Monday, November 13, 2017

The Age of Faith -- in Social Media




Joseph Zwilling, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of New York, said that some churches already offer apps, a trend he does not approve. “There are enough occasions for our mind to wander during Mass; we shouldn’t be using these artificial things that take us away,” he said.  From the NYTimes.


In this age of text and tweet, when hope is on the brink,
Parishioners first cross themselves, then search for shopping link.
The priest may give a homily that makes the stained glass glitter,
But those who bow their heads below are actually on Twitter.

In congregations near and far, the faithful appear drugged
On Facebook and on Reddit, and refuse to be unplugged.
The miracle of Instagram replaces Lourdes and Mecca --
The golden calf that’s worshipped now is certainly high techa.

We play with little pinwheels while the Master of us all
Shakes His head at all the trinkets holding us in thrall.
When He deigns to speak to us, no smartphone will be needed;

All cyberspace will hold its tongue, while YouTube goes unheeded . . .

Sunday, November 12, 2017

Tribute to Dorothy Parker




Mrs. Parker and Those Girls Who Wear Glasses


Dorothy Parker was a New York wit & writer who penned these immortal lines back in 1924:
 
Men seldom make passes
at girls who wear glasses.

In honor of its 83-year anniversary, I offer some variations on that theme. To wit:
 
Men seldom leave traces
on girls who wear braces.
 
Men seldom want babies
from girls who have rabies.

Men seldom write lyrics
for girls in hysterics.

Men seldom stop winking
at girls who are drinking.

Men seldom sincerely
like girls who think clearly.

Men seldom wear clothing
that girls are not loathing.
 
Men seldom take breath mints
for girls who make death hints.

And in the spirit of the times, let us update Ms Parker's lines:
 
Girls seldom make passes
at men with fat *****

What is Modar?




From RNS (Religion News Service)


All Mormons alike look to me.
They have that ‘frightful symmetry.’
Their sainthood assured,
They cannot be lured
With pricey immorality.

First Contact with Alien Intelligence (SETI)




From The Atlantic.

It came upon a midnight clear, while scientists were snoring --
A burst of sentient radio waves in wondrous outpouring.
From Sagittarius it sped into the Chinese basin --
Which sent eavesdropping analysts off to Beijing a-racin’.

Twas proven now beyond a doubt that life beyond the stars
Was ready for FIrst Contact and perhaps some seminars.
The world recoiled in disbelief at China’s great disclosure --
It caused our Chief Executive to lose his cool composure.

The evidence was solid and the proof was so conclusive
That it could not be doubted -- though some Baptists stayed abusive.
To formulate a fit response a group of scholars wary
Concocted just one question for the radio beams to carry.

“How can we have peace on Earth, with mercy mild today?”
Was the query that they sent on its interstellar way.
They had to wait full many years before there was reply
From the cryptic mirrored stars that shone up in the sky.

But at last that basin great in China caught the news
And throughout the gaping world the message did diffuse:
“Earthlings, peace is only had when in your wildest dream --
Unless, of course, you rub your skin with Booferbumber’s cream!”

“So smooth and so refreshing, it will give you mercy mild;
It’s approved for man and beast, for blergs and for young child!
And then you’ll also want to drink organic Klinkerflog!
It will keep your nerblocks green, as green as any frog.”

“And don’t forget to herm your scrot with Diblox Lorfing Moof.
It now comes in a neutron thread while staying waterproof!
This cosmogonal message has been brought to you for free
By the advertisers in the Fornax Galaxy.”

“If you want to speak with our great scientists and sages,
It will cost you plenty in rare stones and gold and wages.
As their sponsors we control the flow of knowledge, so

Prepare to meet your masters and send rocketships of dough!”

Ode to the Diner



My parents taught me eating out was something that the rich
Could do with all impunity, but WE weren’t of that stitch.
Leftovers and brown bags haunted me throughout my years.
A diner was a den of thieves; they might pin back your ears!

And then one day, when cooking my own grub was too much work,
I went around the corner where a joint was known to lurk.
Chromium and plate glass, with formica spic and span,
The place looked halfway decent; they had copper pots and pan.

I ordered eggs and bacon, with a side of country fries,
And when the waitress brought it just imagine my surprise
To find it better than the drek my parents fed to me --
A gift for one who up till then lived on Chef Boyardee.

