1734 lines
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1734 lines
86 KiB
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[This file is from the Sf-Lovers Archives at Rutgers University. It is
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provided as part of a free service in connection with distribution of
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Sf-Lovers Digest. This file is currently maintained by the moderator of
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the Digest. It may be freely copied or redistributed in whole or in part
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as long as this notice remains intact. If you would like to know more
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about Sf-Lovers Digest, send mail to SF-LOVERS-REQUEST@RUTGERS.EDU.]
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- The author of this work is unknown. It was edited and reformatted by
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Saul Jaffe (moderator, Sf-Lovers)
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Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net
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Episode 1 - First Meeting
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One day, not long after tomorrow, Arnold Lint was busy scrolling through
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the seemingly infinite reaches of the Net. All of a sudden the news stopped
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with an abrupt thud, followed by the angry message "YOUR NODE HAS BEEN
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REDUCED TO A LITTLE BLACK, GREASY SPLOTCH IN MY MEMORY SPACE!!". No sooner
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had he assimilated this horrendous event when a great suction like noise
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began to emanate from his terminal. "This is it", he said to himself, "I'm
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going to die". The screen on his terminal imploded and he suddenly found
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himself sucked into the terminal...
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(Arnold Lint regains consciousness, only to find himself in the company of
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an odd trio. One of the trio is an apparently normal human male (named Rod
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Perfect) and the second is a voluptuous young woman (named Gillian). The
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third is also a normal male (named Xaphod Gronklebox), except for a third,
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mechanical, arm and a 12" CRT on his shoulder that keeps scrolling "Pieces
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of Eight, Pieces of Eight".)
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Rod: Evening all! I'm Rod Perfect, awfully rude of you imploding on
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us this way, you silly twit.
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Arnold Lint: Sorry. Am I dead?
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Xaphod: Obviously not, you semi-evolved simian! Are all you net-landers so
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stupid. If you were dead would I be talking to you? I'm Xaphod
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Gronklebox, the famous inter-net-al criminal and dog molester - you
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must have heard of me.
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Arnold Lint: Actually, no, I haven't.
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Xaphod: Oh well, your loss. I just hijacked this node! It's called the
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Infinity, isn't it wild. Just imagine the places we can go in this
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baby.
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(Rod notices that Arnold's eyes are transfixed on the young woman)
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Rod: Her name's Gillian, at least that's what she wants to be called.
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Actually, her real name is Gertrude Floogie, but she didn't like
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it, so she changed it.
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(Arnold Lint detects a mechanical sound to his right. A robot soon walks
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into view)
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Robot: My name is Martin. I am sure you will have an absolutely awful time
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on this node, I always have. I do not know why they insist on
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trying to do things to change the Net, they can only make it worse.
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No matter what happens, some one always says something stupid and
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ruins everything. Then someone else feels obliged to a rebuttal, and
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on and on it goes. How awful. Still, what do you expect from an
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imperfect Net.
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Rod: Martin is a bit, well, depressing.
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Xaphod: He's a real downer, man!
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Martin: That's right, ridicule me. See what I care. I'm only an android.
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Just another example of cruelty in this awful Net.
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[The "Hitch Hikers Guide to the Net" defines cruelty as having to see
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constant repetitions of the same salutary comment in more than 20 messages.
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History shows that a war was fought over the repetition of the statement
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"If you don't like my name - push off, signed xxxx" appearing in 200
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messages from the node of Moronicus. Since that time, any time a salutary
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message is used more than 20 times, subsequent violators have their pelvis
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screwed to a cake stand while they are forced to watch repeats of "The Gong
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Show".]
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Arnold Lint: Well, what do we do now?
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Xaphod: We're on our way to Netrothea. (The 12" CRT on his shoulder now
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starts repeating "Polly want a sedative, Polly want a sedative")
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There's supposed to be all sorts of wild and amazingly great things
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in that place!
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Rod: Martin, set course for Netrothea!
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Martin: All right, but you're not going to like it.
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Gillian: What will we find on Netrothea?
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Xaphod: Well, there's supposed to be a huge stock pile of data there that
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we can sell to the Net for millions.
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Arnold Lint: A stock pile of what?
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Xaphod: Data! Data! You idiot. Knowledge is power in the Net. All that data
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has been accumulating over the centuries. Just imagine the
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amazingly amazing philosophical Net-discussions that it stored. I
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mean, the Net is the focal point of all wisdom. Just think of all
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that smart stuff! Wow!
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[The "Hitch Hikers Guide to the Net" insists that the focal point of all
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knowledge in not the Net itself. Rather, it is the fourth stall in the mens
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room in Grand Central Station. No one has ever been dumb enough to waste
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time disproving this wild claim, so the publishers avoided some nasty laws
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suits.]
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Xaphod: We'll have millions! We'll by everything! No, we'll have
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billions, trillions, . . . .
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(Xaphod begins to shake violently and froth at the mouth, then he falls
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over backward. A few seconds later he comes to.)
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Xaphod: Well, lets go!
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Rod: You all right?
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Xaphod: Yah, sure. Just the excitement of new conquests.
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Arnold Lint: Looked more like Flamers-syndrome to me.
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Xaphod: You should talk, you key-pounding half-wit.
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Gillian: If we're going to go, lets go already.
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Martin: Do we really have to?
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Rod: YES!
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(Just as the node starts on it's way, a host of flame-shaped vessels became
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visible on the scanners)
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Rod: Funny you should mention Flamers-syndrome.
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Xaphod: Oh, hell!
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Gillian: What are they?
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Xaphod: Damn, those are ships belonging the Flamers. They go after
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anything, no matter how pointless or unimportant it is. If they
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catch us, we could suffer permanent brain damage, or worse yet -
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join the Moral Majority
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Arnold Lint: So this it it, we're all going to die!
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Martin: I told you that you would like it.
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Others: Oh Shut Up!
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End Of Part 1
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Will Arnold and his new travelling companions escape the Flamers? Or will
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they end up playing rock albums backwards at 66.6 RPM? For the answers to
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these, and countless other pointless questions, tune in next time ... same
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Net-time ... same Net-channel
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Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net
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Episode 2 - The Flamers
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(The Infinity's scanners are showing the Flamer's ships approaching fast.
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Arnold Lint and Rod Perfect are frantically scurrying about. Xaphod is
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trying to figure out how to fly the node, and Gillian is fixing her makeup.
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Martin the android is off on a corner moping about how he's too young to
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die.)
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Xaphod: This is the node Infinity, we are on a peaceful, although a
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bit mercenary, mission. Hold your fire.
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(The commander of the Flamer's fleet appears on the screen. He appears to
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be a normal human, except for a small silver halo stapled to his head.)
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Flamer: I am Adolf Riteyus, commander of the Flaming Queen. You have
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violated Flaming space and must be blasted. You will be given a
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fair and drawn out hearing before you are found guilty.
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Rod: We didn't know this was Flaming space!
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Adolf: Ignorance is no excuse. Do you think that just because you don't
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know something you shouldn't be responsible for it? Why, if we
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didn't go around blasting people who thought they were innocent,
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there'd be no order. The whole power structure of the Net is based
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on the inalienable right to flame. He who flames the loudest and
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strongest will prevail, for he will have maintained purity of
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essence by not compromising his principles. It doesn't matter what
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one flames about, as long as one comes out a winner. Winning the
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argument for mandatory retroactive birth control is one of our
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greatest victories. We Flamers always win because we never give
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up. No, things are either our way or they're WRONG.
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[The "Hitch Hikers Guide to the Net" lists the Flamers as one of the most
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argumentative races in the Net. History shows that the Flamers went to war
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over the right to keep and bear tongue depressors. They also had a violent
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and bloody discussion over the morality of Odor Eaters. The only time the
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Flamers can be easily beaten in combat is on Sunday mornings when they all
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watch evangelist shows, or during Ronco "Mr. Microphone" commercials (their
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symbol of worship).]
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Gillian:What should we do?
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Xaphod: How 'bout evasive actions?
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Marvin: It won't help.
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Rod: Oh shut up!
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Rod: OK, evasive action!
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Adolf: Where do you come from?
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Xaphod: Not from around here.
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Adolf: Where are you headed?
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Rod: Left.
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Gillian:That's telling him?
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Adolf: What is your favorite color?
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Arnold Lint: My what?
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Adolf: Your favorite color!
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Rod: White!
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Adolf: What is the maximum warp speed of a ladened Swaldrel?
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Xaphod: Denebian or Rigelian?
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Adolf: I don't know that... all right, enough evading, if you don't
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surrender in the next five seconds I'll blast you right out of
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existence.
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Rod: Well, now what.
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Adolf: Five!
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Arnold Lint: What's this button do?
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Adolf: Four!
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Xaphod: That's the Illogical Drive. It propels the node on power from
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hard drugs and acid rock. It's kind of dangerous though.
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Adolf: Three!
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Arnold Lint: Should we try it?
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Adolf: Two!
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Rod: Well, let's not . . . Four!
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Adolf: Four!
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Arnold Lint: So this is it, we're all going to die.
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Adolf: Three!
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Martin: I warned you about this trip.
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Adolf: Two!
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Xaphod: All right, all right, engage the Illogical Drive!
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Adolf: One!
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(Arnold Lint engages the Illogical drive. Images of the movie "Easy Rider"
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float across the view port. "In-a-gadda-da-vida" starts coming across the
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radio. The 12" CRT on Xaphod's shoulder starts scrolling "Wow man, what a
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trip!". The scanners show that the Flamers couldn't handle the sudden flood
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of sensory excitation and burst their brains. This only made their
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reactions a bit slower though as the Flamer's brain is remarkably small.
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The Infinity, charged up with Liquid Super Duetrillium, was able to make
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warp speed and turn the corner before the Highway patrol picked them up on
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radar. This was fortunate for it meant that they wouldn't be caught by
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Spiny Norman, the 45 foot blue hedgehog that had been following them.)
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Gillian: We made it.
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Rod: Yah, where are we Martin.
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Martin: We're way out man.
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Xaphod: Oh, he's useless now - it'll take a while before he comes down.
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Arnold Lint: At least he isn't so gloomy.
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Martin: Nooo body knows, the trouble I've see . . . have any of you ever
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contemplated the death of a grain of salt?
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[The "Hitch Hikers Guide to the Net" points out that the life and death of
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a grain of salt can have amazing importance in the course of life on the
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Net. One particular grain of salt (named Nigel) was responsible for the
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overthrow of an entire government. Nigel gave his
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. <- Nigel
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life by falling into the barrel of a shotgun that was aimed at the planet's
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dictator. Thanks to lousy marksmanship on the part of the rebels, only
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Nigel was able to hit the dictator. The rest of the buck shot killed the
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dictator's pet salmon, Eric. Nigel, however, penetrated the dictators eye
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and eventually killed him 8 months later just before a firing squad cut the
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dictator in two.]
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Rod: Shut Up!
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Xaphod: Well, lets get back on course.
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Arnold Lint: What are those?
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(The scanners now show a dozen ships shaped like the number one heading
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toward the Infinity.)
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Xaphod: Those are Singularan ships. They're worse than flamers!
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Rod: Oh yeah, they're worse than a visit from an insurance salesman.
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Gillian:They're normally mild mannered computer scientists. But when they
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get on the Net, they become endowed with a superhuman ability to
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talk about incredibly personal things, things they couldn't
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otherwise discuss.
