wacky listeria outbreak that has killed 19
Canadians, claiming the controversy was causing the government to suffer, «the death of a thousand cold cuts.»
Being
Canadian and having endured
jokes about the
Canadian tuxedo I wouldn't be caught dead wearing jeans or a denim skirt with a denim jacket, c’est trop!
Many Americans have made
jokes about moving to Canada in the past, but this week, the
Canadian immigration website's server broke down because of all the traffic from unhappy American voters.
In
Canadian director Sarah Polley's experimental, poetic documentary
about the relationship between people (her family, specifically), stories, and identity, she investigates the validity of the lingering family
joke that her dad, Michael Polley, isn't her biological father.
We start off with some aggressive
jokes about ogling women's bodies, move on to sex bets and end up with a running gag
about Thorny (Chandrasekhar) developing a dependence on
Canadian female Viagra.
Rabbit's the biggest victim of this: he's still the film's «rookie,» but he's a gormless innocent who, despite his visible middle age, gets a sexy subplot with French -
Canadian ingenue Genevieve Aubois (Emmanuelle Chriqui), whose character mostly exists as eye candy and a half - hearted conduit for more
jokes about French accents.
If you think this leads to
jokes about obese, arrogant, gun - loving Americans, and even more
jokes about funny - talking, hockey - loving, outwardly polite but quietly resentful French -
Canadians: yep.
Many of the
jokes center on the fact that
Canadians are much more open than Americans
about strippers, cannabis and French accents.
Also,
Canadians definitely
joke about Americans.
She and I got to talk
about her recent solo exhibition in Paris (France, not Texas), whether being
Canadian automatically makes you funny, trying out new mediums, her new kitten named Pluto Chicken Nugget Wise, the politics of dairy, Ubering to incredible pizza in Philly, food in general, sculptural carbohydrates, and a terrible
joke I tried to tell to the man who owns my local wine store.
By Chris Horner, ATI Michael Mann made his way back to the Commonwealth of Virginia yesterday to watch his U.S. lawyer reprise the dark conspiracy theories previously weaved throughout his
Canadian lawsuit against Tim Ball for repeating the old
joke about «belong [ing] in the State Pen, not Penn State».