
#Goofy gpass movie


Lyrics SpongeBob: I'm a goofy goober! (Rock!) You're a goofy goober! (Rock!) We're all goofy goobers! (Rock!) Goofy, goofy, goofy, goober! (Rock!) Put your toys away, well, all I gotta say when you tell me not to play, I say "no way!" (No way!) "No, no, no, no way!" I'm a kid, you say, when you say I'm a kid I say, "Say it again" And then I say "Thanks!" (Thanks!) Thank you very much! So if you're thinking that you'd like to be like me, Go ahead and try, the kid inside will set you free! I'm a goofy goober! (Rock!) You're a goofy goober! (Rock!) We're all goofy goobers! (Rock!) Goofy, goofy, goober, goober! Yeah! (Guitar solo) Trivia This song is an alteration of " I Wanna Rock," originally performed by Dee Snider of the band Twisted Sister. Puff, Sandy, Gary, King Neptune, and the Bikini Bottomites from their mind control. It is a rock version of the " Goofy Goober Song." In real life, the song was performed by Jim Wise and Tom Rothrock.ĭuring the song, SpongeBob frees Squidward, Mrs. Reproduction in any format is expressly forbidden." Goofy Goober Rock" is the song that is performed by SpongeBob SquarePants at the climax of The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie. This is the second part of the London Lampworkers Trilogy covering Pirelli Glass.Īnd if you didn't read the first part of this Trilogy, you can take a look here:Ĭopyright (c) 1998 - 2021 Angela M. The place to browse through interesting glass books - >Ī new book on Pirelli Glass. David Ballentine on The Glass Museum (2001)Ģ: Dugan/Diamond: The Story of Indiana, Pennsylvania, Glass (1993) by Heacock, Measell & Wiggins.ģ: Goofus Glass (1984) by Carolyn McKinley, publisher Collector Books.Ĥ: Harry Northwood: The Wheeling Years 1901-1925 (1991) by Heacock, Measell and Wiggins. Click on the book cover picture left to see if there is one on .ġ: Goofus Glass" by G. Out of print now but worth getting a copy if you can.
#Goofy gpass full
There is an excellent article about Goofus Glass by David Ballentine on the Glass Museum (click here).Ĭarolyn McKinley (click here) which is full of colour photographs. It went out of fashion when Carnival Glass became very popular (from 1908 onwards). It was popular for its bright colors, and being cheap and affordable by most people, it was produced in large volumes in the US by companies such as Imperial Glass and Dugan Glass. Most Goofus Glass dates from the period of about ten to fifteen years around the turn of the last century, (1897 to around 1912) although it continued to be produced into the 1920s. The most common kind of Goofus Glass has red or green paint on the flowers and a dull gold or silver background, painted onto clear glass.

Consequently the paint tends to chip and come off, unlike enamel painting on glass, which is more permanent. Goofus Glass is pressed glass which has been "cold painted" - that is paint has been applied but not fired in a furnace afterwards.

Goofus Glass information from the Glass Encyclopedia Goofus Glass:
