Avery, on The Meaning of Life:

"Remember kids, it’s only funny until someone loses an ideology."

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July 6    

         Tom Cruise Insanity Watch 
           Today:
High
  
(Check Back For Daily Updates)

                    

Cruiser’s Brainwashing Of Holmes
Appears To Be Complete

Hollywood’s bedlam-bound actor, Tom Cruise and foolish girl Katie Holmes are reportedly planning to wed next month at the evil Scientology headquarters in Los Angeles. (It’s the building that looks like a haunted house on a hill.)

"I have encouraged Katie to embrace my faith,” the actor roared at the assembled media he ordered to sit by his feet, “and after much tying of rope, hypnotherapy, indoctrination, rituals of passage, sleep and food deprivation, emotional and psychological tearing down and rebuilding, plus a little more hypnotherapy, the convert, I mean, Katie, has agreed to be my Scientology bride and to renounce her family and friends. It is a prerequisite of mine that everyone must be a Scientologist. I was mortified when that Judas bitch Nicole turned her back on my faith. But when the aliens land and make me their silver-headed God, she will pay dearly. Oh baby, oh man, oh yeah. Can you dig it? Now go. This announcement is over. Yah! Yah! Yah!”

Soldier Gets Picture Taken With The Queen & Displays His Family Jewels

Shriners Hospital Battle Gets Ugly

A bitter feud over a campaign for a prestigious children’s hospital has pitted Ontario and Quebec chapters of the Shriners and has resulted in
drive-by shootings reportedly involving tiny, red, motorized vehicles and leaving several Shriners with bullet wounds in the ankles and knees.   

Anti-Wal-Mart Campaign

A union crusade against Wal-Mart has lead to the recruitment of several high profile political strategists who will deploy election-style tactics against America's largest retailer. These will include running petition drives and spreading rumours that Wal-Mart is a gay, coke-snorting, draft-dodger.

This Week’s Featured Album: 
Gee, Dad

Organ Music by Ed Scofield with son Tim

Liner Notes.

All songs by Ed Scofield unless noted.

Side One:

1. My Big Organ and My Son’s Small Kit
2. I Wish I Was Sterile
3. Stop Calling Me “Dad”
4. When Big Brains and Good Looks Skip A Generation (The Ballad Of Tim)
5. You Were An Accident
6. Keep Your Eyes Off Mom – I Saw Her First
7. Where Did You Hide My Gun, Tim?
8. You’re 16, You’re A Man, You’re Out Of The House

Side Two:

1. Tim (You’re An Enormous Disappointment)
2. Dad Gets The Groupies
3. Making My Boy Cry (Makes Me A Big Man)
4. Shut Up and Shine My Shoes
5. Surfing Bird California Wipe Out Girl (by Tim Scofield)
6. Dumb As A Chimp and Twice As Smelly (An Ode To My Son)
7. The Useless Progeny Two-Step
8. I Think Tim’s A Homo

Writing and performing “Gee, Dad” was a long, difficult, acrimonious and, yes, explosively violent experience. Originally intended to be an artistic collaboration of folk organ ballads written by a loving dad and his “devoted son” it ended up being a financial setback and an ugly discovery of the shortcomings and many failings of my hapless drummer boy, Tim. We walked into the studio with one objective: to write catchy songs about the seasons (mainly Fall). We walked out of the studio with a newer objective: to never speak to each other again. I’m pleased to say that we still haven’t exchanged a single word. These 16 songs represent what I went through in that studio and are the essence of everything that I discovered about my son as well as my feelings of absolute disgust for them: From my concerns about his obsession with his mother to my thorough belief that he is a vile and deviant homosexual. And I’ll say this much, my feelings of loathing really come through in all the songs (with the exception of Tim’s derivatively putrid “single,” Surfing Bird California Wipe Out Girl) and I still enjoy playing them when family comes by for a visit. We had everyone over last Xmas and I fired up the Hammond and played a rather “rocking” version of I Think Tim’s A Homo. It didn’t go over all that well with everyone, but I was so drunk I couldn’t have cared less. Ha, ha, ha.

