Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Why it does not eat with me?
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 1999 05:20:26 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
In news.groups, "bobnik" (bobnik@freemail.it) wrote:
>
> This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
>
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> charset="iso-8859-1"
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Didn't "Deep Throat" used to post with
"Content-Transfer-Encoding: not-for-attribution"?
>
>
> =20
> Why it does not eat with me?
> =20
> Just does not interest You an easy and comfortable job with Internet?=20
> For information you write to me.=20
> =20
> bobnik@freemail.it
> =20
> Ciao Bob
TRY KIBOLOGY! THE ONLY RELIGION THAT WILL EAT WITH YOU!
Whoops, I made a typo. Please change "with" to "against" and then delete it.
> ------=_NextPart_000_009C_01BEECC8.7B6E67C0
> Content-Type: text/html;
> charset="iso-8859-1"
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> http-equiv=3DContent-Type>
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>
face=3DArial> size=3D3>Why it does not eat with me?
>
size=3D3> size=3D3>
>
Just does not interest You an easy =
> and=20
> comfortable job with Internet?
>
For information you write to me.=20
>
>
>
>
>
Ciao=20
> Bob
>
> ------=_NextPart_000_009C_01BEECC8.7B6E67C0--
>
>
> --
> Posted from mta03-acc.tin.it [212.216.176.34]
> via Mailgate.ORG Server - http://www.mailgate.org
Ooh, and we got our choice of reading it in Helvetica OR Arial, the
two most beautiful typefaces ever. <-- SARCASM IN SANS-SERIF CAPITALS
-- K.
(That's 2520 in Roman numerals!)
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: The Sillier Side of Sears
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 1999 05:57:13 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
Chris Masto (chris+usenet@netmonger.net) wrote:
>
> James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com) wrote:
> >
> > The large-type sales pitch on the box said:
> >
> > EURO-STYLE ROUND DOOR
>
> I am reminded of a product I see every time I go to the supermarket,
> though I keep forgetting to bring a camera in order to take a picture
> that I may share its wackiness.
>
> The box says:
>
> +---------------------------+
> | /--------\ |
> || European | New York |
> || Style | |
> | \--------/ |
> | |
> | * TEXAS TOAST |
> | |
> +---------------------------+
>
> Except it's not done in bad ASCII art.
>
> It's funny even if it did make sense to buy frozen toast.
Yes, and even if I already took a picture of it a while ago and haven't
put it up yet (the wacky food section of my Web site is nearing the big
update, in between work on my CGIs -- today my biggest CGI hit 3000 lines!
Yay! Of course, 3000 lines of computer code is no big deal if you're
programing in some wimpy language like C++ or assembly, but I'm using
Perl, so you know that any ordinary program can fit in one line of Perl,
therefore my program must be 3000 times cooler. But I think I'm
starting to digress. Back to the New York Brand European Style Texas
Garlic Toast which I've already called dibs on:)
/// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 ///
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: New Catch Phrase
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
Date: Sun, 12 Apr 1998 08:22:03 GMT
"Jaffo" (jaffo@connect.net) wrote:
>
> "HE TORE INTO EVERY PEICE OF SOFT TISSUE I HAVE!"
>
> Jaffo
Well, now that you bring up the subject of toilet paper related catchphrases...
I dunno, I'm kinda partial to the one I've been working with all day today.
I've been walking around in my Be, Inc. T-shirt and a "Hi, My Name Is
Jean-Louis Gassee" nametag shouting "WE DON'T SHIT ON OUR DEVELOPERS!"
but so far nobody believes I'm Jean-Louis Gassee. But maybe that's
just because I haven't left my bedroom all day.
Also, let's not forget Ridley Scott's favorite, "YES, GUV'NOR, MY ASS!"
And what about "TUBBY TUSTARD! TUBBY TUSTARD! TUBBY TUSTARD!" ?
Today I ate a box of European Style New York Brand Texas Garlic Toast,
which was made in Columbus, Ohio. I had to eat it before Apple Inc.
could shit on it.
But here, let me hijack the thread before I ruin it. It has come to
my attention lately that I can turn anything into bathroom humor.