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Arnold Lint: Sounds awful.
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Martin: That's what I keep telling you.
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Rod: Shut up!
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Xaphod: If we don't get out of here fast, we'll end up debating which
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finger a divorced person should wear his or her ring on when going
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to homosexual orgies - or worse, have to go to a Pot Luck Dinner
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where all that the people do is talk.
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End Of Part 2
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Will the crew of the infinity avoid the clutches of the Singularans? Or
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will they end up exchanging recipes for onion dip. For the answers to these
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and several other amazingly unimportant questions ... tune in next time ...
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same Net-time ... same Net-channel.
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Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net
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Episode 3 - The Singularans
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(Arnold Lint and the crew of the Infinity are trying to decide what to do
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now that they are being faced by the deadly Singularans.)
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Xaphod: Oh wow, just when we got past the Flamers, we have to run
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into the 'Singles'. The Illogical drive won't work this time.
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Rod: No, and neither will evasive actions. They all talk that way!
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Gillian: What will we do then?
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Arnold Lint: I'll tell you ... we're all going to die.
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Xaphod: Shut your cake-hole!
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Martin: I tried to tell you this trip would be a real downer, but
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would you listen?
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Rod: Quiet!
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Xaphod: I guess we should see what they want.
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(Xaphod switches on the two way video telecommunicator and RadaRange. The
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face of the Singularan captain appears on the screen. He is a normal human
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wearing a T-shirt which says: "Have you ever really listened to Manilow?"
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He is also sporting glow in the dark pants and 10 pounds of silver and gold
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chains around his neck.)
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Singularan: Hey, like I'm Dirk Thawtphull. We were cruising by and saw your
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node. Interested in some meaningful relationships, free from
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the moral depravity that otherwise infects the net.
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Xaphod: Well, I kind of like depravity.
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Rod: Yah, me too.
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Dirk: Wow, you'd love our S & M encounter group then, fershure!
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Arnold Lint: Your what?
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Dirk: S & M encounter group. We get together twice a week and exchange
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recipes and beatings.
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Arnold Lint: How could a group like that command such a strong node?
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Xaphod: Well, the sudden popularity of Jogging induced widespread adoption
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of the principles of Single-ism. The subsequent rise of the sport
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of 'Joggering' reduced the numbers of Singularans to normal size.
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It appears that they may be making a come back though.
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[The "Hitch Hikers Guide to the Net" defines 'Joggering' as a sport
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originated in Australia to combat the sudden drop in productivity caused by
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having everybody jogging. Australian champion Bruce Karnage describes the
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sport: "Well, there is a different way of catching both male and female
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joggers. If it's a male, you flush him out into the open with cigarette
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smoke, then chase him down in your 4 x 4 Land Rover. When he's tired, bump
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him with the fender to stun him momentarily. Then get out and with your
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driver pick him up by all fours and run him head-first into the side of the
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truck. If it's a female, bait a likely spot with designer jogging wear and
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then wait for a flock to arrive. When one becomes interested, sneak up
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behind her, very quietly. Then when you are about two feet away, and you
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can see the sun dancing on her richly tanned flesh caressing her well toned
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figure into a visual symphony of delight, split her skull with a handy
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two-by-four. It's a lovely sport!" The sport later became known as
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'Walkmaning'.]
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Rod: We were on our way to Netrothea to pick up some ... uh ...
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fuel, yah that's it.
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Dirk: Well, we've got plenty of fuel, come on over and we'll let you have
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it.
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Xaphod: No, it's OK.
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Dirk: I insist!
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(The Singularan ship lets out a pink and purple polka-dot ray that engulfs
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the Infinity. Arnold Lint and company find themselves in a room on the
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Singularan ship. It is decorated right out off the floor of a K-Mart.
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K-Tel's "Feelings" album is playing "You light up my existence" in the
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background, on the ceiling is a gigantic mirror, and in one corner is a
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gigantic mood-bean-bag chair.)
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Gillian: How awful!
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Martin: Actually, I kind of like it, in a depressing sort of way.
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Rod: Quiet.
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Arnold Lint: Where are we.
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Dirk: You're aboard the Singularan vessel "Sincerity". You will remain here
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until you learn to develop meaningful relationships over the Net.
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Meaningful relationships based on honesty, truth, and having nothing
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|||
|
to do with physical appearance. Relationships which will grow as you
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|||
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and your partner, or partners, share, or don't share, things you
|
|||
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have, or don't have, in common. You will learn how to have every
|
|||
|
other sentence include the words 'special' or 'meaningful
|
|||
|
relationship'.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: If he says "meaningful relationship" once more I'll have to
|
|||
|
pray to the porcelain buddha.
|
|||
|
Rod: Sickening, isn't it.
|
|||
|
Dirk: Right, enough of this. Wait here and we'll start programming
|
|||
|
you for meaningful relationships.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Xaphod bends over a nearby table and vomits, the 12" CRT on his shoulder
|
|||
|
starts scrolling "Uuuggghhh")
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gillian: What did you mean about "programming" us?
|
|||
|
Dirk: We'll have to make you compatible with the environment and take away
|
|||
|
all your inhibitions when discussing your personal life on the Net.
|
|||
|
You'll be subjected to countless sessions watching repeats of "The
|
|||
|
Dating Game", "The Newlywed Game", and "Celebrity Wife Swapping". And
|
|||
|
that's only Stage 1!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The "Hitch Hikers Guide to the Net" points out that the three old Earth TV
|
|||
|
shows just mentioned were actually the basis for a huge inter-conglomerate
|
|||
|
stock monopolizing scheme started by The Phone Company. The questions asked
|
|||
|
on these shows were actually coded messages issued by The Phone Company to
|
|||
|
the conglomerates it was working with. These messages told the associated
|
|||
|
conglomerates about which stocks to buy based on information gained by The
|
|||
|
Phone Company by listening in on the phones of important companies. The
|
|||
|
client corporations paid The Phone Company 1 million dollars for each such
|
|||
|
message. The seemingly idiotic contestants were, more often than not,
|
|||
|
government agents trying to break The Phone Company's code. Chuck Barris,
|
|||
|
the originator of the shows, was later found to be a financial genius,
|
|||
|
rivaled only by Howard Hughes.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: We gotta get put of here!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Yah.
|
|||
|
Rod: You know what really gets Singularans put off? Rudeness and
|
|||
|
crudeness!
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: What?
|
|||
|
Rod: Rudeness, if we act real crude and rude, they'll beg us to leave!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Great, let's try it!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Dirk returns with three gorgeous women and one well built female model
|
|||
|
android.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: (To the first girl) Wow, look at that pair!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: (To the second girl) That's a lovely grab!
|
|||
|
Rod: (To the third girl) OK love, drop 'em!
|
|||
|
Martin: (To the female android) I wave my private parts toward
|
|||
|
approximate vector coordinates.
|
|||
|
Gillian: (To Dirk) Say Dirk, if you get some Saran-Wrap and chicken wire,
|
|||
|
I'll get the honey and the plunger.
|
|||
|
Dirk: Get out of here you disgusting filthly maladjusted perverts!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(The three women and one android exit with great haste. The crew of the
|
|||
|
Infinity is beamed back to their node.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Dirk: Good riddance. Put on the flip side of "Feelings" and pass the cheese
|
|||
|
dip. It's their loss, for only we know what true meaningful
|
|||
|
relationships are. Only we know the feeling of wholeness that comes
|
|||
|
from showing, or not showing, what one feels, or doesn't feel, with
|
|||
|
someone special we care about. We aren't hung up on physical things,
|
|||
|
we are spiritualists. At least, that's what we tell everyone else.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Right, now on to Netrothea, nothing can stop us now.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End Of Part 3
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Will the crew of the Infinity reach Netrothea, or will Nothing stop them?
|
|||
|
For the answers to this, and other useless questions ... tune in next time
|
|||
|
... same Net-time ... same Net-channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net
|
|||
|
Episode 4 - E.C. (The Extra Commercial)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Arnold Lint and the crew of the Infinity are on their way to Netrothea.
|
|||
|
They have successfully escaped both the Flamers and the Singles.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Xaphod: How much longer till we reach Netrothea?
|
|||
|
Martin: Too soon.
|
|||
|
Rod: Quiet!
|
|||
|
Gillian: I can't wait to get there!
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: I'm just glad we're still in one piece.
|
|||
|
Martin: It doesn't take much to make you happy, does it?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(All of a sudden, a blinding light fills the bridge of the Infinity. When
|
|||
|
the light fades, a small, sickeningly adorable creature is revealed. He is
|
|||
|
wearing a cap which says "I'm cute, buy me!")
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gillian: What's that?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: That's E.C. - the Extra Commercial!
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: The what?
|
|||
|
Rod: The Extra Commercial. The most commercialized being since Santa Claus!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["The Hitch Hikers Guide to the Net" lists Santa Claus as a being from
|
|||
|
Pluto who suffered severe brain damage when his space ship crashed on
|
|||
|
Earth. Every year the silly old twit tries to fly an old sleigh and a flock
|
|||
|
of equally stupid reindeer back to Pluto. Unfortunately, his reverse
|
|||
|
gravity modulator is not 100 percent so he never quite gets out of Earth's
|
|||
|
orbit. This is just as well as the jerk lost all his deep space gear. Many
|
|||
|
people on Earth have mistaken the boxes of Kentucky Fried Chicken he
|
|||
|
carries on his unlikely space craft (as rations for the trip to Pluto) for
|
|||
|
presents to be distributed to children. In actuality, the only reason Fred
|
|||
|
Glarn (his real name) ever climbs down chimneys is because he is totally
|
|||
|
wasted on Selurian Brandy and he is merely looking for a likely spot to
|
|||
|
sleep it off. (Why else would his nose always be red?).]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Xaphod: I've never met E.C. before, I always though he was just some
|
|||
|
massive advertising ploy.
|
|||
|
Gillian: (To E.C.) Hello, I'm Gillian.
|
|||
|
E.C.: (In a heavy New York - Jewish accent) Oy vey, vhat a trip.
|
|||
|
Say goylie, you're cute.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Huh?
|
|||
|
E.C.: Don't call me E.C., it's a meshugina name. My real name is
|
|||
|
Phil Moskowitz.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Phil Moskowitz?
|
|||
|
Phil: Yes!, Vhat did you expect - Ricardo Montalban?
|
|||
|
Rod: You're the Extra Commercial?
|
|||
|
Phil: Don't laugh, my brother Saul owns Jordache Jeans!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["The Hitch Hikers Guide to the Net" states that the Jordache Jeans Company
|
|||
|
was actually a very clever marketing ploy by the makers of Preparation H.
|
|||
|
It was their intention to boost the sales of their rectal paraphernalia by
|
|||
|
inducing Americans to stuff their gludius maximus into overly confined
|
|||
|
garments. The ploy did not succeed.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gillian: What are you doing here?
|
|||
|
Phil: I'm on my vay to the Net Christmas Special. This year it's
|
|||
|
being hosted by Johnny Arson and Bud McMolson. Vhen you're a purely
|
|||
|
commercial item like me, you have to travel a lot.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: But you're Jewish, what are you doing on a Christmas special?
