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March 8, 2004 |
Washington, D.C. Mrs. Bird, Graphics Dept. Bushes, and Kerrys and Nader oh my! merica awoke this week to find itself trapped in a shitty Groundhog Day nightmare, thanks to a recent AP poll showing that if the election were held today, President Bush and Democratic candidate John Kerry would tie, with human Muppet Ralph Nader playing the spoiler once again by garnering 6 percent of the vote. These results were eerily and shittily similar to the 2000 Presidential election, when Bush won despite losing the popular vote, thanks in part to Nader siphoning off liberal voters and Bushâs brother Jeb taking a big, wet crap on the Constitution to ensure his brother would carry the crucial state of Florida.
Within moments of the Associated Press poll results being made public, Americans everywhere were comparing their feelings of nauseating year-2000...
merica awoke this week to find itself trapped in a shitty Groundhog Day nightmare, thanks to a recent AP poll showing that if the election were held today, President Bush and Democratic candidate John Kerry would tie, with human Muppet Ralph Nader playing the spoiler once again by garnering 6 percent of the vote. These results were eerily and shittily similar to the 2000 Presidential election, when Bush won despite losing the popular vote, thanks in part to Nader siphoning off liberal voters and Bushâs brother Jeb taking a big, wet crap on the Constitution to ensure his brother would carry the crucial state of Florida.
Within moments of the Associated Press poll results being made public, Americans everywhere were comparing their feelings of nauseating year-2000 dĂ©jĂ vu to the 1993 Harold Ramis film Groundhog Day, in which Bill Murray plays a news weatherman doomed to repeat the same day over and over again until he gets it right. How this phenomenon might be possible for an entire nation on a four-year scale is not yet understood, though faerie magic has yet to be completely disproved. Regardless of the cause, non-Republicans everywhere agree that America needs to make some kind of major soul-searching change to prevent waking up in 2005 to hear âI Got You Babeâ playing on clock radios across the country.
âFuck! FUCK! FUUUUUUUUUUUUUCK!!â fumed an epileptically frustrated Democratic National Committee Chairman Terry McAuliffe upon hearing the results of the poll, a replay of the 2000 election searing his brain stem like a cattle brand. Similar sentiments echoed across the nation this week as Democrats and the non-rich envisioned a bizarre replay of the last presidential election, with Gore being swapped out for Democratic nominee John Kerry like some kind of bad Hollywood script for a time-traveling comedy.
âI donât know if Kerry will be able to pull off what Gore did,â mused confident-sounding political pundit Prance Nancley. âAl Gore could have won that election in his sleep, after all he was running against a Mr. Potato Head doll. But Gore still somehow managed to drop the ball and kick it all the way down the street, allowing so-called adult George W. to sneak into the White House while the door was ajar and Gore was off looking for his ball. I donât think Kerry has that kind of comedy in him. He is rather dull.â
Still, the possible scenario of an election repeat has haunted more than a few Democrat dreams this week, with Kerry taking the place of Gore as the respectable, though thoroughly boring democratic hopeful who somehow loses to Bush on a technicality, after Floridaâs governor declares that blacks donât have the right to vote in his state any more.
The lone encouraging note in all this is that according to the same AP poll, politics arenât the only area in which America is trapped in a loop of dĂ©jĂ vu, as the AP cites âcurrentâ top-grossing films The Grinch, Cast Away and Mission Impossible 2, and has âN Sync, Santana and Eminem topping the album charts, which clearly isnât true.
Is it? the commune news had this exact same thing happen once, except we kept getting arrested for watching our next-door neighbor get undressed through binoculars. Lil Duncan is the communeâs Washington correspondent, and she experiences her own kind of painful dĂ©jĂ vu whenever she hears a man say âThat sounds like my wifeâs car!â
| Satanic Critics Pan The PassionMarch 1, 2004 |
Hollywood, CA Junior Bacon Moviegoers clamor for collectable The Passion barf bags at an early showing of the film. ccording to director Mel Gibson, film critics from across the nation have proven their fealty with the dark lord Satan by panning his latest film The Passion of the Christ, a gruesome religious horror flick released to overwhelmingly negative critical response last week. This novel reaction to film criticism has raised questions nationwide over whether the 48-year-old actor and filmmaker is merely berserkly fanatical, or just completely insane. Not helping Gibson's cause is the director's non-figurative conviction that Satan tried to keep his film from being made, and might have succeeded if not for the intervention of the Holy Ghost. Unfortunately for Gibson, the Holy Ghost was unable to prevent Satan from pointing out to film critics the film's turgid tone, plodding pacing, uneven...