("I'LL TURN ANY TYPO INTO TOILET HUMOR!" -- Kibo, Jan. 12, 1997)
For instane:
Peeps --> poops
Popeye --> has nephew named Poopeye
thirty-two --> turdy-poo
Orbitz --> Orbitzlestra
L. Ron Hubbard --> P-meter
I mean, it only takes a quarter of a second to do the obvious ones,
like Paula Poundstone, synergy, or a jungle gym. It still takes under one
second to do the hardest ones I've found, such as Frank Welker's eyeglasses
and a pound of neutrinos. So please suggest topics for discussion
that cannot possibly be made into pee-pee or poo-poo references, and
then I will use those to elevate the level of discussion.
-- K.
P.S. Peeps! Peeps! Peeps!
HA HA HA HA HA HA!!!!
/// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 ///
[this next thread meanders a while around the bathroom before stumbling
back onto the subject of Texas-flavored Toast Food:]
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: alt.recovery.disease.muppet-crotch
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
Date: Sun, 2 Aug 1998 23:16:28 GMT
Matthew J McIrvin (mmcirvin@world.std.com) wrote:
>
> Also Cat #1 is using the kitty bed we got for Cat #2, actually the New
> Number Two because the other Number Two died of a pre-existing
> condition. Fortunately this one has not died yet but does like to
> fling cat litter great distances while apparently trying to tunnel to
> the center of the earth before peeing.
> Of course we find this "endearing" because of the evil Cute Rays that
> this particular cat emits, even though it is looks nothing like the
> orange tabbies used in all cat food commercials in the post-Morris era,
I've noticed there are no black cats in commercials, even on BET.
Also they'd all have to be dubbed with James Earl Jones saying "MEOW."
because he's the only black actor allowed to do commercials.
For those of you in other countries, American TV commercials are like this:
VOICEOVER: Introducing new Splurge lemon-line drink! Here are some
people cooler than you! They drink it!
(Cut to a rap group, composed of three white people with a black guy
behind them. They hold up their hands and make "peace" signs.)
WHITE GUY #1: It's so RAD!
WHITE GUY #2: It speaks to MY generation!
WHITE GUY #3: AWESOME!
BLACK GUY (James Earl Jones): KICK IT!
VOICEOVER: Splurge! Kick it in the Splurge and get free Splurgewear!
> but is the color of television, tuned to a dead channel. Of course,
> there are limits to the effects of Cute Rays, which in Sam's case all seem
> to have to do with damage to furniture. Anyway she is still
> hundreds of miles from here, so it is cat party time.
You know, if you had said "Cat Potty Time" then you could have tied together
"Potty's Album" and "It's Potty Time" (with your friend, Mr. Penders)
or you could have said "Cat Panty Time" and tied "Panty Cat" to the
famous "Cat Soup" sketch on "Hee Haw", but nooooooooo, you had to MAKE SENSE.
Anyway, I think you should feed the cat nothing but soap suds, like
that Chinese grocery store on Essex Street that doesn't give the cat
a water dish but keeps mopping the floor.
Though it would be better if you exchanged the cat for a wild gorilla
or elephant or Frankenstein monster or Dracula before feeding it the soap,
so that it could run around the wild party scene at the end of your
sixties Peter Sellers comedy spewing soap bubbles all over because
bedlam is always funny if Peter Sellers is stoned.
-- K.
And then he died because
James Randi performed
psychic surgery on him.
/// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 ///
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: alt.recovery.disease.muppet-crotch
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
Date: Wed, 5 Aug 1998 03:53:55 GMT
djcrowe@my-dejanews.com, one of those Deja News people with no real name, wrote:
>
> All at once, James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com) wrote:
> >
> > You know, if you had said "Cat Potty Time" then you could have tied together
> > "Potty's Album" and "It's Potty Time" (with your friend, Mr. Penders)
>
> Great. Now I can't get the song "She is a Sooper-dooper Pooper"
> out of my head.
You have a pooper in your head? Hmm. Maybe Archimpedes Plutonium
should revise his patent for his full-body plaster straightjacket.