|
|||
|
Phil: Believe me, it vasn't my idea. Some people out there actually think
|
|||
|
I'm Christ reborn. I knew a kid in Brooklyn name Jesus Martinez, but
|
|||
|
that's as close as I ever got. Anyvay, I'm hot right now in the
|
|||
|
market, so I go on any show they can get me on.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: That's unbelievable! How'd you get started in the business?
|
|||
|
Phil: Vell, I tell ya'. One day I'm sitting there, eating a lox on rye, and
|
|||
|
some movie man comes up to me and says: "I'm gonna make you are
|
|||
|
star". Next thing I know I'm in some nutso movie vith a bunch of
|
|||
|
little kids. I hate little kids. No sooner does the movie hit the
|
|||
|
screens than there are E.C. video games, clothing, silverware,
|
|||
|
contraceptives, books, posters, and kinky undergarments. You name it
|
|||
|
and I was on it. Then came the TV shows and all the publicity events
|
|||
|
- I actually cut the ribbon on the Jimmy Carter Memorial Brothel and
|
|||
|
Pro Shop! Then I had to appear at the opening of "Nukes are Us" - a
|
|||
|
store for budding nuclear powers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Wow, that's wild.
|
|||
|
Phil: Vell, I gotta run.
|
|||
|
Gillian: Bye!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(The bright light once again fills the bridge, it fades and E.C. is gone.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: That was incredible!
|
|||
|
Martin: If you say so!
|
|||
|
Rod: Quiet!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Well, we're here ... Netrothea!
|
|||
|
Martin: Oh joy and yummies.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End Of Part 4
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What will Arnold Lint and the crew of the Infinity find on Netrothea? For
|
|||
|
the answer to this spine-tingling question ... tune in next time ... same
|
|||
|
Net-time ... same Net-channel. Also, be sure not to miss the BIG NET
|
|||
|
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL starring Johnny Arson, Bud McMolson, Richard Nixon, Barry
|
|||
|
Manilow, Richard Simmons, and Teddy the Wonder Lizard.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net
|
|||
|
Episode 5 - Netrothea
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(The Infinity is about to land on Netrothea. It is here that Xaphod hopes
|
|||
|
to find a wealth of data to sell back to the Net for immense profits.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: Okay Martin, let's land.
|
|||
|
Martin: Do we have to?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Yes!
|
|||
|
Martin: Very well.
|
|||
|
Gillian: Cheer up Martin, maybe you'll meet a nice lady android.
|
|||
|
Wouldn't that be nice?
|
|||
|
Martin: Not really.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: How 'bout a nice male android?
|
|||
|
Martin: That's right more abuse, aren't things bad enough already?
|
|||
|
Besides, how can an android be homosexual? Come to think of it, we
|
|||
|
can't be heterosexual either! How dreadful.
|
|||
|
Rod: Quiet, we've landed.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: How fantastic!
|
|||
|
Gillian: How wonderful.
|
|||
|
Martin: How awful.
|
|||
|
All: Oh shut up!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Right, lets go!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(The door to the Infinity opens to reveal the landscape of Netrothea. It
|
|||
|
is indeed a strange landscape. The ground has the consistency of a
|
|||
|
partially frozen waterbed covered with rich Corinthian leather. Flames
|
|||
|
spring forth from the soil in primordial splendor, displaying brilliant
|
|||
|
patterns of red and green. Off in the distance, great orange hills reflect
|
|||
|
the light of the purple sun. Polka-dotted polygram clouds move swiftly in
|
|||
|
uneven patterns across the blue and grey striped sky. The hills seemed to
|
|||
|
have been polished by the winds of time into huge reflective mounds which
|
|||
|
make light dance on the valleys below. Great forests of trees are off to
|
|||
|
the right. The trees are only 4 feet tall, but 20 feet wide. Stainless
|
|||
|
steel leaves hang from their bubble gum branches as pink and black steam
|
|||
|
spews from their exposed roots. The air stings with the scent of stale
|
|||
|
oysters and rotting, 3 day old, MacDougals BigMuck's. There is still no
|
|||
|
sign of civilization. The 12" CRT on Xaphod's shoulder starts up: "This is
|
|||
|
David Halfmind. Tomorrow on 'Good Morning Idiots', we'll discuss herpes,
|
|||
|
the death penalty, and aerobics at the office. We'll also be talking with
|
|||
|
Yassir Arrafat about fashions for hot climates . In addition, we'll have
|
|||
|
some wonderful holiday recipes from the Ayatollah Khomieni. Also, don't
|
|||
|
miss our special feature, 'A trip to the Police Morgue', which we'll show
|
|||
|
right after the weather report."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gillian: Ugh, how awful.
|
|||
|
Martin: That's what I keep telling you.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Wow, what a great place for a vacation.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Yah, if you enjoy misery.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["The Hitch Hikers Guide to the Net" lists Netrothea as being in the top 10
|
|||
|
places frequented by masochists. The wretched climate and unfriendly people
|
|||
|
(who used to inhabit the place) made Netrothea about as much fun as a
|
|||
|
spinal tap performed with a boat hook. Netrothea's popularity waned as
|
|||
|
more and more places of vastly inferior quality were either discovered or
|
|||
|
created. When these new, modern, haunts-for-the-very-sick hit the market,
|
|||
|
old establishments (like Netrothea) were doomed. The Netrothean government
|
|||
|
tried to boost tourist trade by offering 'Club Mud' vacations to
|
|||
|
Netrothea's famous 'Bile Bog', but it was to no avail.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Martin: I can't even enjoy misery, I hate this place too.
|
|||
|
Rod: Quiet!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Let's go over there.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Arnold Lint and crew make their way around the 20 foot wide trees, past
|
|||
|
the 40 foot tall monolith, under the stop watch draped over the towel rack,
|
|||
|
and over the 10 foot diameter pimple. They finally arrive at a door set
|
|||
|
into the ground. A stuffed penguin stands by the door, on it's head is a
|
|||
|
button labeled "Ring for Verbal Abuse". Etched into the door are the words:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"X = 101010 Copyrighted by Deep Thought, so bug off".)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: One-Zero-One-Zero-One-Zero? What does it mean?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: I don't know?
|
|||
|
Gillian: Should we press the button?
|
|||
|
Rod: Might as well.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: (Trying to open the door) Yah, the door's locked anyway. Arnold,
|
|||
|
why don't YOU press the button.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Thank you very much, I think not.
|
|||
|
Martin: All right, I'll do it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Martin presses the button, the door flies open, and a man pops out to
|
|||
|
great the Infinity crew. He is dressed in a business suit and sports a
|
|||
|
"Stupidity is its own reward" button on his jacket.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Man: Well, what do you want you smelly, squirming insignificant vermin?
|
|||
|
Rod: We wanted to get in the door . . . who are you?
|
|||
|
Man: Oh, I'm Flarg Brittashik, awfully nice to meet you.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: (Confused) You're names' what?
|
|||
|
Flarg: FLARG BRITTASHIK, what are deaf as well as stupid? What a bunch of
|
|||
|
mindless, horrific oafs!
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Look you, just let us in the door and then push off!!
|
|||
|
Flarg: Why didn't you say so, follow me.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Flarg descends down the stairs, the rest follow. The stairs form a spiral,
|
|||
|
with a half-gainer twist, descending at an incredible rate to the interior
|
|||
|
of Netrothea. The stairway is lit by the glow from halibut fished out of
|
|||
|
the sea around the nearby nuclear power plant.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: Where are we going?
|
|||
|
Flarg: WHERE ARE WE GOING?! What a perfectly stupid question. We're
|
|||
|
obviously going down you sickening, malodorous pervert!
|
|||
|
Gillian: Do you realize that you're insulting us, and then the next moment
|
|||
|
being polite to us?
|
|||
|
Flarg: Oh, am I? I hadn't noticed.
|
|||
|
Rod: Well it's bloody annoying, mate.
|
|||
|
Flarg: Well, tough rocko's if I do, you wiper of other people's behinds!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The act of wiping other peoples behinds, according to "The Hitch Hikers
|
|||
|
Guide to the Net", was once considered a quite honorable profession in
|
|||
|
certain areas of the Net. In fact, many of the old regimes went so far as
|
|||
|
to have Royal Behind Wipers (or RBW's for those readers used to TLA's -
|
|||
|
three letter acronyms) whose sole task it was to walk around behind his or
|
|||
|
her appointed monarch with toilet paper in hand and perform the specified
|
|||
|
duty. Although this may seem an unpopular job, the pay was quite good. As
|
|||
|
such, positions as Royal 'Pooper Scoopers' were often granted based on
|
|||
|
tournaments. These tournaments resembled the Earth's olympics except for
|
|||
|
two facets. First, all events (actually, they only lasted for one event)
|
|||
|
were fought to the death. And second, any event thought up had to involve
|
|||
|
the creative use of human excrement. ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Martin: You know, I would have thought any place as awful as this might
|
|||
|
have been amusing to me. But it's just as bad as the rest of the
|
|||
|
Net. Good thing I'm just an android and don't have to ponder the
|
|||
|
reasons why the Net is as it is. I can just be content knowing that
|
|||
|
it can only get worse.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: One more word out of you, and I'll go at your memory banks
|
|||
|
with a chain saw!!!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End Of Part 5
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What will Arnold Lint and the crew of the Infinity find in Netrothea? Will
|
|||
|
Flarg Brittashik insult them to distraction? Or are they already
|
|||
|
distracted? Will Xaphod end up doing a lumber jack-job on Martin's memory
|
|||
|
banks? In the off chance of being told the answers to these, and other,
|
|||
|
ad-libed questions ... tune in next time ... same Net-time ... same
|
|||
|
Net-channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net
|
|||
|
Episode 6
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Flarg Brittashik is leading the crew of the Infinity down the contorted
|
|||
|
stairway toward the interior of Netrothea.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Martin: What an awful place, why do we bother to go on?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Quiet!
|
|||
|
Flarg: Actually, he's right. One of the things we Netrotheans proved was
|
|||
|
that the Net does not actually exist. It therefore follows that
|
|||
|
nothing we do really matters at all.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: What?
|
|||
|
Flarg: Is that all you can say you mindless, facial emation!
|
|||
|
Rod: What do you mean "we don't exist"?
|
|||
|
Flarg: Well, first we approached the problem assuming that we were a unique
|
|||
|
Net. There is none other like us in the entire domain of space,
|
|||
|
right?
|
|||
|
Rod: Right...
|
|||
|
Flarg: Well, if we are alone, how do we know we are? Without another Net to
|
|||
|
tell us we are, we may not be. We could just be the figments of our
|
|||
|
imaginations. How do you KNOW that that cat over there does in fact
|
|||
|
have 5 legs? You see it, but what's to say that it is actually
|
|||
|
there. Do you follow?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[What Flarg Brittashik was pointing out was the famed five-legged cat
|
|||
|
of Felix Major. The "The Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net" indicates
|
|||
|
that the myth of the five-legged cat was actually the result of the
|
|||
|
heavy drinking done on Felix Major. You see, the female of the
|
|||
|
species on Felix Major is covered with a blue slime which eventually
|
|||
|
dissolves her mate if contact is maintained for too long. Because of
|
|||
|
this, the men on Felix Major spend a lot of time in bars discussing
|
|||
|
the differences between being Kosher and being a Cannibal. They tend
|
|||
|
to drink an awful lot while discussing this topic. In their usually
|
|||
|
intoxicated state, it is not difficult to mistake a cat for having a
|
|||
|
fifth leg if viewed side ways (or as having one eye if viewed from
|
|||
|
the rear). The "The Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net" also points out
|
|||
|
that the favorite drink on Felix Major is called the 'Intesto-rout'.
