Terry Southern, call your office:
Youngman Grand, Esq.: Dad, do you think words corrupt?
Sir Guy Grand KG, KC, CBE: I don’t know, let’s try. Agnes?
Dame Agnes Grand: [looks up from the television] Yes?
Sir Guy Grand KG, KC, CBE: Nipple.
Dame Agnes Grand: Shh!
[turns back to the television]
Sir Guy Grand KG, KC, CBE: [watches her a moment] Well, there’s no immediate physical change.
— From the 1969 film version of Southern’s novel, The Magic Christian, starring Peter Sellers as Sir Guy Grand, and Ringo Starr as Youngman Grand.
Flash-forward to 2013:
Wired’s interview with Dropbox CEO Drew Houston is a good read, but you might want to skip right to the correction at the end for the very best part.
“Correction appended [2:37 P.M. PST/9/17]: A previous version of this story incorrectly quoted Dropbox co-founder Drew Houston saying “anyone with nipples” instead of “anyone with a pulse.”
The obvious question: how does one mishear “pulse” as “nipples”? You can’t even try to blame that on autocorrect.
— “Wired’s nipple slip early contender for correction of the year,” Twitchy, today.
Related: “Peter Sellers does a few regional British accents, including different areas of London.”
More: One way or another, I think somebody was quite well lubricated here:
Remember kids, anal and analog are two exceedingly different things.
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