> I personally know all the words to the songs on this video.
Ha! I *ONLY* know all the words to the songs on this video.
"Hold on there, sport, what's the RUSH? Sounds like you forgot to FLUSH!"
> For a two month period of time it was my youngster's favorite.
> Due to my mutated old-timey gene (on chromosome 57), I was too stoopid
> and lazy to get up and turn the damn TV off while the tape ran continuously.
Wait, you were watching it on a tape? Mr. Penders didn't just come over?
Damn! I hate it when I get special treatment from people like Mr. Penders,
bathroom gnome!
> I recently read that the US guv-ment was friendly to some of Hitler's
> "scientists" after the II war. "It's Potty Time" was one of the first
> projects they worked on. Unfortunately for them, the delivery mechanism
> (VHS) was not readily available until the '80s.
>
> Now everyone sing:
>
> "Wipe, wipe, wipe yourself
> always front to back
> merily, merily, merily, merily
> now you've got the knack.
>
> I'M SERIOUS!!! I KNOW ALL THE WORDS!!!! KEEP BACK!!!!
> I'M NOT AFRAID TO USE THEM!!!!
Okay, if you're the world's greatest expert on "It's Potty Time"(R),
please explain these problems I have understanding it:
(1) Why is Mr. Penders the same guy as that really scary clown who
wears a bandana on his head instead of a NORMAL rainbow wig?
(2) When the kid whose birthday it is has to go potty, why
does everyone else at the party freeze for about ten minutes?
(3) Why are all the kids wearing the same underwear?
(4) Why does the kid lather with soap for about twenty minutes,
including lathering his elbows, and then he rinses for a tenth of a second?
(5) What's with that one girl in the "Moon Bounce" thing with
a simian supraorbital cranial ridge and the one giant eyebrow,
like Chaka on "Land of the Lost"?
(6) Could the daddy of the super-duper pooper actually be Urkel?
(7) How come nobody ever gave me a Super-Dooper Pooper award?
What am I doing wrong?
> - DAve C.
>
>
> -----== Posted via Deja News, The Leader in Internet Discussion ==-----
> http://www.dejanews.com/rg_mkgrp.xp Create Your Own Free Member Forum
You know, someday DejaNews (aka Deja News, depending on which of
their Web pages you read) is going to decide to give all their users
a twelve-line .sig with an ASCII picture of the USS Enterprise
battling NBC's seaQuest DSV, causing the same sort of chaos that
would have happened if Heywood Floyd had told the little girl
on the visiphone, "Oh, by the way, we found a big space alien halvah
bar on the Moon, but you can only tell your ten best friends."
And then the rest of "2001" was about the little girl with
bulging forehead and giant eyebrow evolving into a Super-Duper Pooper.
-- K.
I'm never the one who turns the
topic of discussion to the toilet.
I am, however, the only one
who can flush the discussion.
/// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 ///
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: alt.recovery.disease.muppet-crotch
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
Date: Thu, 6 Aug 1998 04:16:55 GMT
David J. Crowe (crowe@radiks.net) wrote:
>
> James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com) said:
> >
> > Okay, if you're the world's greatest expert on "It's Potty Time"(R),
> > please explain these problems I have understanding it:
>
> Triple Secret Friggin Ha! Made you research the stupid thing all afternoon!!!
Quad Ripple Ha! I watched it all NIGHT!
> > (1) Why is Mr. Penders the same guy as that really scary clown who
> > wears a bandana on his head instead of a NORMAL rainbow wig?
>
> Clowns are not only scary, but evil as well. Especially the clown that
> roamed around my hometown many years ago. Name was "Pockets the Clown."
> Had all of these pockets sewn on his clownsuit. Kids were supposed to
> "reach into" the "pockets" and pull out a "prize".
Good thing his name wasn't "Mr. Cuisinart".
THANK YOU! THANK YOU!
> Anyway, clowns are evil and affect your brane-wave patterns into thinkin'
> things. Things like making themselves look just like Mr. Pincers.
