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Vintage Potato Girl: Not Miss Idaho, But Real!

Tuesday, September 10th, 2024 -- by Bacchus

For at least a dozen years, and probably for a lot longer, versions of this potato-inundated beauty have been circulating around the internet. The captions often suggest that she’s naked under the potatoes, and they usually insist that she’s Miss Idaho 1935 or “Miss Idaho Potato” from the same year. (Amusingly, on Russian-language viral-photo sites the captions typically suggest instead that this is Byelorussian porn.)

meme version of woman buried in potatoes photo

I’ve never looked twice at this photo until a skeptical friend asked me about it tonight. As captioned, it struck me as pure bullshit, either photoshopped or taken badly-out-of-context. But once challenged, you know how I simply must look into these things.

Unsurprisingly, the woman is not “Miss Idaho” anything. And she’s not at all naked under all those spuds. But to my very great surprise, she was indeed photographed in 1935, in California. Her name is Dorothy Sommers, and there’s at least one more photograph of her potato-modelling appearance. But I’m getting ahead of myself.

Debunking the Miss Idaho memes wasn’t very hard. This photo has been discussed dozens of times on Reddit, and circulated so widely that numerous sources have been moved to point out that Idaho wasn’t really known for potatoes in 1935. And she’s manifestly not naked, either. In the best version of the photo I can find, you can see a line of printed fabric across the upper curve of her breasts:

enhanced detail showing gunny sack dress

But what is that curious garment? Allow me to introduce you to the famous burlap gunny sack dress, perhaps most famously modelled by Marilyn Monroe after someone may or may not have snarked that she’d look good even if she wore nothing but a potato sack:

marilyn monroe gunny sack dress

I strongly suspect our potato-meme woman is wearing a similar but less-fashionably-altered garment, or is swathed in actual burlap sacks with potato-farm branding on them.

But where was she photographed? The answer comes from the digital archives of the City Of San Diego, which has a second photo of the same scene:

Dorothy Sommers in potatoes on Idaho Day at the 1945 California Pacific Exhibition

The San Diego archives date their photo to 1935, and offer this caption:

Dorothy Sommers laying amongst potatoes at The California Pacific International Exposition held in May – November 1935 and February – September 1936.

On Facebook, which I shan’t link, Justine Clark of the San Diego History Center offered the additional detail that the Expo had an “Idaho Day” event during which these photos were taken.

Confirming my gunny sack dress theory, the San Diego Archives photo shows a glimpse of unmistakable burlap fabric texture:

photo detail showing burlap under and between concealing potatoes

I’ll wind this up with a nice side-by-side of the two photos, something no other researcher appears to have done:

Dorothy Sommers buried in spuds at the Cal-Pacific Expo in 1935-1936

And there you have it. The woman in the wildly-viral “naked Miss Idaho Potato 1935” meme photo is not naked, and not Miss Idaho, but she was the eye candy at a potato publicity event in 1935. As my grandfather used to say, “How about that?”

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Your Hot Date From That “Farmers” Site

Wednesday, October 23rd, 2019 -- by Bacchus

So you got you a hot hookup via that “Only Farmers” dating site. The chemistry is there, the flirting has just the right kind of kinky spark, everything is going well, and then…

fifty shades of farmer/homesteader/prepper dating: I have a pleasure room do you want to see it?

Do you like… pickled things? I hope you do like pickled things!

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The Myth Of Iron Man’s Solid Dick

Monday, August 11th, 2014 -- by Bacchus

This meme has been circulating for months on Twitter and Facebook and Pinterest and G+ and every other social media site where sharing funny pictures is possible:

Marvel has been around long enough that at one time solid dick was slang for straight talk

It’s given added plausibility by the fact that there really are a lot of old comic books out there full of ancient slang that’s become risible due to linguistic drift. (The extended storyline about Batman’s great boner is perhaps the most notorious.)

Unfortunately, the Captain America panel is fake. It has been artfully ‘shopped. Here’s what the panel looks like where it originally appeared in Captain America #176:

floppy dick

There are more scans from this storyline here if you want more context or need more persuading.

The meme has circulated so widely that it has quite thoroughly polluted any searches you might desire to make with respect to whether the linguistic assertion about “solid dick” is true. But I could find no evidence that “solid dick” ever meant anything like “straight advice.” Ironically, thanks to the meme having replicated its bad information very effectively, “solid dick” now may have taken on that meaning in actual usage, even without a historical precedent. It’s unclear whether this Urban Dictionary entry (post-dating the meme’s circulation) is merely somebody extending the joke, or whether it’s a user-submitted entry by someone who has come to believe the false message in the meme. This bit of fan art, however, seems to have been created by somebody who was genuinely infected by the meme without realizing it was false.

Moral: Memes don’t care about truth. A false one can infect your wetware just as quick as a true one, or sometimes even quicker. The strongest ones can warp reality until it more closely resembles their payload. Be careful, it’s rough out there!

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