Author Topic: Judging Presidents Based Solely On Their Portraits  (Read 42034 times)

senorcorazon

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Re: Judging Presidents Based Solely On Their Portraits
« Reply #75 on: February 15, 2010, 02:45:48 PM »
Welcome back, This Thread. I missed you and you are awesome. HAPPY PRESIDENT'S DAY.

Steve of Bloomington

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Re: Judging Presidents Based Solely On Their Portraits
« Reply #76 on: February 15, 2010, 06:13:22 PM »
This thread needs a book deal, but 'Stuff White People Like' and 'S%((%^ My Dad Says' may have blown publishers' potential enthusiasm.

Wes

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Re: Judging Presidents Based Solely On Their Portraits
« Reply #77 on: February 22, 2011, 10:41:48 AM »
SPECIAL AFTER PRESIDENT'S DAY SALE EDITION
Featuring the surprising return of...
James K. Polk
11th President of the United States

Get a load of the size of this dude's dome! Previous portrait-specific judgments of James K. Polk have focused almost exclusively on his trend-setting mullet, which one might now assume was grown to draw attention away from his huuuuge skull, but I am now of the opinion - based solely on this portrait - that Polk started out with long flowing hair that eventually only appeared to be what we now call a mullet once he ended up with that freakish melon up there.

What can we take from this? Well, one must assume that Polk was surely our smartest president, as the only logical explanation for that ginourmous noggin is that it grew proportionally to house some kind of rapidly-expanding superbrain. Limited by the intentional lack of historical context that this topic requires, we cannot in good faith speculate what might have caused this mutation. We can, however, freely speculate as to what kind of presidential super powers that Polk would have likely wielded while in office.

Telepathy: Yes. No question, Polk was some kind of telepath, though perhaps not of the highest levels. Based on he presumed size of his mutant superbrain, Polk was likely able to read the minds of those within close proximity, but only those without extensive training in psychic defense. He was also likely able to project his thoughts over great distances to members of his Cabinet. He may have also been able to influence the thoughts of the weak-minded, but based on the clear-eyed nature of his portrait, it seems unlikely that President Polk would have abused this aspect of his power.

Precognition: Unlikely. While several Presidents may have been able to accurately describe future events through various means - Rutherford B. Hayes through his mastery of the Dark Magicks, Taft through stolen steam-powered supercomputers, Van Buren because of his time travel exploits - there is no reason to assume that Polk had any precog ability, as this power is less likely to crop up under traditional mutant superbrain power trees. Not ruling it out but, I dunno, just not feelin' it here.

Photographic memory: Obviously.

Photographic reflexes: Potentially. Though the sheer size of my man's crown means it would have never come up.

Telekinesis: Almost certainly. Polk is likely the only telekinetic to ever hold the Office of President. (Note: Any historical evidence of Rutherford B. Hayes displaying telekinetic powers is likely the result of poorly-informed eyewitness testimony. Any time Hayes appeared to be remotely moving an object, it was actually being manipulated by an invisible spirit in his thrall.) Based on the size of his skull at the time of this portrait, Hayes may have been able to hold a small adult aloft in the air for brief periods of time, and probably could force toss a fully-grown man back several feet. He would have also been able to telekinetically throw bladed or blunt weapons at attackers and would have been able to project an invisible forcefield capable of temporarily deflecting the small arms fire of the day by the end of his term, though maintaining this defensive shield would have proven greatly taxing on his mental capabilities.

Finally, James K. Polk, as he would have been rated according to the 1-7 scale ued by the 1992 Marvel Universe Series III Trading Cards/Library of Congress:
Strength: 2 (Nearest equivalent - William Howard Taft)
Intelligence: 6 (Nearest equivalent - Doctor Doom)
Energy Projection: 3 (Nearest equivalent - Ulysses S. Grant)
Mental Powers: 6 (Nearest equivalent - Professor X)
Fighting Ability: 1 (Nearest equivalent - Jimmy Carter)
Speed: 1 (Nearest equivalent - Professor x)
This may be the year I will disappear.

senorcorazon

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Re: Judging Presidents Based Solely On Their Portraits
« Reply #78 on: February 22, 2011, 11:10:22 AM »
This thread needs a book deal, but 'Stuff White People Like' and 'S%((%^ My Dad Says' may have blown publishers' potential enthusiasm.

