Lars B Gustafsson har förgyllt travlivet i Örebro med omnejd under några säsonger nu genom att producera en mycket ambitiös och välgjord blogg under namnet "Wiretowire.se".
Möjligen är det slut på det nu, för häromdagen meddelade "Banan", som Lars B kallas, att det är hans mening att lägga ner verksamheten.
Hoppas att han tänker om efter Fotbolls-VM och kommer tillbaka med friska takter för det här har han gjort jättebra.
Alltid påläst, inte för elakt, inte för snällt. Kom igen nu, Gustafsson!
Fotnot.
Från Wikipedia:
History
A banana shortage caused by a banana blight in Brazil is usually suggested as the inspiration for the song.[2] The town of Lynbrook on Long Island, New York, claims the songwriters composed it there and that the catchphrase "Yes! We have no bananas" was coined by Jimmy Costas, a local Greek American greengrocer.[citation needed] However, a 1923 article in the Chicago Tribune stated that the phrase originated in Chicago in 1920.[3] Cartoonist Thomas A. Dorgan (1877–1929) is also credited with inventing and/or popularizing the phrase.The song was the theme of the Outdoor Relief protests in Belfast in 1932. These were a unique example of Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland protesting together, and the song was used because it was one of the few non-sectarian songs that both communities knew. The song lent its title to a book about the depression in Belfast.[4]
The term has been resurrected on many occasions, including in Britain during World War II, when the British Government banned the importing of bananas for an entire five years. Shop owners put signs stating "Yes, we have no bananas" in their shop windows in keeping with the war spirit.
The song also appeared in the popular Archie Comics and was mentioned in the 1939 film Only Angels Have Wings and the 1954 movie Sabrina. It appears as a leit motif in The Comic, often to underscore serious moments in the life of the film's protagonist (played by Dick Van Dyke). In The English Patient, a few verses are sung as a joke. The song was also subject to parody in The Muppet Show, sung by various anthropomorphic fruits and vegetables. A German version, "Ausgerechnet Bananen", was featured in Billy Wilder's 1961 slapstick comedy One, Two, Three, played by an over-the-hill dance band at a drab East Berlin hotel bar. In the 1970s, Harry Chapin used this phrase in the chorus to his song "30,000 Pounds of Bananas". More recently, the phrase was used in 2006 when Cyclone Larry destroyed a large portion of Australia's banana crop, leading to a shortage for most of the year.[citation needed]
The song was the subject of a column by Sigmund Spaeth, who suggested that the melody could have been derived from a combination of parts of other songs including the Hallelujah Chorus from Messiah by Handel, "My Bonnie Lies Over The Ocean", and "I Dreamt I Dwelt in Marble Halls". Spaeth subsequently repeated his argument as an expert witness.