859 lines
40 KiB
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859 lines
40 KiB
Plaintext
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Propaganda Unlimited
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March 28, 1994 Volume One, Issue Four
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"More Fun Than You Can Have Firebombing The Academy Awards!"
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STAFF
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-------
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Midget Caesar .............. Best Actor, Head Writer
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Constantine .............. Best Director, Head Editor
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Oregano .............. Best Performance in a Film Using the
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Word "Rutabaga", Evanston Columnist.
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Newt .............. Best Reason to Have Madly Romantic Dreams,
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Staff Writer.
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Nyarlathotep .............. Best Person in Indiana, Period. Indiana
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Correspondent.
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Aquarius .............. Best Aeon, Staff Writer.
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Nex .............. Technical Award, Distribution Manager and
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Staff Writer
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Operatech .............. Special Effects, Distribution Staff
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and...
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Two Fish .............. The Arbiter of All That is Cool.
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CONTENTS
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----------
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1. Introduction to Issue #4
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by Midget Caesar
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2. Fear and Loathing in Cyberspace, Part Four
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by Constantine
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3. Bob
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by Aquarius
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4. Lucid Death, Part Two
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by Nex
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5. Meat More Midgets!
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by Midget Caesar
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6. Jury Duty Can Be FUN!
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by Oregano
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7. Dystropia, Part Something
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by Midget Caesar
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==================================================================
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==================================================================
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Introduction to Propaganda #4
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by Midget Caesar
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Welcome to wherever you are, and if you ever figure out exactly where
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that is, please let us know, for we haven't a clue where *we* are. Yes,
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Propaganda Unlimited has returned. Yes, there is also panic in the streets
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and mass hysteria, but that's pure coincidence, regardless of WHAT Billy
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Graham says. <Our lawyers prevent us from commenting further>
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Hey, don't look now, but the Berlin Wall just came down.
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The walls are closing in, but we don't really have any idea what
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they're made of. We had to undergo that time-honored ritual of taking the
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SATs recently. SATs represent the pinnacle of education, yet with all
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those ovals to fill in, all the computer scores, somehow the individual is
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lost. We become just a number, and somehow the schools look upon this
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kindly. We guess that says something.
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Hope you enjoyed the Demo included with last issue.....send us some
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mail letting us know what other kinds of freebies you'd like to see. The
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Alternate version of issue #2 with "D000000M" will NOT be redistributed,
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sorry, and the same policy applies to the Small Dachshund Named Ralph
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being zipped up with certain versions of this issue <poor guy>. If you
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don't get one now, you may never.
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More appropriately, welcome to whoever or whatever you are. <Yes, we
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here at Propaganda Unlimited HQ are clueless on that subject too> Music is
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lots of fun, and predictably once again this year the official awards
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shows have proven to be meaningless. Thus, we must toss out our own
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awards:
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Best Album: "Star", Belly Best Song: "Feed The Tree", Belly
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Most Sadly Overplayed Song: "Feed The Tree", Belly
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Best New Group: Belly
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Best New Solo Artist: Bjork
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Best Album Called "Debut": "Debut", Bjork
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Most Profound Song Lyrics, No Matter What You Literate People Think:
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Nirvana, "In Utero"
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Coolest Thing To Yell In The Mosh Pits: "Don't Call Me Daughter!!!", Pearl
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Jam
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Best Group: Def Mangoe
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Best Live Performance: Def Mangoe at Comic Relief Stadium
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Grooviest Grin: Tori Amos
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Best Jim Morrison Wanna-Be Performance: Kurt Cobain
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Morons: Anyone who spells Kurt Cobain's name Kurdt.
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Utterly Naked and Incoherent: Us, really.
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Best Heavy Metal Performance, Solo Artist: Lawrence Welk
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Most Blatantly Cheerful Man In Music: Trent Reznor <he's just kidding,
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folks>
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Hey, Shut Up And Go Away Already: Whitney Houston
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If You Keep Encouraging Them, They Might Actually Reunite: The Village
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People
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Elvis In Disguise: Glenn Danzig
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Whatever Happened To.....: INXS?
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Goofiest Damn Video on MTV: Guns 'N Roses, "Estranged"
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Thank You For Shutting Up And Going Away, Now Stay There: Madonna
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"Why?" : Blind Melon Poses Nude on the cover of Rolling Stone
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Worse: The Bee Girl Poses Nude on the cover of Rolling Stone
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Best Haircut in Rock: Sinead o'Connor
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Most Obnoxious Born-Again Catholic in Rock: Sinead o'Connor
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Now We Get It! It Was The NAME That Made Us Failures: NKOTB
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Heh. Hehehehe. Hehehehehehe. BWAH-HA-HA-HA!: Vanilla Ice's "Rasta"
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Comeback!
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Now let's all take a moment to worship Pink Floyd.
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<whew> There.
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There's our opinions. <Midget Caesars' picks are not necessarily
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representative of the opinions of the rest of the Propaganda Unlimited
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Staff, But They SHOULD be> They can be used to Wipe Out the Grammys! Yay!