Now I am a diner fiend; I search them out to try
Their onions rings and patty melts and all things that will fry.
The waitresses are friendly and the cooks know me by name --

A diner lets you eat and your humanity reclaim.




Saturday, November 11, 2017

I'm Just Sayin'




I love to eat Italian: but I always belch American.

Why do they call it mineral water? You can't chip a tooth on it.

I went to a job interview and they asked me if I was a team player: I told them only in beer pong.


I got a life-size refrigerator magnet of my refrigerator: after I put it up I couldn't open the damn door


Why don't they make pizza in the shape of a Mobius strip? One pizza would last a lifetime.


Some Russians were arrested in a National Forest: they hacked a tree.

I'm not afraid of falling: I'm afraid of floors.

I buy blemished produce for a discount: who cares if a tomato needs a nose job?

I've made one pair of socks last twenty years -- I never took 'em out of the shrink wrap.


I bought a Republican sno-globe: when you shake it nothing happens.

I wasn't born out of wedlock:  but 37 years later I got thrown out of it. 


I got so much static electricity around my place that Rice Krispies is suing me for taking all their snap crackle and pop. 

I got a hair transplant, but it didn't take:  I'm still a barefaced liar. 

I worked my way through college -- as a bank robber

Why do they call it 'sea level'?  Try standing up straight the next time you're in a rowboat in the middle of the Atlantic

I had to fire my shadow for plagiarism

Making tinsel is a cruel business -- you have to make aluminum foil anorexic


I had to find a new line of work when my criminal empire failed -- I was teaching snakes how to be pickpockets 


I think coin laundries should give away free sheets -- since half the socks get stuck in the corners and stay damp until they're run again:  Laundries could double their dryer use in a matter of days. 


The water pressure in my building is so weak the faucets all have a Reverse gear.

Mimes should be seen but not paid

How do you punish children who live in a yurt? You can't send them into a corner . . .

Coal and Scott Pruitt



“Coal is to be thanked for all of its hard work and it now deserves to be retired. It is of retirement age and needs to be put in the retirement home,” Ms. Figueres said. From the NYTimes.

Most fossilized of fossil fuels, King Coal has had his day.
With solar power and the wind, he’s at the end of play.
He powered locomotives and our smokestack industries,
And maybe even saved us from destroying all our trees.

But now we’re growing weary of his senile trail of dust.
He scatters clinkers ev’rywhere; his performance has gone bust.
In India and China he’s enshrined just like a god;
But in the West we see him mostly as a used-up fraud.

But still there are exploiters who won’t give him any rest.
They’ve staked him for a long time and won’t see him be repressed.
Perhaps we should make Pruitt go into an old folk’s home

Before we are all buried in a sooty catacomb!

The Kids Who Didn't Want to Clown

Lou Jacobs



My paternal grandfather was a gamekeeper on an estate in Northern Minnesota. His job, as far as it was ever explained to me by his cross grained wife many years later, was to nab deer poachers and fish beer cans out of trout streams.

My maternal grandfather worked for Pillsbury, and had something to do with creating a patented bleaching process for flour -- which allowed him to marry a Ziegfield Follies showgirl after walking out on my grandmother.

Neither career appealed to me as a child. My own dad was a bartender for nearly fifty years -- mostly noted for his reluctance to perform any duties more taxing than drawing beers. Patrons who dared ask for a mixed drink were told to go to hell. His career, also, held no fascination for me as I grew to manhood.

When I attended the Ringling Clown College, and then went to work on The Greatest Show on Earth as a First of May, I thought I had hit on a job that my children, provided I had any, would love to emulate.

Eventually my wife and I had eight children. They grew up with a father who was an active circus funnyman. But not a one of them ever evinced the slightest interest in following in my oversized footsteps. Not. One. Of. Them. Rotten kids . . .

Instead, they became computer programmers, housewives and mothers, construction workers,supermarket managers, military veterans, and missionaries. Rotten kids . . .

