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Gołąbki are also referred to in English as golombki, golumpki, golabki, golumpkies, golumpkis, gluntkes, or gwumpki. [1] [2] [4] Similar variations are called holubky (Czech, Slovak), sarmale (Romanian), töltött káposzta (Hungarian), holubtsi (Ukrainian), golubtsy (Russian), balandėliai (Lithuanian), Kohlrouladen or kåldolmar (Sweden, from the Turkish dolma).
She explained: "It was all too easy to compare our real actors with our puppet characters and descriptions such as 'wooden', 'expressionless', 'no strings attached' and 'puppet-like' were cheap shots some of the UK critics could not resist ... Typecasting is the lazy man's friend, and boy, were we typecast in Britain". [8]
In the original campaign medical marketers recommended treating the disease with a drug called "Indolebant". They presented a case study in which a lazy man who took the drug then got off his sofa to begin a job as an investment adviser. [1] The original campaign also contained an advertisement for an issue of PLOS on disease mongering. [1]
Stefán Karl Stefánsson (/ ˈ s t ɛ f ən ˈ s t ɛ f ən s ən / STEF-ən STEF-ən-sən, Icelandic: [ˈstɛːfaun ˈkʰartl̥ ˈstɛːfaunsɔn]; [2] 10 July 1975 – 21 August 2018) was an Icelandic actor and singer.
[2] [3] [4] This was one of the songs (along with "Lazy Man") that won him the Calypso King title at the 1961 carnival. [5] He finished in third place in 1963, behind Mighty Sparrow and Lord Kitchener. [6] Another of his calypsos, "Man Nicer Than Woman" was a humorous tale of an argument between a gay man and his straight friend. [7]
Thaddeus Stanley Golas (June 15, 1924 – April 16, 1997) was an American writer active in the self-help, New Age, and psychedelic genres. [1] His most well-known work is The Lazy Man's Guide to Enlightenment, which he self-published in 1972 and which was later picked up by Bantam Books.
Franklin "Pa" Kettle (played by Percy Kilbride in the first eight films and by Parker Fennelly in the last film) is a gentle, slow-speaking, slow-thinking, and lazy man. His only talents appear to be avoiding work and winning contests.
In the second Icelandic stage play, the character was called Glanni Glæpur and, when he arrived at the town, he wore a completely black outfit; but, when he was disguised as Rikki Riki (a very wealthy man), he wore a purple coat, purple pants and shoes that are similar to those that Robbie wears in the television series—although at that point he did not yet have his hair covered in gel. [3]