|
|||
|
It is mixed as follows: Mix equal parts of gin, whiskey, rye, vodka,
|
|||
|
rum, bourbon, and brandy. Add a cup of beer that has been left in a
|
|||
|
gym locker for 3 days. To this add 5 Ex-Lax pills, 1 Valium, 2
|
|||
|
No-Doz, and half a lid of grass. Mix it well in a Hamilton Blech
|
|||
|
mixer. Now add a rotten egg, a decaying guppy, the spleen of 10
|
|||
|
freshly killed frogs, and about a fist full of goat brains. Again mix
|
|||
|
it all up. To add a bit of zip to the mixture, add some Drain-O. Now
|
|||
|
put the whole mixture under a dead horse for 37 hours. After it has
|
|||
|
aged, filter it through the right kidney of a rabid llama and serve
|
|||
|
it in a slightly soiled bed pan with an olive. Felix Major, quite
|
|||
|
obviously developed quite a drunk driving problem. The solution
|
|||
|
arrived at was simple and logical. They simply ground up offenders
|
|||
|
and added them to 'Intest-rout's. Rumor has it that this extra
|
|||
|
ingredient gave the drink the full bodied taste it had always been
|
|||
|
lacking.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: It's the old "Does a falling tree make a sound if
|
|||
|
there's no one there to hear" story, right?
|
|||
|
Flarg: Ooo! 'The falling tree makes no noise!' Aren't we the smart-behinded
|
|||
|
little cretins!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: No, you idiot! It means ... uh ...
|
|||
|
Flarg: Actually, he's quite correct. We were not happy with finding out
|
|||
|
that we may be alone, so we then assumed that there was the
|
|||
|
possibility for an infinite number of varied Nets.
|
|||
|
Gillian: How nice.
|
|||
|
Flarg: Yes, well, it now became apparent that our one little Net was
|
|||
|
entirely insignificant in the scope of things in general.
|
|||
|
Mathematically, our percentage of existence amounted to 1 over
|
|||
|
infinity, which is too small to even consider. Worse yet, since no
|
|||
|
other Net has ever contacted us, we may REALLY not exist after all.
|
|||
|
We could REALLY be mirages of the cosmic mind.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Wow, that's heavy!
|
|||
|
Flarg: Quiet, you drugged out excuse to evacuate my stomach on the table!
|
|||
|
Rod: Go on already!
|
|||
|
Flarg: Well, after taking many heavy drugs, we finally arrived at a solid
|
|||
|
decision.
|
|||
|
Gillian: What was it?
|
|||
|
Flarg: We agreed that our existence was so insignificant that anything we
|
|||
|
did really wouldn't matter. Hence our national slogan changed to
|
|||
|
"Who Cares". After all, in light of everything I've revealed to you,
|
|||
|
it must be perfectly obvious that it just doesn't matter what you do
|
|||
|
or say on the Net.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Boy, I hope the rest of the Net doesn't hear that.
|
|||
|
Flarg: Oh, they did. That's why they attacked us and wiped out most of
|
|||
|
Netrothea. They just couldn't accept that all the fuss they were
|
|||
|
making really didn't amount to a damn thing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["The Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net" points out that the Netrotheans were
|
|||
|
somewhat renowned for exploding the faiths of others. Prior to their
|
|||
|
non-existence fetish, they published a series of treatises titled: "Who is
|
|||
|
this guy God anyway?", "Everything you always wanted to know about the
|
|||
|
benevolent Lord, but were afraid to ask.", and "Well, that's it for God."
|
|||
|
The Netrotheans had no fears of being wiped out for their bizarre views.
|
|||
|
They believed that since what we call 'death' is theoretically infinite,
|
|||
|
and what we call 'life' is so finite and miserable (what with everybody
|
|||
|
wearing digital watches and coveting thy neighbor's bits of green-dyed,
|
|||
|
processed plant matter), we must surely have gotten things backwards. They
|
|||
|
therefore had no problems dealing with the after-life.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Wow, that's wild!
|
|||
|
Flarg: Now if you really want to blow your mind, consider this: If the Net
|
|||
|
doesn't really exist, do we exist? If we exist, what is the point of
|
|||
|
our existence? What is the medium of our communication if there
|
|||
|
really is no Net? What does it all mean?
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: I don't know?
|
|||
|
Rod: That's obvious.
|
|||
|
Martin: I'm kind of relieved that nothing really exists. It's sort of
|
|||
|
reassuring to know that all the misery I've endured on the Net
|
|||
|
really doesn't affect anything anyway.
|
|||
|
Gillian: Quiet Martin. Don't you know what this all means! It means that
|
|||
|
the constant day to day struggle to keep up with the Net is all
|
|||
|
pointless. Posting news is futile, reading news is futile, thinking
|
|||
|
about news is futile - because wherever the news came from or goes
|
|||
|
to, whatever thought up the news - none of it exists - and neither
|
|||
|
do we!
|
|||
|
Rod: Yah, just think. We may have been posting news to a void!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Wait a minute! We get replies to our news!
|
|||
|
Flarg: We thought of that too. But consider the odds against our actual
|
|||
|
existence. They could be considered random at best. The odds of
|
|||
|
other beings also existing comes down to the same random
|
|||
|
probability. It follows that any communication would have to be a
|
|||
|
random coincidence. Now, consider that the only communication we see
|
|||
|
is simply processed electrical impulses. Consider the quantity and
|
|||
|
speed of the impulses. The odds against them coming together in a
|
|||
|
logical combination are astronomically bad. It follows, then, that
|
|||
|
what we mistake for communication with other beings (which don't
|
|||
|
exist either) are simply galactic burps in our faces, if we existed.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Wow!
|
|||
|
Flarg: Well, you wastes of space, I've got to go and kick my dog through a
|
|||
|
hedge.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(With that Flarg disappears in a burst of purple smoke. When the smoke
|
|||
|
clears, only a can of "Putrina Rat Chow" remains.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End Of Part 6
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What other fantastic things (which don't exist) will be revealed on
|
|||
|
Netrothea (which also doesn't exist). To find out ... tune in next time (a
|
|||
|
bizarre concept, time) ... same Net-time ... same Net-channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net
|
|||
|
Episode 7
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Xaphod, Gillian, Rod, Martin, and Arnold Lint continue their descent into
|
|||
|
the heart of Netrothea. Flarg Brittashik has vanished leaving only a tin of
|
|||
|
Putrina Rat Chow in his stead.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Wow, that was far out!
|
|||
|
Martin: If you say so.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(All of a sudden, the 12" CRT on Xaphod's shoulder starts up ... Star Wars
|
|||
|
type music kicks in ... Once upon a time, in a Net far, far away, a band
|
|||
|
of steadfast hackers are fighting a gallant fight. Vast swarms of
|
|||
|
nauseatingly repetitious messages are swamping their news. They must
|
|||
|
retaliate. This is their story ... This is Zar Wars ... All the nodes
|
|||
|
beginning with the letter Z have banded together, they are tired of always
|
|||
|
being last because the Net does everything alphabetically. They decide to
|
|||
|
stage a bold attack and make their presence known! to this end they devised
|
|||
|
a cunning scheme to echo their news articles across the known Net several
|
|||
|
multiple times each posting. In this way, they would be assured the
|
|||
|
attention they feel they deserve. Net.landers are at this moment preparing
|
|||
|
for a counterattack. They are preparing massive Photocomplaint rays,
|
|||
|
Gargantugripe bombs, and the ever deadly Superplasmicautor-
|
|||
|
everberatingmegamoleculozapperdingledangledonglehyperintensified-
|
|||
|
newandimprovedtimewarping complaint field generators. The last device is
|
|||
|
one of the most feared (and hardest to pronounce) in the known Net. Its
|
|||
|
power is so incredible that grown men have been known to pull out their own
|
|||
|
livers rather than be subjected to its awesome force.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: Turn that off!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: (Doing so) Yah, what a drag.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Well, what do we do now.
|
|||
|
Gillian: I guess we keep going.
|
|||
|
Martin: Do we have to?
|
|||
|
All: Yes!
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Sure could go for a cup of tea.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: (Mumbling to himself) Stupid git!
|
|||
|
Martin: Do you people really think this is necessary? Why can't you be
|
|||
|
satisfied with things as they are? Must you always try to change
|
|||
|
them - things can only get worse.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Look you morose metal moron, we're going on so shut up. Look upon
|
|||
|
this as an adventure into a whole new life.
|
|||
|
Martin: Oh no, not another.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(The stairwell they are on leads into a huge room. So huge that it defies
|
|||
|
commentary, only to say that it is, in fact, bloody huge. Off in the
|
|||
|
distance there is a faint light. Arnold Lint and company head for it. Two
|
|||
|
weeks later they arrive. The light is being emitted from a strange kind of
|
|||
|
TTY. There is a plaque nearby which reads: "For the answer to Life, the Net
|
|||
|
and Everything, type in 'Help'. For dirty books or leather goods, ring bell
|
|||
|
for service. The Inter-Net Megamind Exchange and Novelty Shoppe thanks you
|
|||
|
for your patronage of our establishment".)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Wow, the answer to Life, the Net, and Everything!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Who cares, lets get at the dirty books!
|
|||
|
Rod: Yah! I wonder if they have "Advanced Necrophilia for
|
|||
|
Scientists and Engineers" or "Yes, you can be a Toad-Sexer"?
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Dirty books, way out here?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Of course, depravity is the universal language. Pornographic
|
|||
|
material is generally considered legal tender anywhere in the Net.
|
|||
|
I once lived for a whole year on Carnolea, just on trading my old
|
|||
|
"Gland" magazines and lubricants for supplies.
|
|||
|
Gillian: (Disgusted by the antics of Rod and Xaphod) Let's see
|
|||
|
the answer already - boy what sicko's.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: OK, but then can we get some dirty books.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Xaphod types in 'HELP' to the keyboard. Strange hummings and buzzings
|
|||
|
start to emanate from the TTY. The cryptic characters "101010" appear on
|
|||
|
the screen.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["The Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net" points out that the number 42, when
|
|||
|
viewed in it's binary representation is in fact, quite revealing. There
|
|||
|
are many theories for what it actually means. The adult magazine "Spurt"
|
|||
|
suggests that it is the perfect pattern for an orgy, three males and three
|
|||
|
females being the supposed ideal. The actual shape of the characters of
|
|||
|
'101010' seem to bear this out. Also the fact that it does go
|
|||
|
'boy-girl-boy ... ' also helps. The religious magazine 'Modern Moral
|
|||
|
Majority' (MMM) suggests that it is in fact a message from God. The pattern
|
|||
|
indicates that two of the same sex shall not have intercourse. The fact
|
|||
|
that there are equal numbers of both male and female indicates that
|
|||
|
monogamous relationships are the thing to do. Also the fact that, when
|
|||
|
read, left to right, the man always comes first, really gave them an edge
|
|||
|
on the ERA (who really didn't listen anyway). Most other people simply
|
|||
|
wondered why everyone thought the binary sequence had anything at all to do
|
|||
|
with sex.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: That's it?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Apparently.
