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Smello Sniff auctions

  • 1 January 2011 7:48 pm
scratch-sniff Smello Sniff auctions

I hope you find these listings helpful. If you are like me, you need a little bit on information before making a buying decision. Here’s a description of Smello Sniff for you.


How would you take this message if someone sent it to you?
Is this message I want to be friends or more than friends ?HI girl, What cha up to? Nothing naughty I hope. How's your new whip doing? Smica I think we should do Smello Sniff something crazy(exhilarating, euphoric, surprising and or whatever word you can think of.) . I am not sure what but it should include a pile somewhere. We need to have some good fun. I cant wait to see your car. Was the RN program hard? I wonder what you are doind now. I think we need to hear our old songs we used to jam to, NIN...tell me your days off so we can plan something. I promise no scars.lol! j/k. w/c provided. MUAHSmello
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scratch-sniff Smello Sniff auctions

7 Comments

  1. radishgirl88 - January 1, 2011 at 9:15 pm

    You could be a scarecrow, a rag doll, a witch, a ghost or a gnome.

  2. Kevin S - January 2, 2011 at 8:57 am

    “yo, bro”, “ola, cola”, “yobus brobus”, “mornin, sunshine”, “what’s up buttercup?”, “O da ley, whaddya say?”, “Hello, Jello”, “long time, Frankenstein”

  3. Ted H - January 2, 2011 at 9:23 pm

    One of the more curious fad gimmicks of the period was Smell-O-Vision, a process initiated in 1960 by Mike Todd, Jr., son of the famed showman. Mike Todd, Sr. had entertained the world with his massive production of AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS (1956), but sadly, perished in a plane crash in 1958. Todd, Jr. invested his inheritance in the development of Smell-O-Vision, a process in which evocative smells were pumped to the cinema audience through pipes leading to individual seats in the auditorium. Bottles of scent were held on a rotating drum and the process was triggered by a signal on the film itself. Only one film, SCENT OF A MYSTERY, was made in Smell-O-Vision and was far from a milestone in movie history. Mike Todd, Jr. lost his entire investment and left the film business. As an added audience incentive, Eddie Fisher, best friend of Mike Todd, Sr. and, at the time, the husband of Todd’s widow, Elizabeth Taylor, sang the memorable theme song from SCENT OF A MYSTERY. Filmmaker, John Waters, paid homage to Smell-O-Vision with his 1980 film, POLYESTER. Waters created the process of Odorama and, rather than pumping in scents, used individual audience “Scratch and Sniff” cards. http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/spec/belknap/exhibit2002/smell.htmDuring the 1950s and early 1960s, motion picture companies experimented with a number of gimmicks in order to compete with the new audience-stealing medium known as television. One of these gimmicks, championed by movie producer Mike Todd, Jr., was dubbed Smell-O-Vision because it attempted to use familiar scents to enhance an audience’s movie-going experience. The process injected 30 different smells into a movie theater’s seats when triggered by the film’s soundtrack. The Smell-O-Vision process proved to be a glitch-filled flop with audiences, however, and only one Smell-O-Vision movie was ever shown in theaters. The process Todd called Smell-O-Vision was actually developed by a German movie technician named Hans Laube several decades earlier. Laube called his system Scentovision, however. The basic concept involved a projectionist manually releasing various scent vials at specific points in a movie, such as the scent of flowers during a romantic scene or the smell of gun smoke during a shoot-out. The original Scentovision system failed to catch on for a number of reasons, not the least of which was the substantial amount of conflicting fragrances which eventually filled the theater.When Mike Todd, Jr. and his father were considering a novel approach to promoting their newest film, Around the World in 80 Days, they recalled an earlier demonstration of Laube’s Scentovision system. Although the redubbed Smell-O-Vision system was not actually implemented on that film, Todd did commission a comedy-mystery film which would feature Smell-O-Vision. This movie was appropriately titled Scent of Mystery, and it would hold the dubious honor of being the first and last movie produced in Smell-O-Vision.The idea was to rig individual theater seats with hollow tubes which would transmit the various scents at crucial plot points. One character would be represented by a distinctive scent of pipe smoke, for example. A belt containing the individual fragrance vials would be synchronized with the soundtrack in order to insure audience member received the right scent at precisely the right moment. In practice, however, some of the scents did not sync up well with the plot points, arriving too late or not at all. Audiences became frustrated with the sensory overload aspect of Smell-O-Vision, and Scent of Mystery was universally panned by movie critics at the time. Aroma-Rama, a similar application, piped odors into the theater through the ventilator system. In the 1980s, Odorama made a stale debut with scratch-and-sniff cards, which also briefly made their way into living rooms. Outside of theme parks, scent-themed flicks weren’t visited again until last year, when two movie theaters in Japan offered aroma wafts for back-row seats during the Hollywood adventure film “The New World.”Modern attempts at reviving Smell-O-Vision usually involve special scratch-and-sniff cards which audiences are asked to smell during specific scenes. While this may have solved some of the technical glitches regarding the transmission of scents, directors such as John Waters have demonstrated some dubious choices when it comes to the fragrances included in a modern Smell-O-Vision movie.http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-smell-o-vision.htm‘Smellovision’ is making a comeback 9/11/2007A self-proclaimed multisensory artist, Megan Dickerson is now trying to revive “Smellovision.” She’s staged outdoor showings of “Willy Wonka” for hundreds of people and used oscillating fans and artificially scented oils to distribute aromas of blueberry pie and banana taffy during the film. With help from local art houses and the Boston Children’s Museum, she plans to bring other films for sniffing to theaters this fall.http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/20714557

  4. no one - January 3, 2011 at 9:26 am

    well i think he’s kinda gorgeous (dort of)

  5. Yes - January 3, 2011 at 9:43 pm

    Just do only one or two, and do them using natural colors. As long as you do use blonde and black, you are technically using natural colors, even if they’re not in a natural-looking style.I think they’ll look good on you.

  6. songbird1602 - January 4, 2011 at 9:14 am

    It sounds to me like he is being very sexual… but trying not to make it overly pushy or apparent. He’s feeling you out for it though for sure. But that’s from someone who knows nothing about the situation besides that message.

  7. Ailurophiliac - January 4, 2011 at 9:31 pm

    You can’t cover up something like that with fragrance. She may have an infection. She needs to go to the clinic or her doctor. Immediately and if you are having sex with her you need to get checked too. Some infections can be sexually transmitted.

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