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Beans, Beans, The Musical Fruit" (alternately "Beans, Beans, good for your heart") is a playground saying and children's song about how beans cause flatulence (i.e. farting). [ 1 ] The basis of the song (and bean/fart humor in general) is the high amount of oligosaccharides present in beans.
Use of the phrase "the magical fruit" rose only after 1993, when an episode of The Simpsons sang a rendition of "Beans Beans the Musical Fruit". A common alternate lyric calls beans the "magical fruit." In The Simpsons episode "Whacking Day (1993)," Bart performs a rendition of "Beans beans the musical fruit" using the "musical fruit" lyrics.
The Meaning of Life is a 35mm animated short film, written and directed by Don Hertzfeldt in 2005. The twelve-minute film is the result of almost four years of production and tens of thousands of drawings, single-handedly paper animated and photographed by Hertzfeldt.
Monty Python's The Meaning of Life, also known simply as The Meaning of Life, is a 1983 British musical sketch comedy film written and performed by the Monty Python troupe, directed by Terry Jones. The Meaning of Life was the last feature film to star all six Python members before the death of Graham Chapman in 1989.
The title of the episode is a satire of The Beatles' movie, song, and album Magical Mystery Tour. When King Henry first appears, he is gorging himself while singing the 1911 music hall song "I'm Henery the Eighth, I Am". The lyrics, however, are altered to refer to the King's enormous appetite and reputation for gluttony.
Tina Fey’s latest addition to the “Mean Girls” universe has officially hit theaters, and fans are buzzing.
Al Campbell of AllMusic gave the album three and a half out of five stars and wrote that "Unlike most comedy releases, the soundtrack of Monty Python's The Meaning of Life is an appealing audio souvenir that doesn't get stale after listening to it a few times." noting that "[this is] because of the incredibly catchy and satirical songs from the ...
Mr Creosote is a fictional character who appears in Monty Python's The Meaning of Life. He is a monstrously obese and vulgar restaurant patron who is served a vast amount of food and alcohol as he vomits repeatedly. After being persuaded to eat an after-dinner mint – "It's only wafer-thin" – he graphically explodes.