Ed Scofield (revised liner notes 1972)

My therapist says I should try and talk about that summer dad and I recorded these 16 tracks. So I’ll try... “Gee, Dad, you ruined my life and I hate you.” 

Tim Scofield (Belleview Mental Asylum 1972)

Cover photo: Mrs. Scofield. © 1967 Oedipus Records

Your Horoscope:

Aries
: “Nothing ventured, nothing gained.” This time-honoured cliché has no real significance in your life, does it?
Taurus: By all means let your imagination run riot. Pretend you’re Tom Cruise. (Then thank God you’re not.) Get in his brain. Look at all the pretty birdies!
Gemini: The only way to leave behind the awkward status quo that you seem stuck with is to leave behind the existing condition or state of affairs you’re stuck with.
Cancer: You’re plans to make a flying apparatus out of a broom, while semi-admirable, are only making you look like a kook and a failure as a witch.
Leo: A one-sided argument with a gargoyle leads nowhere.
Virgo
: A sense of priority is always a good thing to have: so get one.
Libra
: Some of your ideas might strike others as “completely nuts” but if you believe in them... No, sorry, they’re completely nuts. Give it up.
Scorpio
: There is no such thing as an insoluble problem. Oh wait, sure there is.
Sagittarius
: An errant cow and a stray tuba give you a winning idea for a new musical instrument.
Capricorn
: See above.
Aquarius
: Your plans to stare down a ferret confirm that you’re really losing touch with your priorities.
Pisces
: Your ignorance is your greatest strength.


 

The Curious George Epilogue

The recent discovery of a hitherto unpublished manuscript in a Greenwich Village loft has rocked the world of children’s literature. While it has not been definitively attributed to authors Margaret and H. A. Ray, many scholars are convinced they are indeed responsible for the shocking Curious Yellow.  If it is true, it offers a disturbing glimpse of the couple’s darker side and serves up an unnerving insight into both their love/hate relationship with the monkey that brought them fame and their desire to be seen as serious writers.

 Curious Yellow (Draft 1, description of illustrations in italics.  8/4/57)

Man in yellow hat in bed, unshaven, eyes bloodshot.  Sickly bird on windowsill.  Neck of empty bottle seen under bed (no detail!).  Wallet open on bedside table, empty as well.

1.  This is the man in the yellow hat. He is a writer of books!  He is also George’s best friend.  Sometimes the man in the yellow hat wakes up screaming.  Sometimes the man in the yellow hat despises himself because of his secret weakness and lack of personal integrity.  And today he is going to do both!  Because today is George’s birthday!

George in bedroom.  Window barred, floors and walls filthy. Cold air blowing in through tattered curtains.  Beret in corner of room as well as red rubber ball and kite.

2.   Here is George.  He is a monkey.  And he is very curious.  At night he dreams of bananas and trees and of his mother, from whose teat he was plucked at the tender age of 12 weeks after she was freed from this earth by the single bullet of a small German pistol.

Man in yellow hat in George’s room laughing strangely.  George jumps on bed. Through window we see faceless people walking single file in the rain.

3.   “Happy Birthday George!” shrieked the man in the yellow hat.

Kitchen. A poorly wrapped present on a table.  Man in yellow hat stands, edgy.  George jumps, inane and unknowing.

4.   The man in the yellow hat noticed his hands were shaking as he poured George a glass of milk and handed him a banana.  “This is a special day George, today is      your birthday.  This is a present for you but I do not want you to open it until I  get home from work.”  George looked at the package carefully.  He was curious about what was inside.

Front hallway. Opposite apartment door open.  Woman of questionable background exiting. Man in yellow hat has worried look and old attaché in hand.  George sees him off but casts an eye back to the kitchen.

5.   “I will not be late. So be a good boy and do not answer the door or telephone.  Make no noise and keep out of the windows.  And do not open your present.  Tonight we will have cake and wine and read passages  from Marx under the cover of darkness,” said the man in the yellow hat. George scratched himself and laughed, thinking only of his present and wondering what could be inside the box.

