Booger nights!
Sometimes I also think of things that strike me as funny, like a song title, or a mixed up song title and want to share the joke with others.
Here on Wrongplanet sometimes people take things literally and don’t get when someone is joking.
You can add a smilie or emoji to help people know when you are joking, or make it really obvious by adding “(joke)” or “(funny)” to your post.
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Here on Wrongplanet sometimes people take things literally and don’t get when someone is joking.
You can add a smilie or emoji to help people know when you are joking, or make it really obvious by adding “(joke)” or “(funny)” to your post.
Good advice
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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
The crusty material that forms in the eyes during sleep is sometimes comically referred to as "eye boogers."
The word booger
Booger is a word that has scholars baffled as to its etymology. Since it has always been considered semi-vulgar or at least childish, it has been used in few written sources. Furthermore, in the past the word booger has been used to mean many things, and has often overlapped with the terms boogie, bogey, and bugger. The earliest usage of the word is as an alternate spelling of the vulgarism bugger. Booger was first said to be slang for "dried mucus" in the 1892 Dialect Notes; boogie was said to mean the same thing in the 1891 Dictionary of American Regional English. Its appearance in slang dictionaries indicates that it had probably been use for some time in the United States before the 1890s. Both books said that mainly "schoolchildren" used the words.
By the middle of the twentieth century, both booger and boogie were commonly being used to mean dried mucus. As late as the 1970s, both words seem to have been (relatively) acceptable. Since then, however, booger has apparently become more common. This may be due to its appearance in legitimate print media: Bill Watterson claims to be the first cartoonist to use the word booger in a syndicated comic strip, while Dave Barry has pioneered its use in newspaper columns, both in the 1980s. Today "booger" is the more generally used term, illustrated by the observation that when the film Boogie Nights was released in 1997, no one thought it was about dried mucus.
Booger-related humor
Q: What's the difference between boogers and broccoli? A: Kids won't eat broccoli!
Q: What's the difference between boogers and plates? A: Plates are placed on top of the table.
Q: What's the difference between boogers and basketballs? A: Basketballs are already round. See also: Inherently funny word
Cultural references
Weird Al Yankovic has a song titled Gotta Boogie, in which he sings about the difficulty of removing a booger from his finger.
Booger is also the name of a character from the movie Revenge of the Nerds and its various sequels.
The crusty material that forms in the eyes during sleep is sometimes comically referred to as "eye boogers."
The word booger
Booger is a word that has scholars baffled as to its etymology. Since it has always been considered semi-vulgar or at least childish, it has been used in few written sources. Furthermore, in the past the word booger has been used to mean many things, and has often overlapped with the terms boogie, bogey, and bugger. The earliest usage of the word is as an alternate spelling of the vulgarism bugger. Booger was first said to be slang for "dried mucus" in the 1892 Dialect Notes; boogie was said to mean the same thing in the 1891 Dictionary of American Regional English. Its appearance in slang dictionaries indicates that it had probably been use for some time in the United States before the 1890s. Both books said that mainly "schoolchildren" used the words.
By the middle of the twentieth century, both booger and boogie were commonly being used to mean dried mucus. As late as the 1970s, both words seem to have been (relatively) acceptable. Since then, however, booger has apparently become more common. This may be due to its appearance in legitimate print media: Bill Watterson claims to be the first cartoonist to use the word booger in a syndicated comic strip, while Dave Barry has pioneered its use in newspaper columns, both in the 1980s. Today "booger" is the more generally used term, illustrated by the observation that when the film Boogie Nights was released in 1997, no one thought it was about dried mucus.
Booger-related humor
Q: What's the difference between boogers and broccoli? A: Kids won't eat broccoli!
Q: What's the difference between boogers and plates? A: Plates are placed on top of the table.
Q: What's the difference between boogers and basketballs? A: Basketballs are already round. See also: Inherently funny word
Cultural references
Weird Al Yankovic has a song titled Gotta Boogie, in which he sings about the difficulty of removing a booger from his finger.
Booger is also the name of a character from the movie Revenge of the Nerds and its various sequels.
This long dissertation leaves out one big fat chapter in the story. That of music.
In the 1940s a new style of piano playing appeared in jazz called "boogie woogie". Eight notes to the bar...or something like that. Based on stride. And it became the dominate form of pop music ...after WWII, and after the fall of the Big Band era, but before the ascent of rocknroll in the mid Fifties. It was also hand dance music. Early pioneers of R+B like Louis Jordan who paved the way to rocknroll were practioneers of boogie woogie. So the term naturally evolved into meaning "to dance" (ie "to boogie"). And from there to other dance-like activities between the sexes that resemble dance (Hey baby wanna boogie...boogie oogie oogie with me?). So by the rock era "boogie" (noun or verb) had become completely divorced from its cousin "booger" to mean either dance or having sex. Never to mean "dried mucus". Though the boogie woogie style was long gone by the disco Seventies tons of hit songs in that era had "boogie" in the title ...including a song called "Boogie Nights".
So THATS why no one confuses the two terms today.
https://youtu.be/qZv6hL6aYfQ
https://youtu.be/OqfyiXQckPg
https://youtu.be/6B4gZdvWx-4
It's electric! Boogie, woogie, woogie!
Yes. the Electric Slide (aka "Electric Boogie") was in the later era when songs had "boogie" in the title.
Like "Boogie Ooogie Ooogie", "Boogie Wonderland", "Put on Your Boogie Shoes".
From the original era of actual boogie woogie music...it was rocknroll before there was rocknroll!
Here actress Barbara Stanwick is backed up by drummer Gene Krupa in the 1941 movie "Ball of Fire".
https://youtu.be/FUqd6-11lsQ
I forgot to drop the other shoe and finish making the point!
So...by the 2000s when Hollywood made a movie about a fictitious porn star in the early days of the porn industry (the Seventies) the title "Boogie Nights" (also the name of disco hit song of the era depicted) was enough to convey it all...the setting in time, and the subject matter, etc.