|
|||
|
Gillian: There must be more than just 42.
|
|||
|
Martin: I certainly hope not.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Well, let's try to get some more info!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Xaphod once again starts typing at the TTY. Characters flash and buzzers
|
|||
|
buzz. The TTY finally gives up, it types out: "All right already, if you
|
|||
|
really want the answers, take the service elevator to the 127,366,247th
|
|||
|
floor, then follow the green line till it meets the blue line till it meets
|
|||
|
the orange line till it becomes the slightly off white line. Then climb out
|
|||
|
the window, jump off and ask for Ralph. He'll tell you the whole story.
|
|||
|
Now push off, I've had a bad day. (To itself now) Where did I put those
|
|||
|
Valliums. Crap, I need a drink ... ")
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Oh well, what do we have to lose.
|
|||
|
Martin: Not much really, just our lives. Of course, my life means so
|
|||
|
little already, I doubt I'd mind if it were lost.
|
|||
|
Rod: Quiet.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End Of Part 7
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What is the actual answer to Life, the Net, and Everything? Will Arnold
|
|||
|
Lint get his tea? Will Xaphod get his dirty book? Will the net sponsor a
|
|||
|
Pot-Luck-Orgy? For the answers to these and many other pointless questions
|
|||
|
... tune in next time ... same Net-time ... same Net-channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net
|
|||
|
Episode 8 - The Flamers Return
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(The crew of the Infinity are proceeding to where the TTY directed them. A
|
|||
|
place where they would find out more about the answer to Life, the Net, and
|
|||
|
Everything.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: This is sure a long trip.
|
|||
|
Martin: Why even bother to travel through the Net. All that happens is that
|
|||
|
you are bombarded with countless meaningless messages from
|
|||
|
Singularans about how they feel, and how they feel they should
|
|||
|
feel, and how others feel they should feel. You just get over that
|
|||
|
and some droning Flamer gets on about how drunk drivers should be
|
|||
|
allowed to retain their licenses only if they have oral sex with a
|
|||
|
diseased Yak, and they go on, and on, and on, not even realizing
|
|||
|
that no one is really paying attention. Just when you finally get
|
|||
|
up nerve to post something, some jello-brained fanatic gets on your
|
|||
|
case about how you should spell things correctly and "we always do
|
|||
|
things proper where I work", and then someone else gets on trying
|
|||
|
to correlate the right to spell terribly with the constitution. And
|
|||
|
you never know how people will take things, either they're offended
|
|||
|
when they shouldn't be, or they take insults as just good
|
|||
|
conversation. And if you try to keep personalities out of what you
|
|||
|
post, some half wit from a fabled crappy state on the eastern
|
|||
|
sea-board comes along and starts getting personal with the insults,
|
|||
|
not realizing what he is really getting into. And then some
|
|||
|
emaciated loony starts posting 150 line complaints about people
|
|||
|
posting 150 line articles, which they don't have to read anyway,
|
|||
|
but feel obliged to comment on simply because their minute egos
|
|||
|
need the boost of ragging on someone they've never met. And then
|
|||
|
some deranged cat-molester starts some boring discussion about the
|
|||
|
role of contraception in the development of the ball point pen,
|
|||
|
which goes on, and on, and you find that before long your 'n' key
|
|||
|
has lost the printing on it from over use. And then people start
|
|||
|
sending endless messages about stopping the endless messages of the
|
|||
|
ongoing debate. And then your brain bursts from frustration and
|
|||
|
even if you try to contribute something worthwhile to the Net,
|
|||
|
someone's always getting his rear out of joint about something ...
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Will you shut the @#$% up!
|
|||
|
Martin: Sure, why not, you weren't really interested anyway.
|
|||
|
Rod: You're bloody right about that.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(All of a sudden, the hall they are travelling darkens. Twenty-two Flamers
|
|||
|
beam into view. They are noticably ticked off.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Commander: Look you, we told you to take your mindless drivel off the Net.
|
|||
|
Number 1: Yah!
|
|||
|
Number 2: Yah!
|
|||
|
Rod: Yah! ... yah, yah, yah.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Since when.
|
|||
|
Commander: Well, it was in a different time, we boarded your vessel, acted
|
|||
|
like the mindless, malodorous, sodomistic necrophiles that we
|
|||
|
are, did a lot of shouting, and told you to forever leave the
|
|||
|
Net.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Oh yeah, you must be the Flamers from Kekraphoon, you're the ones
|
|||
|
with the delusions of representing the consciousness of the Net.
|
|||
|
Rod: What a pack of twits, don't you know that the HHGttN has received
|
|||
|
almost overwhelming support from all over Netland?
|
|||
|
Number 1: We'll have to blast you.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: You had your chance torch-head. You should have spoken up when we
|
|||
|
started. But now we have a loyal following.
|
|||
|
Number 2: But you are taking up valuable space.
|
|||
|
Rod: You must be kidding, with the vast quantities of stuff that are
|
|||
|
considerably longer than HHGttN that go out on the Net, and ignored
|
|||
|
totally, you have the narrow mindedness to use such a worn out
|
|||
|
argument.
|
|||
|
Commander: What do you expect!
|
|||
|
Gillian: Haven't you noticed people asking for missed episodes?
|
|||
|
Number 1: Well ... we choose to ignore that.
|
|||
|
Commander: Now hold it, we want you OFF. You're upsetting the balance. Time
|
|||
|
was when we Flamers had the run of the Net. Those were the good
|
|||
|
old days, pouncing on innocent people posting messages for no
|
|||
|
reason at all. People cowering in their offices, wondering if we
|
|||
|
would cut them to ribbons for spelling errors. Now you've ruined
|
|||
|
it. We just can't deal with ... satire (Dinsdale?). Our weak
|
|||
|
attempts to counterattack fade quickly. No, you've got to GO, so
|
|||
|
we can retain our purity of essence and have no contamination of
|
|||
|
our precious bodily fluids.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: PUSH OFF you stiff! You aren't the bloody consciousness of the Net,
|
|||
|
you aren't even conscious. If you don't like the stuff, nobody is
|
|||
|
forcing you to read it. What are you, one of those Moral Majority
|
|||
|
types. Yah, that's it, you don't like what people say, so you try
|
|||
|
to make sure that nobody hears it. That's censorship, mate. Just
|
|||
|
because you don't appreciate or understand something, doesn't make
|
|||
|
everyone who does wrong.
|
|||
|
Commander: Uh, uh ...
|
|||
|
Rod: Why don't we start throwing insults at the guy who sent the
|
|||
|
Flamers. We could kick around his childhood and stuff like that.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: No, let's not go down to that level.
|
|||
|
Gillian: Yah, let's keep our values.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The editors of "The Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net" point out that every
|
|||
|
attempt is made NOT to name names or point fingers. The HHGttN is a
|
|||
|
compendium of commentary intended to help understand what goes on in
|
|||
|
Netland, a place often billed as a "wheatfield of mental disorders". The
|
|||
|
editors also point out that all episodes are intended purely in the spirit
|
|||
|
of comedic-satire. Any insults to any individual's religion, political
|
|||
|
views, or anything like that is either purely accidental, or definitely
|
|||
|
intentional. The HHGttN complaints department is open at all hours, but has
|
|||
|
so far only received one (well intended) complaint, which was kindly
|
|||
|
accepted and acknowledged to the sender. The editors remind all Netlanders
|
|||
|
that there is no evil spell forcing them to read HHGttN (even though it
|
|||
|
makes perfectly good sense to do so)!!! ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(In a fit of frustration, the Flamers depart, muttering something about "We
|
|||
|
shall return".)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Well, that was exciting.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Now let's get going and find the answer.
|
|||
|
Rod: Yah, and the dirty books.
|
|||
|
Gillian: (Looking at a huge mural on what could be considered the wall)
|
|||
|
Look over there, it looks like a whole new Net!
|
|||
|
Martin: Oh no, not another.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End Of Part 8
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Will the crew of the Infinity ever find the answer, or will they get
|
|||
|
interrupted again, to find out ... tune in next time ... same Net-time ...
|
|||
|
same Net-channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net
|
|||
|
Episode 9
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
.-----------.
|
|||
|
! _ _ !
|
|||
|
.-! /* *\ !-.
|
|||
|
\! O !/
|
|||
|
! !
|
|||
|
! .-----. !
|
|||
|
! ' ` !
|
|||
|
`-----------'
|
|||
|
!! !!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Martin
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(The crew of the Infinity is continuing on their way to find the
|
|||
|
explanation to Life, the Net, and Everything. It is an unbelievably long
|
|||
|
trip. It is also notably nasty as Martin insists on droning on and on about
|
|||
|
what a waste of time it all is and how it will probably be quite depressing
|
|||
|
once the destination is reached and so on. Off in the distance, they hear
|
|||
|
pounding type noises. The sounds appear to be getting closer.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gillian: What do you think it is?
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: I don't know.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Maybe it's some new and amazingly interesting people.
|
|||
|
Martin: I hope not.
|
|||
|
Rod: It's definitely getting closer, let's duck out of sight just to be
|
|||
|
safe.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Rod and company duck behind a nearby paperweight. The pounding sounds can
|
|||
|
now be identified as the sounds of people running. Mixed in is a metallic
|
|||
|
clinking sound and various shouts and yells. As the sound gets closer,
|
|||
|
Arnold discerns that there is also a splatting type of sound mixed in.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: What is that?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Could be a Rigelian Megapede.
|
|||
|
Rod: Or a Richard Simmons show.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(The source of the sound now comes into view. The first thing seen is a
|
|||
|
group of seven joggers, of various ages, sexes, and creeds, running for all
|
|||
|
they are worth. Close on their heels are two blokes in a Land Rover, they
|
|||
|
each wield a large club and a large can of beer. They are, in fact, none
|
|||
|
other than Australian Joggering champions Bruce Karnage and Bruce
|
|||
|
Bludletter.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bruce: Here Bruce, get closer and I'll get another.
|
|||
|
Bruce: Right Bruce.
|
|||
|
Bruce: Naw, closer, Bruce.
|
|||
|
Bruce: Pass me a beer, Bruce.
|
|||
|
Bruce: Right Bruce.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(The Land Rover approaches the slowest jogger and Bruce pockets him in the
|
|||
|
corner with a polo-like shot to the head, causing little bits of brain to
|
|||
|
spurt out his ears.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bruce: That was lovely, Bruce!
|
|||
|
Bruce: Thank you, Bruce.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(The joggers and the joggerers depart, the racket follows them, as well it
|
|||
|
should.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: That was great, what a shot.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: That was awful, how vicious and cruel.
|
|||
|
Martin: I don't know, I almost enjoyed it.
|
|||
|
Gillian: What do they call that.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: That's joggering, lovely sport.