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<Note: The Above Opinions are Completely Unbiased, and Any Opinion to the
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Contrary is a Blasphemous Rumour spread by Lawrence Welk cuz we
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made him pay so much>
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======================================================================
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======================================================================
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Fear and Loathing in Cyberspace, Part Four:
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Cthulhu Loves the Children of the World
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by Constantine
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"Last thing I remembered," Jim Morrison was droning as the jet-black
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14.4 roared down the phone grid, "Was somebody telling me that if I stuck
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my tongue in an electric socket, the buzz was INCREDIBLE... This was
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after I faked my death and fled to South America with Elvis, of course."
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I nodded, hands gripping the dashboard as we lurched over a pocket of
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static and careened around a corner.
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"Next thing I know, They brought me in here."
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"They?"
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He nodded gravely. "They."
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"You mean... The Powers of Darkness? Satan? Baalezebub? Rush
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Limbaugh?"
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"I can't tell you. I can only tell you this: the day destroys the
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night, but the night divides the day."
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"That's profound."
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"Thank you."
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He dropped me off at the walkway to Evermore Keep. As I was getting out
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of the modem, he grabbed my shoulder.
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"Wait. I have one more thing to tell you. You must seek the Ascended
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Masters."
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"I'll do that."
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"Good. That reminds me-- any idea where I could score some really good
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acid?"
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"Get high on life, Jim."
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Swearing under his breath, he slammed the door and screeched off with a
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shower of sparks. Shrugging, I hummed a happy tune as I walked up the
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drive to...
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...Nothing. Evermore Keep was gone, a huge void hovering in cyberspace
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where the entire castle had been utterly eradicated. I sniffed the air,
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catching the smell of ozone and faint magnetic traces whirling around me.
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In the shallow, smoking crater where my garage once stood, a textfile laid
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on the ground. I jumped down and picked it up, my eyes narrowing as I
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read the scrawled, child-like handwriting.
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"D00D!! This was a WaRnInG! Next time, youll be in the Keep when we
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blow it up! No, wait, we blew it up already. We meen, next time youll be
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in the Keep when we blow something ELSE up! YeAh! Ha Ha Ha! Stay oFf da
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CaSe or DIE!! Yors truley, the Mastrs of Desaster, [PeNiS!]"
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I gasped as I read the signature, extended ANSI text flashing like a
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fire alarm. I thought that the Professional Elite Neuromancers in
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Syberspace had been destroyed years ago, when the first BLaH Expeditionary
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Task Force engaged them in battle and slew the Dark Nun... (Editor's
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Note: see the Hefty Herb Saga, in classic BLaH). But now, this force
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of utter evil, this diabolical organization, worse than SPECTRE, Fu
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Manchu, and AT&T combined, had once again reared its ugly head. I could
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sense the approach of a great battle, a globe-spanning epic of proportions
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so great that the bards would sing of it for centuries to come, so utterly
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earth-shaking that the world as we knew it would never, ever forget it. A
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battle that would change lives, that would tear souls apart and reforge
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them anew, a battle that could lead to the destruction of all life in the
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universe!
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"Well," I said, "Shit. Guess that blows my vacation."
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At the bottom of the note, a postscript had been attached. I read on.
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"Ps, D00D! We StOlE YeR CaR!! Ha hA Ha!"
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Now they were going to die.
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It was a long walk to 312, but I made it to my old hangout, the
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Intelligent Shade of Blue. The place had been remodeled a few (hundred)
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times over the years, but it was still the same old haunt I had come to
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know and love-- any bar that serves adrenochrome cocktails is my kind of
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place. As I approached the front door, my eyes flitted over to a sign in
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a nearby window, an advertisement from the Mystic Wonderful New-Age
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Healing Crystal Herbal Resource Bunnies n' Light Emporium (TM).
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"Live at the Emporium, for a limited time-- meet MARVIN THE STUPEFYING!
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This world-famous author, lecturer and psychic has been gifted with the
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amazing power of CHANNELING... For just $20 for a five-minute session,
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you can meet...
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-- NOROM, the 25,000 year-old Atlantean War God who gives helpful
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household advice!
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-- Jimmy Hoffa!
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-- Abraham Lincoln!
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-- The New Kids on the Block! (Currently doing an extended tour in
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Hell)
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-- and... The Ascended Masters of 42 Galaxies!
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Don't delay, as Marvin will only be with us for a limited time!"
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With a sigh of resignation, I checked my wallet and started walking
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towards the Emporium. Whatever the Ascended Masters wanted from me, they
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had better be able to say it in five minutes or less.
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TO BE CONTINUED...
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Watch for Fear and Loathing in Cyberspace Part Five:
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"James Earl Jones Has Sex with His Bathers!"
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======================================================================
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======================================================================
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"What Bob Did On A Miscellaneous Friday"
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by Aquarius
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As soon as Bob woke up, he knew someone was watching him.