Where did I go wrong? I tantalized them with rousing stories of blowdowns and hey rubes and the origin of pink lemonade -- I regaled them with the fascinating eccentricities of showmen like Irvin Feld and Tarzan Zerbini -- I described in loving detail the peculiar talents of comic geniuses I had personally worked with, like Otto Griebling, Barry Lubin, and Steve Smith. And I sent them hundreds of postcards while on the road, illustrating fascinating items like the world’s deepest well in Kansas and Nevada’s fabled jackalope. Despite all this, whenever I would coyly ask them what they wanted to be when they grew up, they always answered with something disappointing such as “an astronaut” or “a Barbie Doll.” Rotten kids . . .

Determined to pass on my slapstick heritage by hook or by crook, I dragooned the older kids into clowning with me during the winter hiatus -- when I was able to book school shows in the Midwest. I coached my oldest son Adam in the whipcracker gag. I taught my oldest daughter Madelaine to sculpt balloon animals. And I corralled half a dozen of them to stooge for me in an original gag I created around the Sons of the Pioneer’s song “Cool Water.” Every time the word ‘water’ is sung, the kids shot me with water pistols, spritzed me with seltzer bottles, and poured pitchers down my pants. Messy, but a sure fire laugh-getter. But do you suppose my own little darlings, the seed of my loins, enjoyed drowning their dear old dad in front of a mob of giggling fifth-graders? Not a bit. They always complained they’d rather stay home to play video games or make friendship bracelets. Their mother, bless her soul, is an accomplished musician, and our kids relished their piano lessons and singing in the church choir -- but when I offered to teach them to play the musical saw, they one and all gave me the stink eye. Rotten kids . . .

The crowning infamy occurred some years back, when we lived in Salt Lake City. By then we had our full compliment of eight children, so even taking them all to a movie involved considerable planning and expense. I had wangled front row Annie Oakleys to Ringling Brothers, playing at the Salt Palace, from my old circus compatriot Tim Holst. As VP in charge of Talent, he graciously provided the ducats to a Saturday matinee and then arranged for us to go backstage on a brief tour, including clown alley -- my old stamping grounds. By then I had bowed to the inevitable -- there would be no Lou Jacobs or Peggy Williams to carry on the Torkildson name and clowning tradition under the big top.

But still -- front row seats at the circus! What normal child could resist the thrills and laughter sure to follow? I had no doubt they would be the envy of their peers, getting up close with clowns and elephants and lion tamers -- what a coup for a kid! And they could boast about how their old man had been there, done that . . .

But the little fiends double crossed me. They all came down with the flu. So instead of spending that Saturday chortling at the antics of the Ringling buffoons and swooning over the aerial acts, they lolled about in their beds, feverish and nauseous, being served jello and fruit juice by their mother, and being glowered at by me. Rotten kids . . .

Well, as the years have lengthened and I have thickened, I’ve decided to let bygones be bygones. To bury the custard pie. They’ve all turned out pretty decent, although there’s not a putty nose among ‘em. And they’re giving me grand kids now. Hmmmm. Maybe for Thanksgiving this year I’ll dust off the old spinning plates and invisible dog leash to test the waters with them. They do say that talent often skips a generation . . .


Peggy Williams

Planters Mixed Nuts Are a Fraud!



The holidays are drawing near and yet I never learn
A can of mixed nuts always leaves me with severe heartburn.
It’s not because Brazil nuts are a toxin to my gut;
Nor is it on cashews that I so unwisely glut.


The label says that less than half are peanuts, yet I find
That goobers will predominate before the can is mined.
I’ve nothing against peanuts, but when products guarantee
I won’t be finding many I believe them thoroughly.


So when I grab a handful of mixed nuts to celebrate
The richness of the season, it begins to really grate
That all I get are peanuts -- not an almond is in sight.

Planters, you have tricked me once again -- and that ain’t right!


Joseph Palazzolo of the Wall Street Journal emails his reaction:

"It's so true. Peanuts predominate. Thank you for channeling my grievance."

Friday, November 10, 2017

Foto Funnies

IT'S NOT HARASSMENT IF YOU SAY 'PLEASE' FIRST.



‘Remember, eye contact is optional - but eye gouging is a no-no’

‘Keep your seats in the presence of the elderly - they appreciate the leg exercise’

‘Please put your trash in Congress - where it belongs’


If this book were a tell-all it would only be 10 pages long . . .


I'm only going to say this one more time: The free Starbucks was yesterday.

Okay, we're going deep into the Paradise Papers -- got your cyanide pill?