|
|||
|
Rod: Let's go already.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: What a savage Net we live in.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["The Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net" indicates that one of the most savage
|
|||
|
races in the known Net are the Incindarans. These types make the normal
|
|||
|
Flamers look like choir boys. These types liked to censor shows like "8 is
|
|||
|
Enough" due to it's immoral plot lines. They even went so far as to publish
|
|||
|
'G' rated versions of the Old, New, and Video Testaments (blessed be the
|
|||
|
Holy Box). Legend has it that their system was kept off the Net for a long
|
|||
|
period of time. Their system lords felt that this would be best in light of
|
|||
|
the tendencies of those in the system. Things got so bad in Incindara that
|
|||
|
the system lords decided they better find someone else to fight before they
|
|||
|
wiped themselves out. So the Incindaran system was let onto the Net. They
|
|||
|
were so busy fighting amongst each other that nobody noticed the portal to
|
|||
|
the Net. An errant message found its way to Incindara which made them all
|
|||
|
realize that they were not alone. They selected their most learned scholar,
|
|||
|
Clyd Noeitall, to investigate the wondrous Net. It was the first time
|
|||
|
Incindara had taken enough time out from fighting to do anything. It was
|
|||
|
indeed a great day. He and his colleagues than set out and talked with the
|
|||
|
Net for the first time. Unfortunately, they came in right in the middle of
|
|||
|
the debates over Big Mac's. Upon seeing this, Clyd turned to his colleague
|
|||
|
and said: "No, it's all got to go". Following this they began to
|
|||
|
systematically torch almost every place in the Net. A long war followed in
|
|||
|
which the Incindarans lost badly. The Net, being a bit ticked off, decided
|
|||
|
on a punishment that suited the crime. They took away all the 'n' keys on
|
|||
|
every terminal in Incindara. Unfortunately, they forgot to make Incindara a
|
|||
|
read-only location, allowing the Incindarans to verbally flame. The few
|
|||
|
Incindarans who survived can still be found flaming at will about
|
|||
|
everything they read (which is everything as there are no 'n' keys). The
|
|||
|
once proud and feared Incindarans have been reduced to ranting about Burger
|
|||
|
King, drunk drivers, sterilizing non-supporters of ERA, and so on. "The
|
|||
|
Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net" warns all Net travellers that when such
|
|||
|
types are encountered, the best course of action is to abort the debate, as
|
|||
|
it is probably pointless anyway.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End Of Part 9
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What is the explanation of Life, the Net, and Everything? How did Bruce do?
|
|||
|
Did Bruce get his beer. Is Brooke Shields an Alien? To find out ... tune in
|
|||
|
next time ... same Net-time ... same Net-channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net
|
|||
|
Episode 10
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Xaphod, Rod, Gillian, and Marvin are still on their way to find out more
|
|||
|
about Life, the Net, and Everything. From off in the distance they hear a
|
|||
|
hollow roar punctuated by gunfire. Before they have a chance to grasp the
|
|||
|
situation, a huge battle tank screeches to a halt in front of them. It is a
|
|||
|
fearsome device with great nasty teeth painted on it. The cannon looks as
|
|||
|
if it could punch a hole through a small planet. A hatch opens and a
|
|||
|
rightly uniformed man steps out, crushing a passing cat under his boot.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Cat: (splat)
|
|||
|
Rod: Wh . . . who are you?
|
|||
|
Roarin' George: I'm General Roarin' George Pahton. I heard there was some
|
|||
|
Singularans around here. Thought I'd do some American style
|
|||
|
joggering.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Oh yeah, they went that a way.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Why does everyone pick on the Singularans? They only seek
|
|||
|
meaningful personal relationships with people they find special.
|
|||
|
Roarin' George: Right, that's it, we're gonna have some order around here.
|
|||
|
No more of these damn cliches. From here on out, the following
|
|||
|
rules will apply: Anyone who uses the phrases 'special', 'personal
|
|||
|
relationship', or 'meaningful relationship' WILL be fined twenty
|
|||
|
dollars for the first offense. Subsequent offenders will have their
|
|||
|
genitalia removed with a sharp rock. Anyone who corrects the
|
|||
|
spelling of another, WILL be fined 100 dollars. I won't stand for
|
|||
|
any namby-pamby intellectuals checking spelling when there's so
|
|||
|
much to do. Anyone caught agreeing with anything an oppositely
|
|||
|
gendered personnel says in an obvious attempt to make points, WILL
|
|||
|
have both kneecaps shattered with a ball-pean hammer. Likewise,
|
|||
|
anyone saying things which are right out of soap operas with the
|
|||
|
intentions mentioned above WILL also have his (or her) kneecaps
|
|||
|
shattered with a ball-pean hammer. Remember, this is the NET, it's
|
|||
|
tough out there. Keep your emotions to yourself, do you want a
|
|||
|
bunch of commies to read that gooey crap? Why they'll think we're
|
|||
|
wimps, then they'll invade. They've started infiltrating already -
|
|||
|
ever been to one of the dating service places? They're all commies,
|
|||
|
draining away our precious bodily fluids. Now, get back to work!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(With that, he climbs back into the tank and drives off, casually blowing a
|
|||
|
4 foot hole in a nearby wall. Just then, the 12" CRT on Xaphod's shoulder
|
|||
|
springs to life. On it is a man in a white suit with a Bible in one hand
|
|||
|
and a microphone in the other. He speaks: "Friends. Why are we here today?
|
|||
|
We are here to hear the words - (Amen) - to hear the holy words from the
|
|||
|
Holy Box - (Amen). Oh blessed be the Holy Box, and it's disciples: Prophet
|
|||
|
Ronko, Prophet K-Dul, and the Prophet Popeel - (Amen Amen Amen). Yes, they
|
|||
|
lead is to immaculate spending. We here at the Church of the Divine Vision
|
|||
|
believe in Johnny and Merv and Mike. TV is the reflection of life, and life
|
|||
|
is a reflection of reality, therefore TV IS REALITY. Yes, Mrs. Olson may
|
|||
|
be a Nazi, but if you buy Foljers, you can bake just like her. And Robert
|
|||
|
Yung may have multiple personalities and a penchant for farm animals, but
|
|||
|
if you drink his coffee, you can remain calm in the midst of a nuclear
|
|||
|
explosion ... ")
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: Shut that OFF.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Bloody religious fanatics.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: What an odd religion, worshiping a TV, seems hard to
|
|||
|
believe.
|
|||
|
Martin: Not really, just another awful attempt to deal with this miserable
|
|||
|
Net. It's all a cop out. You can't understand something so you
|
|||
|
pretend that there is something else in control. It's all rubbish.
|
|||
|
Gillian: Quiet. Of course there's a supreme being.
|
|||
|
Martin: If you say so, but if God didn't already exist, he would have to be
|
|||
|
invented.
|
|||
|
Rod: It's hopeless talking to him.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["The Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net" indicates that the members of the
|
|||
|
Church of the Divine Vision are basically agnostics. They prefer to believe
|
|||
|
what they see on the tube to what some half starved people wrote about over
|
|||
|
2000 years ago. They can't meet God, but if the TV gives them trouble, they
|
|||
|
can always replace it. Their belief led to the writing of the Video
|
|||
|
Testament, which is the gospel for all believers in the Holy Box. Although
|
|||
|
it seems unlikely, the Church of the Divine Vision was supposed to have
|
|||
|
formed some amazing concepts as to how the Net exists.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gillian: Let's go.
|
|||
|
Martin: Do we have to?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(They all ignore Martin and press on. Two days later they arrive at their
|
|||
|
destination. In front of them is a rather bug-eyed looking lizard.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Hey man, are you the one with the dope on Life, the Net, and
|
|||
|
Everything.
|
|||
|
Lizard: Yes, I am Teddy the Wonder Lizard. I know all there is to know
|
|||
|
about Life, the Net, and Everything.
|
|||
|
Rod: Well, tell us!
|
|||
|
Gillian: Please do!
|
|||
|
Teddy: You won't like it.
|
|||
|
Martin: (sarcastically) Now that's a real surprise.
|
|||
|
Teddy: Are you sure you want to know?
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Yes, what is it, got to more than forty-bloody-two.
|
|||
|
Teddy: Yes, that was the answer we told the Net. We figured that the real
|
|||
|
answer was so awful, they'd rather get something vague and argue
|
|||
|
about it forever.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Well, out with it.
|
|||
|
Teddy: It's all here, in the Video Testament!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(He hands Xaphod an old looking book, pops about a dozen valiums, and then
|
|||
|
switches on a nearby TV set. He is watching 'Real People'.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Well, that should finish him off.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: The drugs?
|
|||
|
Rod: No, 'Real People', lowers the IQ so much that the brain just packs it
|
|||
|
in and you die.
|
|||
|
Gillian: Find the answer already!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Okay, now lets see . . .
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End Of Part 10
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What is the answer to Life, the Net, and Everything? Why are we here? Are
|
|||
|
we here? And why is it that vampires never attack Jewish neighborhoods? For
|
|||
|
the answers to some of these questions ... tune in next time ... same
|
|||
|
Net-time ... same Net-channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net
|
|||
|
Episode 11 - Life, The Net, and Everything Part 1
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Xaphod, Rod, Gillian, and Arnold Lint have just received the 'Video
|
|||
|
Testament' - a scripture said to contain the answer to Life, the Net, and
|
|||
|
Everything.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: Well, go on, read it.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Do you think we should?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Yah, why not.
|
|||
|
Martin: I can think of a few reasons.
|
|||
|
Gillian: Quiet, we're going to find out what it all means. Aren't you the
|
|||
|
least bit excited?
|
|||
|
Martin: (droning sarcastically) Oh yes, I can hardly contain myself.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Never mind him, lets read this amazingly amazing book.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(They open the book and it speaks to them.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Book: Hark, who goest there.
|
|||
|
Rod: Uh, who are you?
|
|||
|
Book: I ... am the Video Testament. The compendium of all knowledge and
|
|||
|
smart stuff from the mythical age of Kubla Konthemasus. You may call
|
|||
|
me ... Ralph.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["The Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net" has this to say about the mythical
|
|||
|
ruler Kubla Konthemasus: He was reported to be from Austria or Germany. He
|
|||
|
was supposed to be short and have a funny little mustache. He was supposed
|
|||
|
to have died in 1945 and then be reborn in Argentina. His followers looked
|
|||
|
upon him as a sort of Messiah, who would lead them to the land of Silk and
|
|||
|
Money. All of this is, of course, purely hypothetical; as were Konthemasus'
|
|||
|
friends Herman (Hermie) McGoering, and Crazy Joe Stalinson.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Ralph?
|
|||
|
Ralph: Well, what do you expect?
|
|||
|
Rod: Well, not Ralph.
|
|||
|
Gillian:Can you tell us ...
|
|||
|
Ralph: The answer to Life, the Net, and Everything.
|
|||
|
Gillian: ... why yes.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: That's amazing.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: To you it would be.
|
|||
|
Rod: Tell us what it all means.
|
|||
|
Ralph: You won't like it.
|
|||
|
Martin: That's no surprise.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Just ignore him.
|
|||
|
Ralph: Well, it all began sometime in the 1950's. A group of very wealthy
|
|||
|
and powerful men assembled in Argentina under the guidance of a man
|
|||
|
calling himself Kubla Konthemasus. This group of magnates were from
|
|||
|
various political affiliations - Nazis, Communists, Capitalists,
|
|||
|
and Urologists. They all liked money and wanted to rule the world.
|
|||
|
They also realized that TV was going to be the tool that would give
|
|||
|
them the leverage they needed.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: I don't like the way this is starting to sound.
|
|||
|
Rod: Me neither.
|
|||
|
Ralph: I warned you.
|
|||
|
Martin: You should have listened to him.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Go on.
