Katie should know by now that if she sticks out her tongue to be smart she will soon have to stick out her arse to be spanked and that will really smart!

Moderator: hugob00m
Katie had something to say about that: And then...willjohn wrote:I do not know if Katie's arse is on fire but it definitely looks swollen!
She should've learned her lesson about sticking out her tongue this time... but we'll see! She'll either become smart, or she'll smart for her foolishness!willjohn wrote:Katie should know by now that if she sticks out her tongue to be smart she will soon have to stick out her arse to be spanked and that will really smart!
I hope so. I've got more spankings for Katie (and her college roomie, Karen) in store!willjohn wrote:Let's face it. No matter how many spankings Katie gets we will be looking for more.
Both kinds of interest, I'd say! If you're talking about the kind of interest that the banks add to a loan... even at a fairly low rate of 5% annually, added to the spankings she should've gotten back in her college days... That would take a while!willjohn wrote:so Yank gets to spank Karen after all those years? There must be some interest on that spanking.
She doesn't have a chance with Bullmoose... but maybe Yank likes 'em like that.willjohn wrote:Karen is really putting her weights up if she thinks her skinny frame could attract Bullmoose away from Katie's delectable derriere
There weren't too many episodes, B00m - the BBC approved 12 initially or two groups of 6 (I forget which), but either way it adds up to only a dozen. Most of them were brilliant, however - John Cleese's best work by far. And he was terrific as Basil Fawlty, the irascible hotel owner who complains about everything from the staff to the quality of the clientele. No corporal punishment in the series except for one scene in which Fawlty flogs his car with a tree branch for breaking down on him (after he tried to fix it himself instead of taking it to a garage, of course). Funny, but not very erotic.hugob00m wrote:Hi, WillJohn.
I've seen a few episodes of Fawlty Towers, but it never seemed to catch on in the U.S. as much as Monty Python's Flying Circus. Of course, John Cleese is funny no matter what show he's on.