ccording to director Mel Gibson, film critics from across the nation have proven their fealty with the dark lord Satan by panning his latest film The Passion of the Christ, a gruesome religious horror flick released to overwhelmingly negative critical response last week. This novel reaction to film criticism has raised questions nationwide over whether the 48-year-old actor and filmmaker is merely berserkly fanatical, or just completely insane. Not helping Gibson's cause is the director's non-figurative conviction that Satan tried to keep his film from being made, and might have succeeded if not for the intervention of the Holy Ghost. Unfortunately for Gibson, the Holy Ghost was unable to prevent Satan from pointing out to film critics the film's turgid tone, plodding pacing, uneven characterization and excessively pointless violence.
"They are the forces of Satan or the dupes of Satan," Gibson offered charitably, giving non-fans the choice of being either evil or stupid.
"Holy shit was that a bad movie," disagreed Satan's minion Elvis Mitchell of the New York Times, who must've been typing his review while drenched in lamb's blood. "That piece of shit was worse than We Were Soldiers."
The film opened to sellout crowds after months of speculation that it was going to be really offensive to Jews, generated by Gibson cashing in on his "Jews Killed Jesus" Catholic offshoot faith and his father's reputation as a notorious Holocaust denier to market the film with the catchy tagline "The Jews Hate It," despite the fact that no religious groups had seen or commented on the film at that point.
In interviews, Gibson has explained that his Traditionalist Catholic faith, which rejects the Vatican's exoneration of the Jewish race for the death of Christ, grows from his bond with his father Hutton Gibson. In either a brilliant marketing ploy or disturbing evidence of inner turmoil, Gibson's answers to requests to clarify his own stance on the Holocaust have been rambling and evasive.
Unable to go five whole minutes without saying something unnervingly kooky, however, Gibson's response to New York Times writer Frank Rich's article pointing out that the director was inventing nonexistent Jewish outrage to market his film was like something straight out of The Passion itself. "I wanted to kill him. I want his intestines on a stick. I want to kill his dog." Luckily for Gibson, from all reports Rich's dog is one of those "turn the other cheek" sorts who is unlikely to accuse the director of speaking for Satan.
The relentlessly masochistic tone of Gibson's film has caused some to ponder the director's obsession with torture, as evidenced by the mandatory torture sequences contained in nearly every film in which Gibson has appeared. From being electrocuted in Lethal Weapon and drawn and quartered in Braveheart, Gibson even went so far as to insist on adding an unscripted toe-smashing scene to Brian Helgeland's Payback. Though he was unsuccessful in similar attempts to add a testicular electrocution scene to the chickflick hit What Women Want, it was not for lack of trying.
Meanwhile, The Passion's large opening box office is sure to inspire imitators, and early word that such knock-offs as The Passion of the Weekend at Bernie's and Friday the 13th XI: Run, Jesus, Run are already in the works. Additional reports hint at an upcoming franchise of movies where Belgian marshal arts expert Jean-Claude Van Damme will beat the shit out of Jesus for two hours in various exotic locales. Whether the makers of those films will be able to pull off Gibson's brass-balled bluster, claiming that critics of The Passion's blitzkrieg of violence are merely deficient in character and unable to handle the power of his flawless cinema, may well depend on how closely they can duplicate that crazy look in his eyes. the commune news is no expert on theology, but we think Denzel got fucked up bad enough at the end of Training Day to at least qualify as a minor deity or saint or something. Ramon Nootles owns the distinction of being the first member of the national media to see The Passion, but we feel the need to temper that by explaining that he thought there was going to be a whole lot more sex involved in a movie with a name like that.
| Weepy NASA: Rover ran away; not coming back Iraq plagiarized Mexican constitution to meet deadline Sepracor sleep drug packs power of 600 history teachers Search for Bin Laden made into fun scavenger hunt |
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March 1, 2004 Cell OutTruth be told, nobody ever thought Omar Bricks would get a cell phone, least of all Omar Bricks. That's strictly Captain Kirk bullshit for sci-fi geeks and mama's boys in my book. But to be honest I never thought somebody would leave one unguarded on the counter at Emergency Room Pizza, either. So let this be a lesson, we should always write our books in pencil or dry erase marker whenever possible or else look like an asshole later.