|
|||
|
Ralph: Well, they began to infiltrate the TV industry. Soon they not only
|
|||
|
owned huge percentages of each network, but had also emplaced their
|
|||
|
own people into many of the creative positions at each network.
|
|||
|
Then they began to manipulate things. They decided to cast the
|
|||
|
world in an image that they could easily control. So each little
|
|||
|
kid on TV was either predictably (and sickeningly) nice and
|
|||
|
helpful, or predictably always getting into trouble. Women were
|
|||
|
either predictably aggressive or predictably obtuse. You see, they
|
|||
|
set up patterns of behavior that they could count on. Once they
|
|||
|
could predict and control how the public would react to something,
|
|||
|
they could do whatever they wanted. Whenever they wanted to do
|
|||
|
something really tricky (like when they took over the Mid-East oil
|
|||
|
fields in the late 70's and early 80's) they made sure to get the
|
|||
|
country thinking their way before hand with a massive TV
|
|||
|
bombardment. If it was a topic that they knew nobody would go for
|
|||
|
no matter how they publicized it, they flooded the airways with
|
|||
|
those sickening human emotion type TV-movies. Things like "Plight
|
|||
|
of the Forgotten Children" or "Why is Daddy always angry?". The
|
|||
|
kind of stuff that makes you want to blow lunch.
|
|||
|
Rod: Wow, that's amazing.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Yah.
|
|||
|
Ralph: Their greatest triumph was getting a president elected. Their plan
|
|||
|
was simple. They made sure that the east coast was for their
|
|||
|
candidate, leaving the west coast alone. Then, on election day, the
|
|||
|
TV 'predictions' claimed their candidate to be a sure winner. Due
|
|||
|
to the time difference, all the people on the west coast thought
|
|||
|
the election was over anyway and didn't even bother to vote.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Wow, imagine getting a president elected by manipulating the media.
|
|||
|
Ralph: And guess what ... he was an actor!
|
|||
|
Gillian: What a coincidence.
|
|||
|
Rod: Yah, imagine that.
|
|||
|
Martin: Doesn't surprise me ... I expect such things from humans.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: But what does all this have to do with the Net?
|
|||
|
Gillian: Yah, controlling TV is great but most people in the Net are far
|
|||
|
too dedicated to their work to partake of anything as tacky as TV.
|
|||
|
We're all thoroughly dedicated professionals.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(If it were possible for an android to suppress a burst of uncontrollable
|
|||
|
laughter, that is what Martin could now be described as doing.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: Yah what about the Net!?
|
|||
|
Ralph: Well ...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End Of Part 11
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What are the interests of this Neo-Nazi-Communist-Capitalist organization
|
|||
|
in the Net? The answer will surprise you - unless you're a great stupid
|
|||
|
twit. To find out more ... tune in next time ... same Net-time ... same
|
|||
|
Net-channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net
|
|||
|
Episode 12 - Life, The Net, and Everything Part 2
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Ralph, the 'Video Testament' is just about to explain Life, the Net, and
|
|||
|
Everything to the crew of the Infinity)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gillian: Tell us, what does all this neo-Nazi stuff have to do with the
|
|||
|
Net.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: I don't think I want to know.
|
|||
|
Martin: Me neither.
|
|||
|
Rod: Quiet.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Go on . . .
|
|||
|
Ralph: Anyway, Kubla Konthemasus' followers were doing great. Anything
|
|||
|
they showed on TV was immediately accepted as truth. Disco became an
|
|||
|
overnight sensation, and then was phased out when the profit wasn't
|
|||
|
great enough. It was soon realized that there was a significant
|
|||
|
group of people in computer related fields who possessed
|
|||
|
considerable wealth. It was also realized that these people were not
|
|||
|
being taken in by the video blitz.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Good for us!
|
|||
|
Martin: Not really, I'm afraid.
|
|||
|
Ralph: Very perceptive, robot. Konthemasus' research showed that hackers do
|
|||
|
not believe what they see or hear, unless it comes across a computer
|
|||
|
terminal. It was fast becoming apparent that computers would be
|
|||
|
vital to the power of the new regime, so it was vital that anyone
|
|||
|
who worked with computers could be controlled.
|
|||
|
Gillian: Yes, but what does that have to do with the Net? The Net is an
|
|||
|
exchange of ideas and ideals between computer professionals!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Martin starts coughing sarcastically)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Ralph: Kubla Konthemasus, in a brilliant stroke, figured out a way to not
|
|||
|
only carry out an experiment in behavioral psychology on the
|
|||
|
computing professionals, but also to put into action all his
|
|||
|
findings. He created the Net. You see, there are a few key links in
|
|||
|
the Net controlled by his men. At first they tried a variety of
|
|||
|
topics and tested reactions. Then they started trying to bend the
|
|||
|
opinion of Net-landers. First by trying to get everyone to like
|
|||
|
current trends in music, then by trying to create the impression
|
|||
|
that North Dakota does not exist. Anyone who rejected the ideas they
|
|||
|
tried to push, and was fool enough to say so, was put onto a list.
|
|||
|
This list will be used to purge the society of all those who would
|
|||
|
corrupt the purity of essence of Konthemasus' new order of
|
|||
|
conformity and religious fulfillment.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Wow, that's unbelievable.
|
|||
|
Rod: Yah, I don't think I do believe it.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Me neither ... An actor in the white house? ...
|
|||
|
No North Dakota? ... Couldn't happen!
|
|||
|
Gillian:I don't know, maybe ...
|
|||
|
Ralph: Well, that's about it. I've got to go, lots to do.
|
|||
|
Rod: What could a book have to do?
|
|||
|
Ralph: About an ounce of cocaine!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(With that, Ralph vanishes into thin air. The crew of the Infinity is left
|
|||
|
standing, dumb founded by what they have heard. They start to leave and
|
|||
|
come to the door. There is a moment of hesitation.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gillian: If anyone of you open the door for me, I'll put the boot in.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: What's with her.
|
|||
|
Rod: She's an ERA.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: A what?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: ERA - An Extra Rights Activist.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[According to "The Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net", the Extra Rights
|
|||
|
Activists group was started by a group of women who were quite upset by
|
|||
|
their station in life. They didn't just want equality, they wanted
|
|||
|
superiority. They figured they could get all the privileges of equality
|
|||
|
with men, and yet retain all the conveniences regarded them as women. They
|
|||
|
wanted equal pay for less work, lower taxes for women, shorter work hours.
|
|||
|
After all, the fairer sex shouldn't have to work so hard, but they do
|
|||
|
deserve the same pay. They didn't want to join the army though. They felt
|
|||
|
that in some cases, where it was convenient, men could still have it all.
|
|||
|
The one thing you could do to make an ERA mad was to hold the door for her.
|
|||
|
They took it as a sign of harassment ... no one knows why. Other acts of
|
|||
|
courtesy were also mistaken as antagonizing the ERA movement. Helping an
|
|||
|
ERA with her coat was the same as telling her she smelled like bathroom at
|
|||
|
the National Food Poisoners Convention. Helping an ERA with her chair in a
|
|||
|
restaurant was tantamount to clubbing her about the head with a moldy
|
|||
|
Albatros. In response to this threat to male dominated society, the
|
|||
|
all-male anti-ERA faction MCP (Male Counter-ERA Pact) circulated a pamphlet
|
|||
|
explaining what a man could do if the woman he was with gave any
|
|||
|
indications of trying to open the door before he could open it for her. It
|
|||
|
read as follows:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
** How not to hold the door for an ERA **
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If the woman you are with starts to race for the door so she can open it
|
|||
|
for herself, and this upsets you, here are a few things you can do to make
|
|||
|
sure it won't happen again.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
* Just as she gets up to speed, trip her from behind.
|
|||
|
* When she has a large enough lead, and has the door open, stop to
|
|||
|
tie your shoe.
|
|||
|
* If there is a convenient doorway (like a men's room) nearby, wait
|
|||
|
until she isn't looking and duck in as she opens the door.
|
|||
|
* If she is holding the door, take hold of it as you enter the
|
|||
|
doorway and close it behind. Locking it is a sure-fire clue to her
|
|||
|
that you are displeased.
|
|||
|
* If there is a long corridor before the offending door, and she
|
|||
|
starts to speed up, keep pace with her. When you both hit a dead
|
|||
|
run, body check her into the wall. A well timed 'Ooops' will make
|
|||
|
it all look innocent. This is dangerous if you are with a lady
|
|||
|
roller derby player.
|
|||
|
* If you really don't care about offending her, give her a quick
|
|||
|
feel just as she turns away from you to head for the door. Of
|
|||
|
course, she may never turn her back on you again.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Remember, there is nothing wrong with being courteous. But if she won't
|
|||
|
take it gracefully, make it bloody inconvenient for her to keep doing so.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The ERA movement, surprisingly, took no action against the MCP. Rumor has
|
|||
|
it that they settled the debate in some non-violent manner. History notes
|
|||
|
that there followed a sudden increase in the sale of plastic drop clothes
|
|||
|
and corn oil followed by a sudden increase in births about 9 months later.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End Of Part 12
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Will Arnold Lint hold the door for Gillian? Or will he become a soprano? To
|
|||
|
find out ... tune in next time ... same Net-time ... same Net-channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net
|
|||
|
Episode 13
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(When last we left Xaphod and company, Gillian was preparing to put the
|
|||
|
boot into the first one who held the door for her - this being an act of
|
|||
|
harassment to the Extra Rights Activists movement.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Martin: Look, I'll solve the problem.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(With that, Martin blasts the door away with his built in Ultra-Zap gun.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gillian: You shouldn't have done that Martin, blasting the door away is the
|
|||
|
same as holding it. You are threatening my rights.
|
|||
|
Rod: Forget it.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Yah, besides, putting the boot into old Martin wouldn't accomplish
|
|||
|
anything.
|
|||
|
Martin: Well, at least I there will be no Martin Jr.'s who have to endure
|
|||
|
this miserable life.
|
|||
|
Others: Ugh.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Well, what do we do now?
|
|||
|
Gillian: I guess we'll head back to the Infinity.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Yah, I guess so, this place is getting dull.
|
|||
|
Martin: GETTING dull!?
|
|||
|
Rod: Shut up!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Xaphod and the others make their way back to the Infinity. They are just
|
|||
|
about to take off when two strange people appear on the Infinity's bridge.
|
|||
|
One of them is dressed in a business suit and is carrying a brief case with
|
|||
|
a "Jesus Saves, But Only If You Make A Deposit!" sticker on it. The other
|
|||
|
is dressed up as a Nazi SS Captain.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: Who are you two?
|
|||
|
Business Man: We represent the Church of the Holy Profit and Divine
|
|||
|
Purity. We believe in the Word of Adolf.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Do you cats have names.
|
|||
|
Nazi: Names!? I'll ask the questions here.
|
|||
|
Rod: Could you tell us about this 'Word of Adolf'.
|
|||
|
Business Man: Our faith is based on the works of Hitler. When he
|
|||
|
rose again in Argentina, it was the sign of our upcoming dominance.
|
|||
|
Gillian: But, how can you worship such a man?
|
|||
|
Nazi: Quiet, the Fuhrer was a great leader.
|
|||
|
Business Man: Actually, we realized that his goals were not that much
|
|||
|
different than those of our previous affiliation - the Pay The Lord
|
|||
|
Club. He believes that our religion is best, he believes that all
|
|||
|
others will rot in Hell. But what makes him really different is
|
|||
|
that he did what all other God-fearing evangelists only dream of
|
|||
|
doing - KILLING THE NON-BELIEVERS!!!