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It was strange. After he wiped the yucky sleep-crust from his eyes,
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he glanced around his bedroom. Oh, it was only his dog, Chubbins.
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"It's about time you woke up." said Chubbins.
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"Aw, go eat your Alpo." Bob replied grumpily.
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Yes. It was true. Bob's dog could talk. But Bob didn't
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really care. In fact, it was quite a nuisance, especially when
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the dog learned how to use the phone. But that's another story.
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Bob walked into the bathroom and took a leak. He then
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walked back into his bedroom to change his clothes. However,
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when he opened his shirt drawer, he found a small note on top
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of his shot-to-death-smiley-face shirt.
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"Hmm. How odd." said Bob.
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The note read: "Stop talking to yourself."
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"Boy, now that is TOTALLY weird!" thought Bob as he realized
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there was more writing on the back of the note.
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The back of the note read: "That's much better."
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Whoa! Twilight Zone city! Bob heard a noise and turned around.
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It was Rod Serling! No, wait, it was only his dad.
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"Hurry it up, Bob, we have to leave for the waffle convention
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in 15 minutes!" Bob's dad reminded him.
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"Sorry dad. I'm going to have to miss this one. My friends
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and I are going to get together for some hopscotch."
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"Oh, OK. Well, your mother's at the paint store, and she
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won't be back until dinnertime. I should be back around then, too,
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so try to be back before dinner."
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"Will do, Dad. See ya."
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"Bye."
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Bob's dad walked out of the room, shutting the door behind him.
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Nailed to the back of the door was a scarecrow that looked eerily like
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Bob with a nametag with Bob's name on it: Bob.
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"Now how did that get there?", thought Bob.
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"Great, I'll have to get all the nails out with a hammer.
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I'll do it later."
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Bob went downstairs and poured himself some tangerine juice.
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As he was drinking it, he perused the Thursday paper. There was a
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sale at his favorite store, Salt Central! He'd have to stop by
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there sometime today. Bob tore the paper into tiny pieces and
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put it in the garbage. He then picked up the phone and called
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his best friend, Nimroy.
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"Hello?", said the part of the phone by Bob's ear in a woman-type
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voice.
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"Hi, could I speak to Nimroy?", asked Bob.
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"Sure, Nimroy's right here... Nimroy? Oh my god! Don't open
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that! No, no, not th- AAAAHHHH! Get some bandages! My face! My face!"
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"Hey Bob, what's up?", said Nimroy as he came on the line.
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"Are we going to get a game of hopscotch going?"
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"Probably not, I have to take my mom to the hospital."
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"Oh. Well, I'll see you later then. Bye."
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"Bye."
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Bob hung up the phone and decided to head over to Salt Central.
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He got into his mauve 1977 Plymouth Duster and cruised away at 73 mph.
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On the way there he flipped through the radio stations, but turned it
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off in disgust when he realized all the stations had the emergency
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tone on. Bob didn't feel like waiting to see if instructions really
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_did_ follow the tone. As he came into view of Salt Central, he
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realized the place looked pretty packed. But of course, what did he
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expect with a 3% off sale going on? He pulled into a handicapped space
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and walked into the store. A sale on salt licks! Bob decided he
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better pick up a couple. In fact, Bob also ended up buying a salt
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shaker and a cool blown-up picture of salt under a microscope.
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After Bob strangled the police officer giving him a ticket, he
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got into his car and pulled away. Bob realized that a ninja was sitting
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in his back seat.
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"Hwaa suige sukarama soy sauce gstorana kawasaki!", said
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the Ninja.
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"Could you please speak English?", Bob asked politely.
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"What is the 7th letter of the alphabet?"
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"G."
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"Oh."
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"No, it's G, not O!"
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"I see."
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"How can it be TWO letters? It can't be I _and_ C!"
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"What is this, Abbot and Costello? Just keep driving,
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fat boy."
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Bob was not fat. In fact, he was quite thin.
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"We're going to take you to see Hwung Chou.", said the Ninja.
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"Fine. I don't have anything else to do."
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Bob drove to Hwung Chou's house.
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A golf cart drove out to meet the car. An Atari 2600 seemed
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to be driving. Bob and the Ninja got into the cart, and it skyrocketed
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into outer space, all the way out to a bubble-dome on Neptune. Hwung
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Chou was inside the bubble.
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"We need you to solve a huge dilemma here, Bob." said Hwung
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Chou.
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"Fine, fine, whatever, just hurry up. My toenails need clipping."
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Bob told Chou.
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"We need you to tell us what the square root of three is."
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"1.73, but that is not exact, of course.", said Bob.
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"Hey! Yeah! Thanks Bob! I'll make sure we send you some
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gift certificates to your house. Maybe some nice Macaroni samples?"
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Bob got into the golf cart and drove home. The traffic
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wasn't too bad.
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He got back just in time for "The Young And The Restless".
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He left his car at Hwung Chou's house. Oh well. It was a piece
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of crap anyway.
