New Tricks for Old Dogs: 28 Laughable Lessons for People Too Stiff to Change . . . or Bend . . . or Move
By (Author) Gene Perret
Familius LLC
Familius LLC
10th May 2016
United States
General
Non Fiction
Age groups: the elderly
818.5402
Paperback
240
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
28 hilarious "self-help" lessons for seniors who've heard it all.With age comes wisdom. Mostly, we become wise enough to realize that we cant do some of the things we did so well when we were young. The beloved comedian George Burns said it quite eloquently: I can do anything at eighty that I could do when I was twenty. That gives you an idea of what terrible shape I was in at twenty. Self-help books offer solid, beneficial techniques, but they really only work for the young. Award-winning comedy writer Gene Perret reveals that more mature devotees must adjust these techniques, tweak them, alter them, and in some cases, ignore them completely.New Tricks for Old Dogs points out some of the flaws in the self-help philosophy. It tempers the advice with common sense. The battle cry of this volume is Do it, but dont overdo it. Sometimes, after we reach a certain age, the best exercise program is a good, brisk nap.
Gene Perret has been a professional comedy writer since the early 1960s, writing stand-up material for Slappy White and Phyllis Diller, among others. He began in television in 1968 on The Beautiful Phyllis Diller Show. He wrote for Laugh-In and collected three Emmys as a staff writer on The Carol Burnett Show. Gene was on Bob Hope's writing staff for twenty-eight years, the last twelve as Hope's head writer. He traveled with the Hope troupe to several of the Christmas shows from war zones. He produced Welcome Back Kotter, Three's Company, and The Tim Conway Show. Today, he lives in Southern California and teaches email classes in comedy writing. His hobbies include painting, sketching, and playing the guitar. He paints rather well and sketches adequately, but you don't want to listen to his guitar playing. No one does.