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: They're crazy!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["The Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net" points out that there was in fact
|
|||
|
a plot conceived in the late 1970's by Jerry Foulmouth and Oral
|
|||
|
Rectal to set up mass extermination camps under the guise of
|
|||
|
'Religious Interface Centers'. Fortunately, The plan was never
|
|||
|
carried out as it would have interfered with the football season.
|
|||
|
Project 'Clean Slate', as it was known, was rescheduled for 1984. It
|
|||
|
was felt that the coincidence with the book of the same title would
|
|||
|
lull the masses into thinking that all the strange happenings were
|
|||
|
just the result of a few people just took a book a bit too seriously.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Xaphod: They may be crazy, but they're right. Have you ever heard those
|
|||
|
guys on TV on Sunday morning. I don't half expect them to put all
|
|||
|
the blacks and Jews up against the wall and shoot 'em.
|
|||
|
Nazi: Ah what a wonderful thought.
|
|||
|
Business Man: We would like you to join our congregation. Our scanners
|
|||
|
indicate that you could be useful additions to our 'Flock of
|
|||
|
Power'. We need people to go out into the Net and spread our
|
|||
|
beliefs. It is best when they know the Bible and can cloud our
|
|||
|
intents with a lot of biblical quotes. You'll have to brush up a
|
|||
|
bit on that stuff. Remember, you'd be better off joining us now,
|
|||
|
than serving us later. First, we will have a short prayer to our
|
|||
|
beloved Adolf ... everybody now ...
|
|||
|
Gillian: What will we do?
|
|||
|
Nazi: It's simple - pray ... or DIE.
|
|||
|
Business Man: In light of that, we would accept a LARGE donation
|
|||
|
from you. How much do you feel your lives are worth.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(With that, the Nazi pulls out a WWII vintage MP40 sub-machine gun.
|
|||
|
Martin, shakes off his usual bustling disinterest and zaps the Nazi in the
|
|||
|
groin with 1000 volts. The Business man takes off and is also quickly laid
|
|||
|
to rest by Martin's electro-gun.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Nice shooting Martin!
|
|||
|
Rod: Yah, really 'trific.
|
|||
|
Martin: I have a cousin who's Jewish - and a sister who's black.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Yah ... right.
|
|||
|
Gillian: Hard to believe a religion based on taking in money and bigotry.
|
|||
|
Must be a billion to one shot.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Well, where shall we go now?
|
|||
|
Rod: How 'bout Micro-Ways!?
|
|||
|
Gillian: Yah!
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: What's Micro-Ways?
|
|||
|
Martin: It's the restaurant at the end of the Net - you won't like it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End Of Part 13
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What will be found at Micro-Ways? Will they have BigMacs and Whoppers? How
|
|||
|
about Egg McMuffins? To find out the menu ... tune in to the upcoming
|
|||
|
RatEotN (Restaurant at the End of the Net). Seen on many of these Net
|
|||
|
stations in a few weeks.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Restaurant at the End of the Net
|
|||
|
Episode 1
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Xaphod, Rod, Gillian, Martin, and Arnold Lint are on their way to
|
|||
|
MicroWays: The Restaurant at the End of the Net.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: What's this MircoWays place like?
|
|||
|
Martin: It's awful.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Shut up, it's a wild place. What they did was place a restaurant at
|
|||
|
the exact time in the continuum at which the Net ends. It's all
|
|||
|
very complicated, but you can dine while watching all the nodes and
|
|||
|
news groups you've come to know and despise vaporize in a great
|
|||
|
apocalyptic blaze.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["The Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net" points out that the Net did actually
|
|||
|
cease due to over population. The volume of stupid and useless comments
|
|||
|
(and their associated authors) got so compressed that all activity stopped
|
|||
|
due to the immense amounts of time required to sort through this black hole
|
|||
|
of mental ineptitude. A few die hards kept on, however, in the hopes that
|
|||
|
the loyal followers would again return. Legend has it that they followed
|
|||
|
the writings of some mystical female netlander from the Valley (fershure!).
|
|||
|
This has been widely disclaimed as gnarly to the max and highly unlikely.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: Yah, it's lovely!
|
|||
|
Gillian: Sounds fun.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: You mean the Net isn't forever?
|
|||
|
Marvin: Fortunately not.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Gee, it seems kind of pointless to go to so much trouble on
|
|||
|
the Net, knowing that it all is going up in the end anyway.
|
|||
|
Marvin: Same with everything else in this seemingly endless lament we call
|
|||
|
life ... why bother.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Quiet.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(A buzzer sounds and the Infinity's sensors show a squadron of ships
|
|||
|
approaching. It's the Flamers!!)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: Oh heck, it's the bloody Flamers again. Don't those mindless oafs ever
|
|||
|
learn!?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Guess not.
|
|||
|
Flamer Commander: Right, I thought we were rid of you lot. Push off or
|
|||
|
else.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(The Flamer commander looks a lot like Phil Donahue.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gillian: Ah, go intercourse a leprous elk!
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Don't Flamers ever stop? I though they were under control a
|
|||
|
while ago.
|
|||
|
Rod: They were, but they've started another uprising.
|
|||
|
Flamer Commander: Right, assigned topics for discussion WILL be adhered to.
|
|||
|
Anything said which sounds like it might be important WILL be
|
|||
|
ignored. Full frontal lobotomies WILL be required.
|
|||
|
Martin: I don't think he's too well.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: That's an understatement.
|
|||
|
Rod: We better get out of here before they start up.
|
|||
|
Flamer Commander: First, let's discuss the social and political effects of
|
|||
|
shirtsleeves. Should they be rolled up? Left down? Or made a
|
|||
|
felony? Suppose if every American rolled up his shirt sleeves and
|
|||
|
every Commie didn't - where would we be then? If you are interested
|
|||
|
in having an incestuous relationship with your illegitimately
|
|||
|
pregnant sister, what impact will the length of your shirtsleeves
|
|||
|
have on her opinion of you? Is the shirtsleeve a phallic symbol?
|
|||
|
How many engineers does it take to sew a shirtsleeve?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: STOP! STOP! STOP! What do you want from us?
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Wait, I was just getting interested.
|
|||
|
Rod: We better get ourselves out of here quick.
|
|||
|
Flamer Commander: Next, what about people who type in all lower case - does
|
|||
|
this make them homosexuals or ocelots?
|
|||
|
Gillian: Aaaarrrrgggghhh!!!!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End Of Part 1
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Will the crew of the Infinity once again escape the clutches of the
|
|||
|
Flamers? Or will they start to question the sexual significance of candle
|
|||
|
pin bowling? To find out ... tune in next time ... same Net-time ... same
|
|||
|
Net-channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Restaurant at the End of the Net
|
|||
|
Episode 2
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Arnold Lint and the crew of the Infinity are once again faced by the
|
|||
|
dreaded Flamers. The Flamers are bombarding our heroes with an infinitely
|
|||
|
pointless diatribe on the legal points of rolling up ones shirtsleeves.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gillian: What can we do to stop this?
|
|||
|
Martin: Why bother, it's all hopeless anyway.
|
|||
|
Rod: Look you, I've had just about enough of your lip.
|
|||
|
Martin: I don't have lips, I'm afraid. My assembler must have been in a bad
|
|||
|
mood and forgot them ... ah well (sigh).
|
|||
|
Gillian: Well, we better do something!!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: We've tried everything else, why don't we try to out-stupid them?
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Don't you need at least a Master's in Computer
|
|||
|
Science to attempt that?
|
|||
|
Rod: Yah, but let's try anyway!!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Right, what's the most idiotic topic we can throw at them?
|
|||
|
Gillian: Spelling mistakes in Net submissions?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: No.
|
|||
|
Rod: Profanity on the Net?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: No. I'm afraid this won't work.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: What will we do?
|
|||
|
Flamer: Now, let's turn our attention to the psycho-sexual ramifications of
|
|||
|
user's having to hit the 'n' key repetitively when reading Netnews.
|
|||
|
Does this form a non-compliant attitude that is reflected in the
|
|||
|
individuals sex life? If Netnews becomes too dull, will we all go
|
|||
|
sterile from the 'n-key' complex?
|
|||
|
Gillian: I can't take it.
|
|||
|
Rod: There's one last hope. If we pray to the goddess of the Net, we may be
|
|||
|
saved.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: The what?
|
|||
|
Martin: You really don't want to hear this.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Quiet. The goddess of the Net - Laedeyarh-wehn-kenobi. Legend has
|
|||
|
it she is from the Valley and has amazing powers over some denizens
|
|||
|
of the Net.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: What kind of power?
|
|||
|
Xaphod: I don't know, but her followers even chipped in for air fare so she
|
|||
|
could sing "Let's get physical" at the Superbowl half-time.
|
|||
|
Rod: (Seeing Arnold Lint's look of disgust) Yah, a pretty sick bunch.
|
|||
|
Gillian: Well, it's worth a shot.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Okay, when I signal you, chant 'fershure' three times.
|
|||
|
Others: Right.
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Oh Laedeyarh-wehn-kenobi, protect us from these grody-to-the-max
|
|||
|
flamers.
|
|||
|
Others: Fershure! Fershure! Fershure!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: Oh Laedeyarh-wehn-kenobi, vanquish these flamers with a totally
|
|||
|
awesome laser blast.
|
|||
|
Others: Fershure! Fershure! Fershure!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(From out of nowhere a high pitched, whining voice is heard to say "Oh wow,
|
|||
|
flamers. Like, gag me with a spoon." The flamers ships then implode into
|
|||
|
nothingness. The voice then says "Far out! Like, may the force be, like,
|
|||
|
with you, you know." Arnold Lint and the Infinity crew are left standing on
|
|||
|
the bridge looking into the newly empty space before them.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: That was amazing!
|
|||
|
Xaphod: That was amazingly amazing.
|
|||
|
Martin: Wasn't all that great.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: That has to be the most impressive display of power in
|
|||
|
the Net!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["The Hitch Hikers Guide To The Net" points out that the most impressive
|
|||
|
display of power in the Net was the result of the actual cooperation of
|
|||
|
subscribers of net.singles, net.flame, AND net.religion. According to the
|
|||
|
story, this unholy trinity was capable of twisting even the most simple of
|
|||
|
statements into states of uncomprehensibly circuitous illogic. The group
|
|||
|
went their separate ways when the net.religion group called the net.singles
|
|||
|
group immoral sexual deviants and the net.flame group blaspheming agnostics
|
|||
|
who would all burn in hell. The net.flames group fried the net.religion
|
|||
|
group, but agreed that the net.singles group were real sick. The
|
|||
|
net.singles group had an orgy.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rod: Well, lets get going to Microways.
|
|||
|
Arnold Lint: Yah, I'm getting hungry.
|
|||
|
Gillian: I hope the food is good.
|
|||
|
Martin: I'm sure it will be awful. We'll all get food poisoning and die in
|
|||
|
convulsive fits, spitting up bits of intestine and semi-digested
|
|||
|
fruit cup.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End Of Part 2
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What will be on the menu at Microways? Is the roast beef purple? To find
|
|||
|
out ... tune in next time ... same Net-time ... same Net-channel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
That's All Folks
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