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THE END
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(C) Aquarius, 1993
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======================================================================
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======================================================================
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<20><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>
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Lucid Death, Part Two
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by Nex
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<20><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>
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Some say that when you die in your dreams, you die in life.
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Well, I died in a dream, and as you can see, I'm still around to type this
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text file. However, although I did not physically die, it feels as
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though a certain aspect of my mind is either no longer there or it has
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been buried away for the time being. Anyway. What you are about to
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read, if you have the interest, is a narrative account of a lucid dream,
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or rather, a lucid nightmare, which I have recently had. For dramatic
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purposes, I may edit a couple things here and there...
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[Editor's Note: Narrative continued from last issue.]
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The bullet struck Lou in the left eye and he fell backwards into his
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|||
|
store. My aim needed a little work. I strolled over to his store and
|
|||
|
walked in. I looked down at Lou, who still had that look of pure terror
|
|||
|
washed over his face. I spit in it. Then I grabbed the shotgun and
|
|||
|
checked to see how much ammo was left. Shit, there was only one shot
|
|||
|
left. I grabbed a Twinkie and stuck it in my mouth as I started to search
|
|||
|
the place for money and more ammo for the shotgun. I found a couple of
|
|||
|
shells that looked like duds, but I took em anyway. The bastard only had
|
|||
|
3 bucks in his damn cash register!
|
|||
|
I grabbed a bag and started piling in various things; HoHo's, cans of
|
|||
|
Jolt!, Mountain Dew, cigarettes, bread, cheese, and various meats. When
|
|||
|
the bag was full, I made my way out of the store, careful as to not trip
|
|||
|
over Lou.
|
|||
|
As I walked out, I noticed that bums and beggars were already start-
|
|||
|
ing to gather around the store. Not because they wanted to see what the
|
|||
|
gunshots were about, but because they were starving. The fuck had been
|
|||
|
hording the damn food for himself. I casually walked back over to my
|
|||
|
sleek black Yamaha Shredder. I punched in my security code on the keypad,
|
|||
|
and the turbines came to life. I mounted it, and took off down the street
|
|||
|
at about 60. I sped over to the abandoned church near California and
|
|||
|
Fairfield. I got off and entered the church. The smell of urine and
|
|||
|
human (non-human?) waste would normally sicken me, but I had gotten used
|
|||
|
to it by now. I walked over to the altar.
|
|||
|
"Hey Charlie," I said, "I got you some more grub."
|
|||
|
"Tyler, you scum, where've you been?" Charlie asked.
|
|||
|
"Nowhere. I've been nowhere. Now take the food, I've gotta run." I
|
|||
|
left the church, primarily because I couldn't stand to see people living
|
|||
|
like that, especially old people like Charlie. I had just started the
|
|||
|
turbines on my bike again when I heard screams coming from the alley. I
|
|||
|
quickly checked for my gun and darted for the alley behind the church. I
|
|||
|
knew I was headed for trouble when I heard the metallic sounds. As I
|
|||
|
turned the corner, I saw about five PCs and two kids. One kid was already
|
|||
|
being mindwiped by one, and the other was held in the air by the arm by
|
|||
|
another. I took my gun out and took a step forward.
|
|||
|
"Hey, dumbfucks, come get me, not those kids!"
|
|||
|
Boy, that was a really stupid mistake. There were FIVE damnit! The
|
|||
|
other three not preoccupied turned around and I saw their red glowing eyes
|
|||
|
adjust to my figure. They were probably looking me up in their library of
|
|||
|
fugitives. I knew this for a fact when one said in a metallic voice,
|
|||
|
"Tyler, Eric P. Rebel. Wanted Dead or Alive, preferably Dead."
|
|||
|
The three started walking towards me, their metal limbs glinting in the
|
|||
|
light from the streetlamp. I charged them at full speed. This was
|
|||
|
obviously unexpected, as they stopped for a split second, adjusting to a
|
|||
|
new combat routine. But in that split second, I did a flip over the
|
|||
|
middle one and landed in front of the one holding the kid not being
|
|||
|
mindwiped. The thing looked like it was smiling as it nailed me in the
|
|||
|
sternum with its metal fist.
|
|||
|
Damn, that hurt.
|
|||
|
I flew back about 10 feet and hit the wall of the building behind me, my
|
|||
|
breath leaving me and the blood trickling from the back of my head. My
|
|||
|
sight grew hazy, but I had to fight it. I got up groggily, my gun
|
|||
|
miraculously still in my hand. Simultaneously applying pressure to the
|
|||
|
wound on the back of my head, I pulled the trigger of my gun which was now
|
|||
|
aimed at the head of the PC holding the kid. It didn't do anything except
|
|||
|
make a nice little spark, but it did make the PC focus its attention to me
|
|||
|
instead of the kid. It dropped the kid and headed towards me.
