Montana

Winemaking Talk - Winemaking Forum

Help Support Winemaking Talk - Winemaking Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Sage

Junior Member
Supporting Member
Joined
Aug 23, 2014
Messages
1,207
Reaction score
4,168
BUD, THE MONTANA COWBOY





A cowboy named Bud was overseeing his herd in a remote mountainous pasture in Montana when suddenly a brand-new 2015 BMW advanced toward him out of a cloud of dust. The driver, a young man in a Brioni® suit, Gucci® shoes, RayBan® sunglasses and YSL® tie, leaned out the window and asked the cowboy, "If I tell you exactly how many cows and calves you have in your herd, will you give me a calf?"



Bud looks at the man, who obviously is a yuppie, then looks at his peacefully grazing herd and calmly answers, "Sure, why not?"



The yuppie parks his car, whips out his Dell® notebook computer, connects it to his Apple i phone, and surfs to a NASA page on the Internet, where he calls up a GPS satellite to get an exact fix on his location which he then feeds to another NASA satellite that scans the area in an ultra-high-resolution photo.



The young man then opens the digital photo in Adobe Photoshop® and exports it to an image processing facility in Hamburg, Germany ...




Within seconds, he receives an email on his Apple iPad® that the image has been processed and the data stored. He then accesses an MS-SQL® database through an ODBC connected Excel® spreadsheet with email on his Galaxy S5® and, after a few minutes, receives a response.



Finally, he prints out a full-color, 150-page report on his hi-tech, miniaturized HP LaserJet® printer, turns to the cowboy and says, "You have exactly 1,586 cows and calves."


"That's right. Well, I guess you can take one of my calves," says Bud.


He watches the young man select one of the animals and looks on with amusement as the young man stuffs it into the trunk of his car.


Then Bud says to the young man, "Hey, if I can tell you exactly what your business is, will you give me back my calf?"


The young man thinks about it for a second and then says, "Okay, why not?"



"You're a Congressman for the U.S. Government", says Bud.


"Wow! That's correct," says the yuppie, “but how did you guess that?"


"No guessing required." answered the cowboy. "You showed up here even though nobody called you; you want to get paid for an answer I already knew, to a question I never asked. You used millions of dollars worth of equipment trying to show me how much smarter than me you are; and you don't know CRAP about how working people make a living - or about cows, for that matter. This is a herd of sheep.”



“Now give me back my dog.”
 
Just a joke, take it for what it's worth. Every joke has someone or something as a punching bag. I don't read into a joke something that's not there, just get a laugh and move on.
 
Yeah, the joke did feel familiar as I was reading it but I still got a laugh.

An element found in many jokes is exaggeration. It can be exaggeration about consultants, the government or as is often the case in foul jokes... body parts.
 
Yeah, the joke did feel familiar as I was reading it but I still got a laugh.

An element found in many jokes is exaggeration. It can be exaggeration about consultants, the government or as is often the case in foul jokes... body parts.

I thought the joke was quite accurate as a politician. In fact, the 'politician' and 'body parts' comparison was also quite fitting.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top