Kitchen. Roach on cupboard. Rat on floor. George holds package close to him.

6.    George knew that he should leave the present alone. But he was so curious.

Senate Hearings Room. Senator McCarthy in chair. Man in yellow hat seated at table, behind microphone. He appears “shaky” his eyes red and his tie loosened.

7.    The man in the yellow hat felt hatred grip his body like a cancer. He was a coward, and a fool.  He was addicted to morphine and a communist sympathizer.  But his sympathy had run out. The men seated behind the table had frightened him into naming names.  He had been told it was in his best interest. He knew that after it was all over he would  never ever work again.

Kitchen. George, flies buzzing about his head, puts the package back on the table and looks at it.

8.   George felt and understood nothing. It was a lack of knowledge and instinct that only a monkey in a wholly unnatural experience could know. If he knew only one thing, it was that it would be very unwise to disobey the man in the yellow hat.  George decided to leave the package alone.

Package.  Close-up. Slight tear in poorly wrapped paper. Silver fish crawling on package.

9.    “Oh my,” thought George. “I have accidentally ripped the paper. The man in the yellow hat will be so furious with me. I must fix it.”  George struggled in vain to repair the package but his lack of opposing thumbs and awkwardness of age caused him to only make matters worse.

Three illustrations of package becoming unwrapped. Increasing, primal fear appearing on George’s face.  Final illustration -- George staring at brown box.

10.    Soon, all of the wrapping paper was on the floor. George knew he was in trouble, and that his curiosity had gotten the better of him, but he had not intended to be bad.

Bar. Man in yellow hat, half-drunk, throwing the last of his dollars away. Empty shot glasses. Assorted barflies and party girls.

11.     There would be no cake and wine this evening.

George opening package. Contents unseen.  Terror in his face. Little hands all askew.

12.    Since the wrapping paper was already off, there was no harm in taking a peek, thought George.

Man in yellow hat with man in white coat in alley. Two starving dogs fight for garbage in background.

13.    The man in the yellow hat needed money. He needed to get out of town and he needed to start his life over again. His new friend, the man in the white coat was sympathetic.

Kitchen. George holding German pistol. Note is visible and reads: “This is the gun I used to kill your mother.  I am ashamed and weak.  Please kill me and then yourself.  I haven’t the nerve to do it.”

14.   If George had been able to read, he would have been upset.

Kitchen.  Man in yellow hat staggering in. He is weeping.  He sees George with the gun and collapses to his knees in shame. George points pistol, curious expression.

15.   The man in the yellow hat cried out, trying to release the demons that tormented him, “I killed your mother because of you. I loved you. And  because of that, my morphine addiction, weakness for alcohol and belief in Communism I am ruined.  I am not a man.  I am a grotesquerie.”

Two illustrations. George draws bead on man.  Considers.

Puts gun down and jumps in his lap.

16.   George could not stay mad. The man in the yellow hat was his friend.  “Things will get better, George, I’m turning my life around and moving to Argentina.”  The man in the yellow hat threw George in the air, picked him up, and sat him down. “But things must be different. I have made arrangements for you.”  George was curious.

Two illustrations.  Man in yellow hat on street with George. George is on harness. Faceless people in background. Later.  Man in yellow hat tearfully accepting money from man in white coat.

17.   The man in the yellow hat smiled weakly. “George.  This is the man in the white coat. He works for a research company and is going to be your new friend.  Don’t hate me, George, and God have mercy on my wretched soul.”

Man in yellow hat getting in cab.  Man in white coat putting George in a car.

18.   This is very curious, thought George.

Man in yellow hat on beach, writing a letter, seated beside him is an interested penguin.

19.   The man in the yellow hat missed his friend, and still felt overwhelming guilt.  But he had a life to lead, and everyone has to make some sacrifices.

Laboratory.  George strapped to chair. Arm tied off. Man in white coat approaches with needle and length of rope.

20.   George looked at his new friend and the toys in his hand.  And when it was all over... He was never curious again.
      

(to the top)

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