The time art on Exhausted Rooster could have been an old Playboy cartoon.I like the randomness and occasional absurdity of Cornell & Diehl's naming conventions. Nevermind how one blending house can keep over 200 blends in regular production, which is something I've always wondered about, but who wouldn't want to try some Bow-Legged Bear or Cross-Eyed Cricket? I'm pretty sure they have a blend that's evocative of a deoxygenated cow as well. Personally, I'm still waiting for that tin of Audacious Varmint to come along.
Does anyone save their dottle in a Persian slipper?Now, I’ll tread out on thin ice and suggest we examine the infatuation with all things Sherlock Holmes….
So, you are saying that's a bad thing?I just wish the companies would stop with the LOTR's bullshit.
C.S. Lewis was way more successful, way more meaningful and creative, but not a single Dawntreader Slices, Pevensie Plug, or Aslan's Breath blends.
And, just because the writer smoked a pipe, we got people coming into the hobby. So, it's like Steven King fans all lining up to start drinking lemonaid, because it's his favorite beverage.
And, what has driven me mad for the lack of any sanity in it, was years of listening to these guys say, "aromatics suck," and then in another thread, "Try the Hobbit Weed. It's my favorite." When Hobbit Weed is a cherry aromatic. But, just because it's named after some midget from a fairy tale, people think it's actually what these hairy midgets smoke. WTF!!
OK, rant over
Ill take Lord of the Rings over Narnia any day but to your point the LotR themed blend names have been beaten to death. Some of the ones you suggested are pretty good actuallyI just wish the companies would stop with the LOTR's bullshit.
C.S. Lewis was way more successful, way more meaningful and creative, but not a single Dawntreader Slices, Pevensie Plug, or Aslan's Breath blends.
And, just because the writer smoked a pipe, we got people coming into the hobby. So, it's like Steven King fans all lining up to start drinking lemonaid, because it's his favorite beverage.
And, what has driven me mad for the lack of any sanity in it, was years of listening to these guys say, "aromatics suck," and then in another thread, "Try the Hobbit Weed. It's my favorite." When Hobbit Weed is a cherry aromatic. But, just because it's named after some midget from a fairy tale, people think it's actually what these hairy midgets smoke. WTF!!
OK, rant over
Except some of us. --many?-- will not touch anything named after that franchise.Or think of the four Hogwarts houses, and some of the characters... Sir, you have struck a rich vein of marketing genius.
Good point. As long as it means decent tobaccos are brought on to the market, and inferior new blends do not eclipse anything older and better in quality. That which we call a rose, by any other name would smell as sweet. If Peterson's Irish Flake were renamed Satan's Socks I'd still buy it.On the other side, if a certain naming brings more people into the hobby, which in turns, brings more revenue...is it a bad thing?
Personally, I don't save my dottle at all. And I bet Holmes didn't, either, after a while. As I recall, we are introduced to this and other eccentric habits of his at the beginning ('A Study In Scarlet', I think) when Holmes is clearly, like Watson, embarking on an as yet relatively unremunerative career - hence Holmes' advertisement for someone to share his apartment. After a few grateful illustrious Clients and Royal Personages, Holmes would no longer be so impecunious - though admittedly we get no news of him upgrading from cheap black shag smoked in a cutty, to something nice by Sullivan & Powell and a Meerschaum-lined calabash that is always associated with him but which Doyle never mentioned in the stories but was only subsequently shown smoked by him on stage and screen.Does anyone save their dottle in a Persian slipper?
I just wish the companies would stop with the LOTR's bullshit.
C.S. Lewis was way more successful, way more meaningful and creative, but not a single Dawntreader Slices, Pevensie Plug, or Aslan's Breath blends.
And, just because the writer smoked a pipe, we got people coming into the hobby. So, it's like Steven King fans all lining up to start drinking lemonaid, because it's his favorite beverage.
And, what has driven me mad for the lack of any sanity in it, was years of listening to these guys say, "aromatics suck," and then in another thread, "Try the Hobbit Weed. It's my favorite." When Hobbit Weed is a cherry aromatic. But, just because it's named after some midget from a fairy tale, people think it's actually what these hairy midgets smoke. WTF!!
OK, rant over
I think it's something to do with the language. Too many letters to fit on the standard tin.Celticity (Scottish/Irish Flake/Cake/Cask/Mixture etc, and why is there never a Welsh brand?)
I'm sure there's more...
So agree with everything you said here.I like the randomness and occasional absurdity of Cornell & Diehl's naming conventions. Nevermind how one blending house can keep over 200 blends in regular production, which is something I've always wondered about, but who wouldn't want to try some Bow-Legged Bear or Cross-Eyed Cricket? I'm pretty sure they have a blend that's evocative of a deoxygenated cow as well. Personally, I'm still waiting for that tin of Audacious Varmint to come along.