|
|||
|
I scaled the wall of the building I had slammed against, using various
|
|||
|
protrusions as footholds. I got up onto the roof just as I lost my
|
|||
|
balance from that damn wound on the back of my head.
|
|||
|
The things were coming up after me. I looked around frantically, and
|
|||
|
saw no escape...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(To Be Continued)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Yes, It's Just What You Were Hoping Not To See Staring You In The
|
|||
|
Face During Your Third Period Algebra Class:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Even MORE Midget Caesars! Whee!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<Let's Meet A Few Hundred Lunatics, Part Two>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Slurp Fishie Fish:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Wuz ripped off, bro, and he gonna jack the Dog whut dissed him!
|
|||
|
Slurp is hip to the sounds of the Pacific ghetto, and is currently facing
|
|||
|
a murder rap for trying to coerce we Caesars into eating some fish sticks.
|
|||
|
"You Don' Luv Me, You Jus' Luz Mah Fishie Style."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bob of Arc:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Joan's little-known older brother who served as a model for Joan, right
|
|||
|
down to the pantyhose and bra he wore into battle.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Mack the Spoon:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Knife's business partner, he was murdered by a roving gang of sporks.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Romeo:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Didn't realize what a wacky sense of humor Juliet had.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THEY:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The source of all rumors that originate with "Well, THEY say he was in he
|
|||
|
closet with her....."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Ronald Reagan's Coherency:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Has been in here for several decades, but ol' Ronnie is doing fine without
|
|||
|
it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Mr. Jones, Mr. Smith, Mr. Brown, Mr. Garcia, Mr. Johnson, and Mr. Wang:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Collectively fathered over half of the world's population.
|
|||
|
<boy, are they pooped>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Trent Reznor's Happy and Cheery Twin Brother:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Is still attempting a music career with songs like "Happiness In Everyday
|
|||
|
Life", "March of the Happy People", and albums like "Fixed", and "Just
|
|||
|
Plain Pretty Machine".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Entire Population of Idaho:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<okay, so maybe not, but would you really notice if they were gone?>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
All Of Your Mismatched, Lost Socks:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Would like us to tell you that they don't really miss you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Abraham Lincoln:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Faked his death! It was a conspiracy, and he avoided it!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Vinnie Washington:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Second Cousin, Twice Removed of Our Country. <George never liked him much>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Milli Vanilli:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Okay, so they have nothing to do with us, we just like to type that name
|
|||
|
and laugh about it for a while.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Shakespeare's Pet Gecko:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The TRUE author of Shakespeare's works.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The New Kids On The Block's Popularity:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Weren't we mean to steal it? They're still clueless where it went....
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Cheerful Reaper:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hey, death isn't all that bad! Brighten up, it'll be FUN!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<Look for MORE Profiles of the Not-Especially Wealthy or Sane soon!>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Jury Duty Can Be FUN!
|
|||
|
by Oregano
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Jury duty began a few weeks earlier with a letter. I was told
|
|||
|
that I was one of the lucky ones who gets the honor of serving my
|
|||
|
community, fulfilling the constitution of this great land. I had
|
|||
|
to send in a form and then a few weeks later I was sent a summons
|
|||
|
signed by an actual judge to appear at a certain courthouse at a
|
|||
|
certain date and time. And to make things easier they sent me
|
|||
|
instructions as to which buses to take to arrive at the appointed
|
|||
|
courthouse.
|
|||
|
For me this led to a phone call to a friend who is a big fan
|
|||
|
of jury duty, in fact she gets into it so much that she often
|
|||
|
becomes foreman (forewoman?) of her jury group and wears her
|
|||
|
responsibility on her sleeve. First question she asked me was
|
|||
|
where i would be serving. I told her 1340 S Michigan and she
|
|||
|
told me that that was the courthouse that everyone dreads, its
|
|||
|
in a bad neighborhood and there are more criminals outside the
|
|||
|
courthouse than inside. But she gave me a few tips and a few
|
|||
|
days later it was time to go.
|
|||
|
Being a master of Chicago's public transportation I decided
|
|||
|
to take the Chicago and Northwestern train to downtown Chicago.
|
|||
|
The train is always a nice way to travel with its big
|
|||
|
comfortable seats. In fact the only time the train is bad to
|
|||
|
take is when its snowing or raining outside where you get
|
|||
|
people's dripping feet from the second level. In Chicago the
|
|||
|
entire train station was in the process of being torn up so it
|
|||
|
was a challenge to snake my way through all the construction
|
|||
|
(destruction?) to get out of the Atrium building.
|
|||
|
It was then a nice mile walk to Michigan avenue, through the
|
|||
|
heart of Chicago's financial district. The streets teemed with
|
|||
|
people wearing gaudy colored jackets, bright green with yellow
|
|||
|
collars. These people, i later found out, worked for the Chicago
|
|||
|
Board of Trade and these odd jackets somehow signify where in the
|
|||
|
trading pit they belong.
|
|||
|
The cold was biting but I made it from Canal street to
|
|||
|
Michigan Avenue without losing any appendages to frostbite.
