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Short Imagined Monologues.
THAK, THE MOST ORGANIZED MEMBER OF THE PARTY
OF ROUGHLY 70 PEOPLE WHO ORIGINALLY SETTLED
NORTH AMERICA.
BY RICHARD D. ALLEN
OK, I know it's difficult to plan for a trip like this. Everyone's running around like a reindeer with its head cut off.
But we had a whole lunar cycle to coordinate. I know nobody wants to stand around outside on the tundra making small talk only to find your lips and eyeballs have frozen solid, but ... "What are you bringing to eat on the way there? Oh, really? I was going to bring a small handful of rabbit organs, too! Maybe one of us should bring something different!" You know, a little gossip never killed anybody. I suppose it killed Gorf. More accurately, a sharp rock thrown by Ooni's husband killed Gorf. But I digress.
Let's just make sure I'm not overreacting. Going down the line, what did we bring? Half a squirrel. Piece of bark. Recently stomped baby bird. Handful of seeds. Handful of poisonous berries. Nice gathering there, Peela.
I see appetizers. I see desserts. What I don't see is a single hunk of fish, deer, bison, or even the desiccated flesh of a hated enemy. I don't know about you people, but trekking dozens of miles across a narrow strait into an unknown land makes me more than a little edgy. And when I'm nervous, I get hungry. And when I'm hungry, I like to eat something a little more substantial than squirrel ass!
Someone's just handed me a moose bladder full of a primitive, foul-smelling root liquor. I'll be totally honest: this will do.
Pass the seeds.
There are many more of these gems to
pick from
on this great web site I found.
Some of my faves so far...
YAHOO'S
MAILER-DAEMON AUTOMATED REPLY FOR FAILED E-MAIL
DELIVERY IS GETTING A LITTLE TOO INTIMATE
EXCERPTS
FROM THE DIARY OF AN ASPIRING
DEATH-METAL FRONTMAN
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Honeybee
Waggle Dance
Reviews.
- - - -
Yesterday I watched what is supposed to be the
hive's brightest talents give expression to our
300-million-year-old story of the flower quest. I'm
sorry to say that my view was all too clear—it makes
one long for a few thousand clambering workers to
obscure your line of sight. The disheartening
verdict:
Age Before Duty
There's nothing sadder than watching a
once-brilliant artist struggle to hang on to fading
glory. In her prime, worker 38970 could lay out a
waggle dance that made you see and smell the flowers
before you lifted off; she mapped out a route that
dropped you right down onto the pistil even if you
flew it with your eyes closed. Now we are forced to
endure this aging diva—35 days old if she's an
hour—drag herself pitifully in a serpentine tracing
of the two loops, her stinger bumping behind because
she's too weak to lift it off the comb. Also,
according to her, the nectar is easy to find—just
fly 5 feet out and 12 feet down below ground level.
For God's sake, somebody eat her before it gets more
pathetic.
Ego Trips
Worker 40388 is one of the most technically
proficient waggle dancers going right now, with
crisp fouettés and brilliant coordination among all
six legs. So why, at the end of the performance, are
we left with the feeling that the dance was less
about where the flowers are located than about the
journey worker 40388 undertook to get there? How she
had self-doubt, and a stiff headwind, and was dogged
by an aggressive wasp, yet never gave up, never
forgot about the hive or her sisters in need, or—of
course—her ladyship, who needs to grow to fullest
splendor. By the way, worker 40388, you don't need
to vibrate frenetically through the entire
dance; we're already looking at you and after a
while it's just so much noise.
Wit Without End
Puckish worker 48593 has demonstrated a droll
outlook in her waggle-dance oeuvre, sending hive
mates on one fool's errand after another—to flour
spilled on some human's patio, or to plastic tulips
on a garden table. However, at some point, these
stunts became worker 48593's crutch to hide a lack
of talent. Her routine, a frantic yet incoherent
sequence of jetés broken up by one entrechat in each
loop, gives the viewer no insight into a flower's
location; after the pyrotechnics, we're left
wondering what it all was supposed to mean. (The
drones, of course, lap it up.) Really, worker 48593,
if you don't care where the nectar is, why should
we?
The Usual Subtext
Worker 79609 continues to use her waggle dance to
animate the same "revolutionary" ideas most of us
toyed with and discarded when we were larvae:
Honeybees are credulous tools of the flowers! The
hive's authority is rooted in sororicide and
matricide! Most of us live merely to work ourselves
to death! Etc., etc. The shocking message she
conveys is about as original as the arabesque she
assumes at the end of her pedestrian dance. The
subversive intent is clear enough, but, worker
92483, where is thy sting?
Callow Youth
Worker 98475 is only 10 days old and it shows.
Lopsided loops, inconsistent arcs, haphazard
trembling—too much noise and not enough signal.
Still, she radiates an ebullience I haven't seen
since worker 13983 found the botanical garden and
lit up the swarm for days. I was just starting to
get glimpses of raw talent when worker 98475 got
dizzy and fell off the comb. If this is the future
of the hive, we better start learning to metabolize
grass. |
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Room Service Room
Service:
Morny, rune sorbees.
Hotel
Guest: Oh,
sorry, I thought I dialed room service.
RS:
Rye, rune sorbees. Morny, Jewish to odor sunteen?
HG:
I'd like some bacon and eggs.
RS:
Ow July then?
HG:
What?
RS:
Aches. Ow July then? Pry, boy, pooch...?
HG:
Oh, the eggs! How do I like them? Sorry. Scrambled, please.
RS:
Ow July thee baycombe? Crease?
HG:
Crisp will be fine.
RS:
Okay. An Santos?
HG:
What?
RS:
Santos, July santos?
HG:
Ugh ... I don't know ... I don't think so.
RS:
No? Judo one toes?
HG:
Look, I really feel bad about this, but I just don't know what
judo-one-toes means. I'm sorry.
RS:
Toes! Toes! Why Jew Don Juan toes? Ow bow eenglish mopping we
bother?
HG:
English muffin! I've got it! Toast! You were saying toast!
Fine. An English muffin will be fine.
RS:
We bother?
HG:
No, just put the bother on the side.
RS:
Wad?
HG:
I'm sorry. I meant butter. Butter on the side.
RS:
Copy?
HG:
I feel terrible about this, but...
RS:
Copy. Copy, tea, mill...
HG:
Coffee! Yes, coffee, please. That's all.
RS:
One Minnie. As rune torinofie; strangle aches, crease baycombe,
tossy eenglish mopping we bother honey sigh and copy. Rye?
HG:
Whatever you say.
RS:
Okay. Tenjewberrymud.
HG: You're
welcome.
The above dialogue never actually took place in any
hotel anywhere in the world. It is an intentionally composed
humorous fiction and is entirely the creation of Shelley
Berman, written as a chapter in his book, published as A HOTEL
IS A PLACE, A HOTEL IS A FUNNY PLACE, and A HOTEL IS A VERY
FUNNY PLACE, by Price/Stern/Sloan Publishers, Inc. Copyright
© 1972, 1985. Any claim to the contrary is utterly baseless
and erroneous.
The Official SHELLEY BERMAN Web Site - Room Service
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