Difference? This is funny and original. But yes, it does lack the certain "hey, I barely tried on this" that seems to melt the hearts of publishers.

Steve of Bloomington

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Re: Judging Presidents Based Solely On Their Portraits
« Reply #79 on: February 22, 2011, 01:59:03 PM »
This thread needs a book deal, but 'Stuff White People Like' and 'S%((%^ My Dad Says' may have blown publishers' potential enthusiasm.

Difference? This is funny and original. But yes, it does lack the certain "hey, I barely tried on this" that seems to melt the hearts of publishers.

True, and it requires some effort on the part of the reader, what with the entries being longer than a paragraph or two, so that's publishing poison.

Martin

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Re: Judging Presidents Based Solely On Their Portraits
« Reply #80 on: February 22, 2011, 02:04:14 PM »
I say get a Name to front the collection (and contribute one text), another Name to write the foreword, and it's off to the printing presses!

yesno

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Chris L

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Re: Judging Presidents Based Solely On Their Portraits
« Reply #82 on: February 20, 2012, 08:11:47 AM »
Bump. 'Tis the season.

Wes

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Re: Judging Presidents Based Solely On Their Portraits
« Reply #83 on: February 16, 2015, 11:34:48 AM »
SPECIAL RETURN OF THE BEST SHOW/ALL OF THIS HAS HAPPENED BEFORE AND ALL OF THIS WILL HAPPEN AGAIN EDITION
Richard M. Nixon
37th President of the United States

(President Nixon, right, pictured with unknown associate in 1970)

1969 was an important year for Richard Nixon. He entered the year on a high, having defeated famed Canadian grappler Gene Kniski in 1968 for the National Wrestling Alliance World Heavyweight Championship (worn in photo above), the same title once held by Abraham Lincoln.  Having returned the NWA gold to the US, Nixon became the first champion since Lincoln to cash in the stipulation that allowed him to immediately run for President of the United States and was swept into office in January 1969. It would be only the second most important event of his life that year.

For in July 1969, the United States completed its goal to put a man on the moon. Originally conceived as a way to prove US technological superiority over its Communist rivals, the goal quickly changed once Nixon was in office. Instead, astronauts and first human moonwalkers Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin were secretly tasked with retrieving a collection of "moondust", the mystical substance that, when carried each night by lunar winds to the surface of the planet, temporarily granted creatures of the night the freedom to move freely over the Earth. With actual moondust retrieved from the surface of the Moon itself and worn in a small pouch around his neck (seen in photo above), President Nixon - himself secretly a powerful vampire lord - was able to move about the world even in direct sunlight, allowing him to create what he would call an "Eternal Empire" covering the whole of the United States and Canada, repelled to the South only by the heroic efforts of El Santo, Champion of Mexico and bane of the undead.

At the height of his powers, Nixon wielded a number of skills and unique abilities on top of his own training as a world-class hand-to-hand combatant, including superhuman strength, limited flight, the ability to transform into mist and hypnotic powers, which he used to turn most of the Senate and many of the nation's industrial leaders into mindless thralls (seen in photo above where a head of American industry, left, is shown enthralled as a gladhanding, spineless puppet happily in service of Nixon's dark empire).

Aside from his ongoing war with Santo to prevent vampiric expansion to into Mexico, Central America and South America (where Nixon hoped to obtain a rare, exotic rain forest soil that would allow easier travel across the Atlantic and Pacific), President Nixon suffered only two setbacks during his time in office. The first came in 1973, when he was defeated for the NWA strap in a surprising upset by "The King" Harley Race, a fearsome wrestler out of Missouri, who overcame Nixon with a his patented diving headbutt attack. The second and arguably more important defeat came in 1977, when Nixon was killed by former Governor of Georgia and Human Resistance Leader James Earl ("Jimmy") Carter, who impaled and destroyed the seemingly immortal Nixon with a wooden stake during a battle on the White House Lawn. Initial reports claimed that Carter had used a stake fashioned from the "True Cross", as it would be the only wood powerful enough to destroy the moondust-enhanced Nixon, but Carter - who would become 38th President of the United States by rite of Trial By Combat - later reported that it was simply a normal wooden stake "crafted with care" and imbued with with nothing more than the "honor and decency of the free American people untainted by the blood of the Dark Lord."
This may be the year I will disappear.