For those of you not native to the area, ERP is a local legend, a hospital-themed pizza joint that burns the fuck out of some tasty pepperonis. It's not really legendary for the food, but more for the number of people who have passed out or lost their shit while eating there, which are many. Apparently all the bloody tourniquets and bone saw deco...
º Last Column: Long Live Omar Bricks! º more columns
Truth be told, nobody ever thought Omar Bricks would get a cell phone, least of all Omar Bricks. That's strictly Captain Kirk bullshit for sci-fi geeks and mama's boys in my book. But to be honest I never thought somebody would leave one unguarded on the counter at Emergency Room Pizza, either. So let this be a lesson, we should always write our books in pencil or dry erase marker whenever possible or else look like an asshole later.
For those of you not native to the area, ERP is a local legend, a hospital-themed pizza joint that burns the fuck out of some tasty pepperonis. It's not really legendary for the food, but more for the number of people who have passed out or lost their shit while eating there, which are many. Apparently all the bloody tourniquets and bone saw decorations on the walls are too much for some local pizza lovers, and all the tables in there are pretty banged up from people falling down all over the place or scrambling out the windows in a panic.
Personally I think it's awesome. Yeah, what you've heard about the pizza is true; it does pretty much blow ass. It basically tastes like somebody smeared glue on a cardboard box, then set it on fire. Not that I've ever done that. But the place is never crowded, and you know Omar Bricks digs that part. I hate having to wait in line for shitty pizza. Plus ERP never fails to lift my spirits when I'm in a carless funk. They do this thing where every new customer gets a steaming cow heart right in the middle of their pizza as a surprise the first time they eat there, and let me assure you that shit is some serious dinner theater.
Now, the classy move when you're new to ERP and you get a heart on, to the Bricks school of thinking, is to palm the bloody thing in one hand, then stagger up to the counter and start coughing like you just took a hit off a Pinto muffler. When the dude in the paper hat asks you what's the score, that's when you squirt the heart out of your hand like you just coughed the fucker up. What happens after that is a matter of chance and wind direction, but in my case the nasty thing smacked off the guy's face like a wet frog and the entire restaurant threw up all at once. That's how I got my picture on the wall.
Not everyone handles it so well. One time I was there gnawing on a slice when this rookie got her pizza, and she actually thought the cow heart was a big bell pepper or some shit, and I guess she was some kind of bell pepper freak because she stabbed the fucker with her fork like it was going to get away. By chance, at that exact moment somebody flushed a toilet in the john, which sets off that fountain that squirts all the fake blood up by the counter, an ERP landmark. As you might guess, the lady dropped two gonads trying to get out of there before her stomach caught up with her brain, and that's why the front door is missing the glass on the bottom.
Something similar must have happened last week, because some poor soul got the rock out of there at the speed of fear, too fast to be worried about cell phones or their left sneaker. I left the shoe there, since they have a wall they nail those to as trophies, but I was pretty sure that nails and cell phones mix about as well as nails and Jesus, so I liberated that bastard like an Iraqi oil well.
Of course, the real trouble with cell phones is trying to figure out what your phone number is, not enough people write it on the back of the phone with a grease pencil like you're supposed to. I had a plan to have commune speed bump Bludney Pludd dial every number in the phone book until my phone rang, which was brilliant enough, but some little shithead kept calling the thing to ask if his mommy was coming home and that cocked up the whole deal. I had to send Pludd out to take him for ice cream so he wouldn't eat up all my battery time calling like that, since I don't have a charger or anything.
At least I can call out well enough, which is handy when I'm at a fast-food drive thru and I don't want to roll down my window and let the cold in. But people still find a way to piss on my pageant, saying they're not allowed to drop food through a sunroof or there's certain places where it's not polite to use a cell phone. Hey, if I want to talk on my phone while I'm pissing in a movie theater urinal, that's my own business. As for whoever's on the other end of the line, well, that's why I didn't find a camera phone. I just say I'm at the ocean or in a rainforest or some shit and they have to take my word on that if they want hear the rest of the story.
And don't get me started about people bitching that it's dangerous to talk on a phone and flip through the yellow pages while you're driving. Christ on a bike, I'm starting to understand why this thing got left behind. It's like a nag magnet.