|
|||
|
First thing I did at Michigan Ave was to take out my guide to
|
|||
|
buses and find what would take me south. A few of the buses
|
|||
|
stopped at the corner where I was standing but others went by, I
|
|||
|
had no idea of whether the bus I needed would stop at my corner,
|
|||
|
until I noticed it drive by without stopping. I ran down the
|
|||
|
street chasing it yet it would not stop. I then discovered that
|
|||
|
buses only stop at places marked with a bus stop sign.
|
|||
|
The bus made good progress, and I kept track of the
|
|||
|
addresses as they drifted by, and since I couldn't see every
|
|||
|
building I kept a mental note in my head of where I was, finally
|
|||
|
it was up to the 1100 block (I was looking for the 1300 block)
|
|||
|
and the bus suddenly turned off of Michigan Ave. Panic filled
|
|||
|
my heart, I saw myself having to get off way by Soldier Field
|
|||
|
and walk 2 1/2 miles to the court house in a not very favorable
|
|||
|
part of the city. But as luck had it the bus turned south again
|
|||
|
after a block; I yanked several times on the weird bell that
|
|||
|
informs the driver that someone wishes to get off and after
|
|||
|
going the length of the block the driver left me off. I walked
|
|||
|
two blocks, easily found the courthouse and went inside.
|
|||
|
As one might expect the entrance to the courthouse had metal
|
|||
|
detectors and was swarming with police. Before I went through I
|
|||
|
was asked to check my radio in a front room. It appears that
|
|||
|
some people are fond of bringing in bombs concealed in portable
|
|||
|
radios. This was rather reassuring. After checking my radio I
|
|||
|
was asked to remove all metal from my pockets. So off went my
|
|||
|
watch, my headphones, my keys, and then I took out about $12 in
|
|||
|
change and put it all in a basket by the metal detector. The
|
|||
|
officer looked at all my change and asked, "Did you rob a pay
|
|||
|
phone?" I smiled weakly and walked through the metal detector
|
|||
|
then collected all my metal.
|
|||
|
Finding the meeting room for jurors was easy, I just followed
|
|||
|
the signs. Just outside the door I was handed a sheet explaining
|
|||
|
the rules for jurors and I was given a sticker that in big white
|
|||
|
letters on a bright red background said I was a juror. Inside
|
|||
|
the juror's room I gave my summons sheet and was asked to pick a
|
|||
|
number from a little wastebasket on the counter. I was in group
|
|||
|
17.
|
|||
|
The loud noise in the room was a television in the far
|
|||
|
corner that was tuned to the Home Show, seats were facing both
|
|||
|
directions with each row containing seats with their backs to
|
|||
|
each other. All the seats facing the television were taken, but
|
|||
|
I had brought reading material, daytime TV turned me off. I
|
|||
|
should probably mention at this time that I was about a half hour
|
|||
|
late. Having some disregard for the law I decided to sleep in a
|
|||
|
half hour rather than come in on time. It turns out that it
|
|||
|
didn't matter that I was late except for not getting a seat
|
|||
|
facing the TV.
|
|||
|
The TV was loud, so loud that it could not be ignored, it
|
|||
|
was hard to read, as the hosts discussed that the "in" color for
|
|||
|
the spring was silver, or that El Paso, Texas has instituted a
|
|||
|
new curfew policy. I finished one article in the magazine I
|
|||
|
brought and found that I could not bring myself to start another,
|
|||
|
my concentration had been destroyed. After about an hour the
|
|||
|
TV went silent and a lady at the head of the room, holding a
|
|||
|
remote control, told us that she had a little tape that she
|
|||
|
wanted to show us. The lights in the room went dark and a second
|
|||
|
TV facing towards me showed a tape explaining how the jury would
|
|||
|
be selected. It went through how the lawyers might reject us for
|
|||
|
whatever reason, and that we should not take this personally.
|
|||
|
The tape told us that we should not talk about out case with
|
|||
|
anyone, that bad people might try to influence us and that if we
|
|||
|
talk we might be the ones going to jail. The tape lasted 7 or so
|
|||
|
minutes and then on came the Home Show again and we were left
|
|||
|
once again to sit.
|
|||
|
To make our lives just a little more miserable, in some
|
|||
|
nearby corridor some men did maintanance, drilling and pounding
|
|||
|
with hammers. Meanwhile the Home Show ended and some soap opera
|
|||
|
came on (I didn't catch the name) and for a half hour I had to
|
|||
|
hear about how Egypt was running away after she commited a crime,
|
|||
|
and she had to blackmail a pilot to take her to where she was
|
|||
|
going. After this there was the news at 11:30, we were told that
|
|||
|
a terrible blizzard was coming to snuff out all life in Chicago.
|
|||
|
The lead story was this weather, everyone in the room, no matter
|
|||
|
how much they had previously ignored the TV, now turned to
|
|||
|
hear the awful news.
