Once You Pop, You Can’t Stop

Cutetropolis is brought to you today by Munk Chips™, the crunchy, healthy oat and nut snack that’s so fresh, it pops right out of the bag! It even eats the oats and nuts for you so you can go eat something you really want, like cheese doodles.

https://twitter.com/duil_chipmunk/status/790537477350010880

They’re chipmunk-a-licious, Andrew Y.

You already voted!

35 thoughts on “Once You Pop, You Can’t Stop

  1. Gigi the cat lady November 1, 2016 / 8:54 am

    Can I have one more? Thanks.
    Can I have one more? Thanks
    Can I have one more? Thanks.
    Can I have one more? Thanks…..

  2. Faye November 1, 2016 / 9:00 am

    Oh gosh. That’s so cute it hurt. But in such a good way!

  3. Doug November 1, 2016 / 9:02 am

    AAALLLVVVIIINNNN !!!!

    • allein ? November 1, 2016 / 10:43 am

      Yes?

  4. Brouhaha November 1, 2016 / 9:09 am

    All I am thinkin is “eat a pellet make a pellet. Eat a pellet make a pellet.”

    • Murray C. November 1, 2016 / 11:25 pm

      ?

  5. sumomermaid November 1, 2016 / 9:59 am

    Whack-a-Chipmunk (sorry; I know this will offend some).

    • Doug November 1, 2016 / 10:36 am

      You asked for it Sumo … (*Snickers*)

      • Murray C. November 1, 2016 / 9:50 pm

        That is FUNNY!

      • fkaWaldenPond November 1, 2016 / 10:21 pm

        😀

  6. Duckie ? November 1, 2016 / 10:56 am

    At the bottom of the video is the name of the original poster. Based on this post, I thought it said “dill chipmunk”!

    • Starfish November 1, 2016 / 1:03 pm

      I don’t know why they would choose “dull chipmunk” as a handle. Nothing dull about this one!

      • Murray C. November 1, 2016 / 11:30 pm

        It’s actually “duil” – just sayin’.

  7. Murray C. November 1, 2016 / 11:00 am

    I love every single comment made – and I love this post. Chippies are among the world’s cutest animals (auto correct tried to say “Hippies” – I don’t think so)

    • fkaWaldenPond November 1, 2016 / 6:38 pm

      That’s when all the nuts go straight to their thighs.

      • Dulcie November 1, 2016 / 8:42 pm

        hoot hoot !!

        • fkaWaldenPond November 1, 2016 / 9:02 pm

          Hey Dulcie, not jinxing anything but so far a certain team has a certain lead…mind you, still early so breaking a bat here so to speak.

          • Dulcie November 1, 2016 / 9:35 pm

            Oh don’t I know it…that certain team is hot!!

  8. Dulcie November 1, 2016 / 11:31 am

    Sometimes posts are so cute one does not have the words. I can hardly stand it it’s so cute!! Sigh.
    Also brought back a memory of my childhood (B.D. Before Dinosaurs)…English was not my grandfather’s first language and one day he said “look look – there’s a monkeychip”! Of course we loved the new word and used it often (and even to this day)!

    • Murray C. November 1, 2016 / 12:33 pm

      I love family words that enter your personal lexicon – it’s folklore in action! I posted a while back about “vice reverse” which is what a neighbor of my aunt used to say – she had no idea it was wrong. But we use it to this day sometimes without thinking and I’m sure we get a funny look from time to time.

      • Dulcie November 1, 2016 / 12:54 pm

        YES!…We also have picture-squee for picturesque…and also from an old aunt “bobbles the mind”. !

        • Murray C. November 1, 2016 / 1:12 pm

          That is hilarious – I think “bobbles the mind” might leak out into the world at large!(if I have anything to do with it!?) I had an aunt who couldn’t say “Humoresque” so it became “Humsquerooo”.

      • Claire November 1, 2016 / 1:30 pm

        I love these too! The classic one in my family comes from my great grandmother who used to accuse my parents of “galvanating” (like galvanize) instead of gallivanting around town.

      • Brouhaha November 1, 2016 / 1:58 pm

        These are also great to get from kids – a friend’s daughter was wearing a dress and not sitting very ladylike, so I sang her the “I see London, I see France…” song, and she just turned the word underpants into “underfrance” Genius. Still use that.

        She also couldn’t pronounce diarrhea, and so called it beabea. Much cuter.

        • Dulcie November 1, 2016 / 2:50 pm

          I am so giggling right now ???

        • sumomermaid November 2, 2016 / 11:21 am

          Diarrhea: one of the Rhea sisters – Dia, Pya & Gonna (the pronunciation is important here; the spelling is not)

          • Flowerfanatic November 2, 2016 / 12:03 pm

            I had an aunt who had her own interpretation of some words. A station wagon was a stagecoach. Trash was pronounced tHrash. and the list goes on. Our oldest when he was a toddler couldn’t say anything right that started with an ‘S’ so fish was Sish. He used a Sork to eat with. He outgrew it, yeah!!

            • Murray C. November 2, 2016 / 12:45 pm

              Was that with a hard “T” and then an “H” thrown in for good measure? Because the Irish do that all the time. or was it like “th” as in “the”?

    • Amyliz November 1, 2016 / 7:23 pm

      Monkeychip! Wonderful! When my oldest niece was very small, she called chipmunks “minkmunks” so that is what my family calls these cute little rascals to this day!

      • Carlotta November 1, 2016 / 8:28 pm

        We’ve got very vocal chipmunks around here. I started to refer to them as “chirp-minks”.

    • 6rabbits November 2, 2016 / 7:30 am

      That is so cute, Dulcie!?

  9. Rina November 1, 2016 / 2:47 pm

    This is a rare instance of portrait video being the right choice!

    • 6rabbits November 2, 2016 / 7:40 am

      ???

  10. sugitomo November 1, 2016 / 10:11 pm

    The only way to make this cuter would have been overstuffed cheek pouches.

    • 6rabbits November 2, 2016 / 7:38 am

      I think she used up all the energy she was getting from nuts in popping up and down so much! She’s gonna need a nap!

Comments are closed.