A bit of controversy
Jul. 9th, 2010 04:25 pmYahoo has a story up about the auctioning of items from the Roy Rogers Museum, including---drumroll, please!---Trigger, who was preserved when he passed. According to the article, they expect Trigger's taxidermied remains to fetch about $200K.
I commented. I HAD to comment:
Gee, I wish I had a spare 200 grand to throw away on a giant stuffed palomino! Nothing against Trigger, but in this economy, that's just crazy. Anyone who spends that kind of cash on something so absurd clearly has more money than good sense.
To my bemusement, reaction is running 5 to 4 against, and a subsequent poster accuses me of being jealous. Someone else has commented that it's funny to think that a dead horse is worth more than a Prius. And a lot of people are saying Trigger belongs in the Smithsonian.
It's funny what people will find to wank about!
ETA 7/16/10: From Yahoo news: Rural cable network RFD-TV bought (Roy Roger's dog) Bullet for $35,000 on Thursday and Trigger for $266,000 a day earlier at an auction in New York City.
RFD-TV owner Patrick Gottsch said the Omaha, Neb.-based network will begin airing old Roy Rogers movies on Saturdays starting November 6. The movie cowboy's son, Roy Jr., will introduce each film, as Trigger and Bullet stand in the background.
"The goal is to introduce Roy Rogers to a whole new generation of kids," Gottsch said.
That's kinda cool!
.
I commented. I HAD to comment:
Gee, I wish I had a spare 200 grand to throw away on a giant stuffed palomino! Nothing against Trigger, but in this economy, that's just crazy. Anyone who spends that kind of cash on something so absurd clearly has more money than good sense.
To my bemusement, reaction is running 5 to 4 against, and a subsequent poster accuses me of being jealous. Someone else has commented that it's funny to think that a dead horse is worth more than a Prius. And a lot of people are saying Trigger belongs in the Smithsonian.
It's funny what people will find to wank about!
ETA 7/16/10: From Yahoo news: Rural cable network RFD-TV bought (Roy Roger's dog) Bullet for $35,000 on Thursday and Trigger for $266,000 a day earlier at an auction in New York City.
RFD-TV owner Patrick Gottsch said the Omaha, Neb.-based network will begin airing old Roy Rogers movies on Saturdays starting November 6. The movie cowboy's son, Roy Jr., will introduce each film, as Trigger and Bullet stand in the background.
"The goal is to introduce Roy Rogers to a whole new generation of kids," Gottsch said.
That's kinda cool!
.