'MIDSOMER MURDERS'
"TALKING TO THE DEAD"
'I thought you said your dog didn't bite .'
'Whose dog?'
'Your dog.'
'Yeah. But that's not my dog.'
I'm not sure what the genesis for this joke is, but I've found it in two novels:
"Quirkology: How We Discover the Big Truths in Small Things"
by
Richard Wiseman
"Eye Opener"
by
Michael Z. Lewin "Manitou Canyon: A Novel"
by
William Kent Krueger
Krista Procklw used the joke as the opening ice-breaker in an article about "Dog Liability in British Columbia".
"Quirkology: How We Discover the Big Truths in Small Things"
by
Richard Wiseman
by
Michael Z. Lewin "Manitou Canyon: A Novel"
by
William Kent Krueger
A man walks into a bar and sits down
next to a woman with a dog at her feet.
“Does your dog bite?,” he asks. “No.”
A few minutes later, the dog takes a huge chunk
out of the man’s leg.
“I thought you said your dog didn’t bite!” he says indignantly.
“That’s not my dog” , replies the woman.
next to a woman with a dog at her feet.
“Does your dog bite?,” he asks. “No.”
A few minutes later, the dog takes a huge chunk
out of the man’s leg.
“I thought you said your dog didn’t bite!” he says indignantly.
“That’s not my dog” , replies the woman.
And of course there is the most famous iteration of the joke from the movies:
So.... Does anybody know where the joke started?
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