|
|||
|
About halfway through the newscast we were set free to have
|
|||
|
lunch. First, we had to remove the stickers that labeled us as
|
|||
|
jurors.
|
|||
|
As I have mentioned, the neighborhood around the courthouse
|
|||
|
is not very good. We did have the option of eating in the
|
|||
|
courthouse "cafeteria" but that consisted of a vending machine
|
|||
|
dispensing candybars and potato chips. Instead I followed
|
|||
|
everyone else outside and north, down the street. A few people
|
|||
|
turned off to a corner diner, so rather than risking my life by
|
|||
|
going a few blocks to the east to Burger King, I too went for
|
|||
|
the diner. The diner was loaded to the rafters with people that
|
|||
|
I had seen waiting for jury duty, I got a nice spot at the
|
|||
|
counter right in front of a TV that hung high up on the wall.
|
|||
|
The TV was tuned to the same station as in the courthouse, I
|
|||
|
wondered whether that was done as a service to the jurors.
|
|||
|
Anyway the show "All My Children" was on and half the show took
|
|||
|
place in a courtroom.
|
|||
|
I got a greasy hamburger with some bland imitation velveeta
|
|||
|
cheese. It took about 15 minutes before anyone would give me a
|
|||
|
7-up. The lettuce was rancid and the tines on my fork were bent
|
|||
|
in various directions. Lunch produced a strange twist of
|
|||
|
behavior in the jurors, as if suddenly being thrown together in a
|
|||
|
different, less threatening situation made people start talking to
|
|||
|
each other. I paid my bill and walked back to the courthouse,
|
|||
|
admiring the burned out buildings that I passed, wondering
|
|||
|
if this neighborhood was ever a thriving, lively part of the city.
|
|||
|
The warmness to strangers continued inside, the air of
|
|||
|
tension was broken and I found myself talking to a retired fellow
|
|||
|
about his past experiences in jury duty. He had been on various
|
|||
|
juries and said about how they can last for a few weeks
|
|||
|
sometimes. One good thing is that the judges often don't start
|
|||
|
things till noon, so you can get a chance to sleep in if you are
|
|||
|
on one of those juries. His hope was to not get selected this
|
|||
|
day, he wanted to serve out his time waiting in the jurors room
|
|||
|
and then go home at 4:00 when the juror's day is done, he didn't
|
|||
|
want to have to come back here, it was a long drive from Oak
|
|||
|
Lawn. Plus he wanted to get out before the killer snow storm
|
|||
|
came in and cut off all exits from Chicago.
|
|||
|
The conversation turned to the street cars that used to run
|
|||
|
up and down the street of Chicago, and how there was bitching
|
|||
|
when the fares went up from 7 cents to 8 cents. Others joined in
|
|||
|
the conversation and the subject turned to how small construction
|
|||
|
firms cannot compete with the larger ones in this city and then
|
|||
|
turned to health care. An hour and a half passed, and the TV --
|
|||
|
which by now was being ignored by everyone who had broken up into
|
|||
|
little discussion groups -- suddenly went silent. We were then
|
|||
|
told that since no one was needed today and since we were going
|
|||
|
to be hit by big snow, that we'd be allowed to leave.
|
|||
|
No one at all was chosen this day, which seemed odd to me, My
|
|||
|
friend the jury expert told me that she had often been to
|
|||
|
courthouses where all the jurors were selected. I collected my
|
|||
|
radio and took the bus and the train back home, but not before I
|
|||
|
got gypped by a hot dog stand that gave me a jumbo hot dog when I
|
|||
|
ordered a polish sausage, but that's another story.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Truth, Justice <mostly>, and the Dystropian Way Part 2:
|
|||
|
My Spam is Your Spam, But It Sure Isn't Elvis's.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<part two of chapter three of the dystropian chronicles by midget
|
|||
|
caesar>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Tension was building like an ancient Egyptian pyramid, like graffiti
|
|||
|
on the Great Wall of China. The prime movers were now in place. Each side
|
|||
|
waited for some sign of weakness from the enemy. Everything was at stake
|
|||
|
here. The fate of an entire ocean depended on this single decision, which
|
|||
|
would in turn decide the winner of this epic conflict. They were each down
|
|||
|
to their last defenses, and both knew that the brutal, intense war that
|
|||
|
had consumed their lives had to be coming to an end soon, much to the
|
|||
|
relief of the victorious side, and much to the anguish of the losing side.
|
|||
|
Finally, neither could stand the anticipation. A brilliant but tired man
|
|||
|
looked up, sipped his last drink, and spoke the words. The other man
|
|||
|
looked up, shocked, in disbelief.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"DAMN YOU!", said the enraged loser.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The victor smirked, ad wiped away the last remnants of the force that had
|
|||
|
opposed him so viciously, but had fought its last.
|
|||
|
|
|||
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"YOU SUNK MY BATTLESHIP!"
|
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|
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|
|
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|
Meanwhile, a congo dancer was born, and a bongo player died.