Bricks out. º Last Column: Long Live Omar Bricks!º more columns |
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Milestones2002: Office prick and former Acting-Editor Ramrod Hurley successfully turns 30, leading us on an endless week-long binge of bitching, moaning, and strange acts of vandalism we hope not to repeat this year.Now HiringBig Fat Patsy. 'Cause we're not taking the rap for this, see. We must look like a real all-day sucker to you, yeah, a sucker, with a big fat wrapper. Boy, should we have seen it coming! Played like a two-bit piano from day one. Backstabbing dames need not apply.Top Oprah Book Club Rejections1. | The Venomous Black Bitch by Phil Donahue | 2. | Fried Pork Cracklin's in Butter by Flanny Fragg | 3. | The Happy and Compliant Slave by Newt Whiteny | 4. | How Stella Left Her Groove Under the Seat on the Plane Ride Back by Terry McMillan | 5. | Fight Club by Jerry Springer | |
| Masked Jackson Still Eludes AuthoritiesBY red bagel 3/1/2004 A Fistful of Tannenbaum Chapter 3: Danger Cabin!Editor's Note: Millionaire raconteur Jed Foster was dragged back into a life of adventure by an old acquaintance, Hans "Two-Bit" Reilly, who may never be referred to as "Two-Bit" again, outside the Editor's Note. They climbed a mountain, there was some reference to a girl named Audreybell and a free backrub coupon, and a lot of horseshit about a lockbox.
They had started to open the door to the cabin when Jed grabbed Reilly's arm, stopping him.
"Careful, the door's wired," said Jed.
Reilly pulled his gun dramatically. "So, the door's been working for the cops the whole time."
"No, not that kind of wireâexplosives. One wrong move and the whole cabin could go up like a cigar smoker in a Tennessee fireworks stand."
Editor's Note: Millionaire raconteur Jed Foster was dragged back into a life of adventure by an old acquaintance, Hans "Two-Bit" Reilly, who may never be referred to as "Two-Bit" again, outside the Editor's Note. They climbed a mountain, there was some reference to a girl named Audreybell and a free backrub coupon, and a lot of horseshit about a lockbox.
They had started to open the door to the cabin when Jed grabbed Reilly's arm, stopping him.
"Careful, the door's wired," said Jed.
Reilly pulled his gun dramatically. "So, the door's been working for the cops the whole time."
"No, not that kind of wireâexplosives. One wrong move and the whole cabin could go up like a cigar smoker in a Tennessee fireworks stand."
"First the door's stooling for the cops, now he's strapped up with TNT. He's out of his fucking mind."
Jed ignored his temporary partner and unrigged the door, snipping the wire carefully with his bomb-neutralizing scissors, $500 from the L.L. Bean catalogue. He nudged the door open with his foot, shielding himself behind Reilly just in case, and nodded. The smell of old wood and Ben Gay wafted from the cabin.
"It looks like they actually left it empty," said Reilly with a smile.
Jed shook his head. "You know what they say about appearances?"
"They're worth two-thousand words."
"No, you just made that up. They say they're deceiving," clarified Jed. He told Reilly to search the corners and not let his gun drop at all. Jed took a folding shovel from his backpack and pried up the floorboards, until he was sure the cabin was unoccupied.
"The lockbox!" reminded Reilly. "We've got to find the lockbox."
"Look in the wall safe, behind that picture."
Reilly took down a handsome portrait of Audreybell, who had once been the love of Jed's life. The picture stared back at him, flat, oily, a pale shadowy image of a real personâjust like Audreybell had been. While Jed was lost in his thoughts, refusing to ask for directions, Reilly chipped into the wood behind the portrait. Wood gathered in pieces at his feet, until he broke through the wall and the cold breeze blew in and chilled them.
"It's gone!" shouted Reilly. "The wall safe has been stolen!"
"Oh, that's right. We didn't have a wall safe. It's under the bed."
From under a thin mattress on rusty springs, Reilly pulled up the famous gray steel lockbox. He shook it with excitement.
"We got it, Jed! I can't believe it was this easy!" he stated prophetically.
Before Jed had a chance to make a statement soon proven ironic, two men burst out from behind the door with their guns drawn.
"Damn!" cursed Jed. "Behind the door! I always forget about behind the door."
"Do you recognize me, Foster?" wheezed the more muscular of the two villains. He pointed at a black eye patch with his gloved finger. "You gave me this!"
"Yes, I felt sorry for you after you shot your eye out with that B.B. gun," said Jed solemnly. "But just because we exchanged a few gifts doesn't mean I'm going to let you take the lockbox, Fango."
"Too bad, Jed," said Fango, cocking his gun, as his associate gunned his cock. "I had hoped our old friendship might help us avoid some bloodshed. But it's for the best. After all, I love bloodshed! Almost as much as I love candy."
Next Chapter: Different Day, Same Bullets |