Jokes1 min ago
Chad
Derivation please. As used at least twice by Joe Pasquale in IAC.
In context I assume it meant bottom. How?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Mr Chad was a wartime cartoon-style figure. The picture consisted of the top half of a bald head with a large nose looking over a brick wall. It appeared as if the nose was so big and round it could droop over the top. Each such picture had a caption reading: "Wot? No...!" It might be eggs, bullets or whatever fitted into the specific situation being referred to.
It is from this source that we had the 'hanging chad' fiasco during the 2000 US Presidential election...ie a bulbous, drooping piece of paper in this case which had not been cleanly punched out of the voting forms...just like Mr Chad's nose.
My guess, therefore, is that anything round and dangling - such as a lady's bottom on a swing! - would qualify as a 'chad', too. (I must confess I've never heard the word used thus, but it seems a reasonable explanation.)
It was a form of grafitti used during WW2 to annoy the authorities. Taken from a New York Times cartoon called Mr Chad, by JJ Kilroy.
When there were rations etc, walls would be daubed with a little cartoon head peering over a wall, with hands either side and his nose dangling down. The caption underneath always started with the "Wot no...?" so during war time it might have been anything that was in short supply "Wot no sugar?" or "Wot no bananas?". The chad 'cartoon image' had a heavily over-used revival in the 1980's. "Wot no goals?" etc etc
Octavius, when Janet was on a 'jungle swing' and Joe was on the ground he said something like 'I never thought I'd be looking at your chad from this angle.'
The other time I noticed was when he was checking Fran's behind for ticks.
Thanks to everyone who's speculated but I guess we'll only know for sure if someone asks JP on a chat show.