20 thoughts on “Canine Car Salesman”

  1. Looks like a nice doggie. He’s trustworthy. Give him a million dollars.

    Make sure the bankers don’t find out. Its called fixing your accounting problem.

  2. Lotta,

    I am bucking for Scrooge of the Year award.
    Can I count on your vote?

    Agree (unofficially) that he is adorable.
    And that was the very first time I said that about a bull teerrier.

  3. Idealist: “…photoshopped?” Doesn’t matter, cutest little button ever.
    —-

    Peeeete, c’mon man, my kitty is laying here reading Turlyblawg with me and he’s sensitive. 🙂

  4. My Pal (one dares not call a human pal an owner) framed a photo of this guy, named him Jake, and posted it on the wall of the Marina Clubhouse. Our pittbull in our pack says that the smile does come out at the time of a fart.

  5. The friendly smile doesn’t hide the beady little pit bull eyes. He looks like he just left his dentures at the Dentist for sharpening. Beware!

  6. Hell no! My sister has the most adorable doxie and I’ve fallen to her sweet face and loving charms. Gets me in trouble every time! LOL

  7. Who gets the credit for this photo? We would like to make it the poster child for the Dogs With Out Papers project in our town. DWOPs attempts to save dogs whether in shelters or without who are DogWOPS.

  8. Ask him in Dogalogue what he was in a prior incarnation. I would bet that he might have been a human, male, gadfly at a hooker bar in
    Vegas. His name would be Jake in our dogpack.

  9. oops … corrected

    Maybe the new modified Turing test should be adapted to poochdom:

    Nowadays, programmers compete yearly for the Loebner Prize, which is won by the computer that is most often mistaken for a human.

    But the Turing Test’s application is no longer limited to questions of artificial intelligence: Social scientists too are getting in on the action and using the test in a completely new way — to compare different human subjects and their ability to pass as members of groups to which they do not belong, such as religious and ethnic minorities or particular professional classes. With the Turing Test, sociologists can compare the extent to which subjects can understand people who are different from them in some way.

    (The Atlantic). People can be fooled so easily, otherwise the nation and civilization would not be in such dire straits.

  10. Maybe the new modified Turing test should be adapted to poochdom:

    Nowadays, programmers compete yearly for the Loebner Prize, which is won by the computer that is most often mistaken for a human.

    But the Turing Test’s application is no longer limited to questions of artificial intelligence: Social scientists too are getting in on the action and using the test in a completely new way — to compare different human subjects and their ability to pass as members of groups to which they do not belong</b?, such as religious and ethnic minorities or particular professional classes. With the Turing Test, sociologists can compare the extent to which subjects can understand people who are different from them in some way.

    (The Atlantic). People can be fooled so easily, otherwise the nation and civilization would not be in such dire straits.

Comments are closed.