|
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|
|
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|
|
|||
|
Darius seemed to have run into a brick wall with this case, so he
|
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|
shrugged and turned to face the plaster wall on the other side of the
|
|||
|
courtroom. Perhaps he'd have better luck with that wall. It wasn't easy
|
|||
|
for poor Darius. The odds were overwhelmingly against him, and the
|
|||
|
litigants in the case next door were making quite a bit of noise. Next
|
|||
|
door, a group of farm machines had banded together to sue society for
|
|||
|
being the Combine, and giving farm machines everywhere a bad name. One of
|
|||
|
Darius's associates from Cuckoo's Nest Law Firm was handling the case, a
|
|||
|
quiet young horse named America. The farm machines were unhappy, claiming
|
|||
|
that their lawyer was exactly who they were suing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Darius sighed, and looked again at the judge. How was he going to
|
|||
|
prove that his client had been forced to pay a lot for that muffler? None
|
|||
|
of his impassioned pleas seemed to be working. The judge, a former auto-
|
|||
|
mechanic with a short fuse, yelled at Darius that he was throwing the case
|
|||
|
out if Darius didn't speak up soon? All seemed lost, when.....
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The noise from next door stopped. The horse had mollified the machines
|
|||
|
with some wheat.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Darius glanced at the judges short fuse, grabbed the muffler, strapped
|
|||
|
the fuse to the judge's head in one fluid motion, and lit the short fuse.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The judge blew up, and the muffler didn't help in the least.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Darius asked the jury if his point needed to be proven any further, and
|
|||
|
they unanimously said no, partially because the muffler had failed to
|
|||
|
quiet the blast, and partially because none of them wanted it tested on
|
|||
|
them. Darius's client was awarded the third-world countries that she had
|
|||
|
requested, and the courtroom cheered at yet another victory for Darius.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Meanwhile, the ruthless men stared at each other. The wrong move could
|
|||
|
mean the end of everything that each had worked for. Big money was at
|
|||
|
stake, as the car raced forward. The right turn could mean control of most
|
|||
|
of the world, the wrong turn could mean disaster. The car moved.....
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Go Directly to Jail. Do Not Pass Go. Do Not Collect $200."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Milo grinned. He had won again.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
While all this was happening, a lamp was lighted, and a sad melon
|
|||
|
finally regained its sight.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The intense faces looked at each other, fury in the eyes of one, cool
|
|||
|
calmness in the eyes of the other. The equipment was in place. Now, the
|
|||
|
only question that remained was whether he would use it or not. He knew it
|
|||
|
would really ruin his opponent's Saturday night if he used the equipment.
|
|||
|
But something in his opponent's eyes urged him forward, and he pressed the
|
|||
|
button.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Half of South America blew up. Milo had won again, just on a real game
|
|||
|
board this time.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And Darius strolled out of the courtroom, trying to look casual even
|
|||
|
though an angry scythe had tied his shoelaces together.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Don't Miss Part Three of Chapter Three of the Dystropian Chronicles:
|
|||
|
"She Not Only Blinded Me With Science, She Shattered My Pancreas With It
|
|||
|
Too!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<well, actually, you could probably live without it, but go for it
|
|||
|
anyways!>
|
|||
|
<please?>
|
|||
|
<pretty please?>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
COMING SOON...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--- Following their scandalous shut-out at the Grammy awards (which they
|
|||
|
invented anyway), Def Mangoe has gone into seclusion. In other words,
|
|||
|
they didn't show up for the interview again. Next issue, we send our
|
|||
|
elite commando reporter unit out with a mission: track the band to
|
|||
|
their Chicago hideaway and get the interview, or don't come back at
|
|||
|
all.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--- Find out how you, too, can become a Propaganda Unlimited columnist!
|
|||
|
(We need to replace all the ones that didn't come back.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--- More mondo mirth and maximum mayhem!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--- Less alliteration!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
D I S T R I B U T I O N
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you don't call these boards, your friends will abandon you, your
|
|||
|
pets will laugh at you, and you will be publicly reviled as an Eater
|
|||
|
of Pancakes. You don't know what that euphemism means, do you? Well,
|
|||
|
let's just say you don't want people calling you that. Especially not
|
|||
|
that chick in third period math you've got your eye on.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Yes, you. We're watching, you know.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For letters, comments and rants, don't forget the Propaganda Mailbox
|
|||
|
at Internet address PULETTERS@AOL.COM!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Board Phone
|
|||
|
-------------------------- --------------
|
|||
|
Intelligent Shade of Blue (312) 588-4231 (Headquarters)
|
|||
|
Temple of Pong (708) 268-1696
|
|||
|
Big Bob's Leechburger Farm (708) 838-1015
|
|||
|
Bob Saget Hate Club (815) 363-1351
|
|||
|
A Glitch in the System (312) 761-1270 (After 10:30 PM)
|
|||
|
Micro Information Systems (805) 251-0564 (California Hub)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
======================================================================
|
|||
|
|
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|
|