Difference between revisions of "That's Not Too Many"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | An oft-quoted allusion to a piece by the late [[Charles Burbee]]. He collected ragtime player piano rolls and reported, in his [[fanzine]], ''[[Burblings]]'' 1, having heard from his player-piano repairman about someone who collected player pianos. He owned 50. [[Burb]] quoted himself as replying, "Fifty player pianos...that's not too many." | + | An oft-quoted allusion to a piece by the late [[Charles Burbee]]. He collected ragtime player piano rolls and reported, in his [[fanzine]], ''[[Burblings]]'' 1 (1947), having heard from his player-piano repairman about someone who collected player pianos. He owned 50. [[Burb]] quoted himself as replying, "Fifty player pianos ... that's not too many." |
− | After [[Terry Carr]] and [[Ron Ellik]] republished the piece in ''[[The Incompleat Burbee]]'', | + | After [[Terry Carr]] and [[Ron Ellik]] republished the piece in ''[[The Incompleat Burbee]]'', a 1958 anthology of [[Burbee]]'s writings ([https://fanac.org/fanzines/Fanthologies/Fantho28.pdf online here], p. 32), it crept into repeated [[fannish]] usage – and, for a while, it was difficult to mention any number larger than three without someone else popping up to say, “That's not too many.” |
− | {{fanspeak}} | + | |
+ | {{fanspeak|start=1958}} | ||
[[Category:catchphrase]] | [[Category:catchphrase]] |
Latest revision as of 21:51, 12 October 2022
An oft-quoted allusion to a piece by the late Charles Burbee. He collected ragtime player piano rolls and reported, in his fanzine, Burblings 1 (1947), having heard from his player-piano repairman about someone who collected player pianos. He owned 50. Burb quoted himself as replying, "Fifty player pianos ... that's not too many."
After Terry Carr and Ron Ellik republished the piece in The Incompleat Burbee, a 1958 anthology of Burbee's writings (online here, p. 32), it crept into repeated fannish usage – and, for a while, it was difficult to mention any number larger than three without someone else popping up to say, “That's not too many.”
Fanspeak | 1958— |
This is a fanspeak page. Please extend it by adding information about when and by whom it was coined, whether it’s still in use, etc. |