I like the idea of Mr. Pinders following little kids into the bathroom
and shouting "HEY! YOU FORGOT TO FLUSH! THAT MEANS I GET TO PINCH
YOU WHERE YOUR BATHING SUIT COVERS!"
Those "...if anyone touches you where your bathing suit covers"
public-service ads are all part of Allen Funt's campaign to get
kids to think they will be safe from pedophiles if they take off
their bathing suits. And then he'll pinch them with his giant claws.
> > (2) When the kid whose birthday it is has to go potty, why
> > does everyone else at the party freeze for about ten minutes?
>
> Gort knows why. But he ain't talkin'.
GORT, KLAATU BARADA NIKTO DUPER POOPER!
> > (3) Why are all the kids wearing the same underwear?
>
> Hmmm. I always assumed they were wearing the same BRAND of underwear.
> Now that you mention it, they're wearing the same PAIR of underwear. You
> got me on that one.
It's not even a pair. They're all wearing the same underPANT.
-- K.
WHY DO UNDERPANTS COME IN
PACKS OF SIX BUT GIANT PINCERS
COME IN PACKS OF EIGHT?
/// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 ///
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: alt.recovery.disease.muppet-crotch
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
Date: Tue, 4 Aug 1998 08:54:50 GMT
Roger Douglas (rdouglas@magna.com.au) wrote:
>
> Theresa Willis (twillis@sound.net) said:
> >
> > I guess we weren't really talking about the Weather Channel, though
> > were we? I was just trying to illustrate that most pop-culture
> > references go right over my head, and I've learned to live with that
> > so well that it really upsets my sense of Order of the Universe when I
> > have a glimmer of a clue of what it is you folks are discussing. So
> > cut it out, OK?
>
> Right! So now you have an inkling what it feels like to be an Englishman
> reading ARK in Austria!
>
> The constant sense of complete alienation, like that guy in
> "Return From the Stars".
Hey! Stanislaw Lem is *not* from Australia! So you can't possibly
understand his works even if you've seen all those "Omni" covers he
painted with bald women with metal lips sucking on tubes of oil paint!
The first time I typed that it came out "oil pant" but oil pants would
be annoying because it would be hard to get them dirty playing in the mud.
> The strange feeling of deja vu when you catch an episode of some rerun US
> sitcom on TV and suddenly half-understand something someone posted three
> years ago.
>
> The sense of absolute weirdness when Kibo mentions Barry Humphries.
FOR THOSE OF YOU READING THIS IN PARTS OF THE WORLD WHERE YOU DON'T
WATCH STUPID TV SHOWS FROM ABOUT FIVE YEARS AGO: Barry Humphries was
a mega-star in Australia for about six months as "Dame Edna". He hosted
a couple of "specials" (or the opposite thereof) in the United States
and was then quickly consigned to the counter-clockwise flush of the
toilet of history, because here in the Northern Hemisphere history
always swirls counter-clockwise whereas in Australia is swirls ANTI-clockwise.
> The total mind-blowing dislocation of reality when you find Ben and Jerry's
> ice cream on a ferry between Belfast and Stranraer.
Or when you find Emac's & Bolio's ice cream installed on your hard drive.
> I had the New York Chocolate Fudge Nut Special, or whatever the hell it's
> called.
Not European Style New York Brand Texas Garlic Toast from Ohio?
> Did you know Barry Humphries is really a WOMAN? It's true. He is just a
> character played by Dame Edna Everage!
And if you slept with him you'd be below
PUN FAILED AT 0000:00F3 -- NON-MASKABLE INTERRUPT, SYSTEM HALTED
Anyway, Roger, or as I pronounce it, Rod-Ger, or as I'd pronounce that,
Rodg-Dger, the reason I'm making this post is to cheer you up.
CHEER UP, ROGDER.
Okay, I lied. The only reason I'm making this worthless post is so that
in twenty years you'll see it in some old archive with tannin-stained
pages and dog-eared corners on all the icons, and every single proper
noun in it will be incomprehensible unless you've wasted your entire life
filling your NON-VOLATILE brain cells with stuff about Stanislaw Lem
dressing up in a pink wig and mincing around pretending to be a talented
celebrity and/or woman instead of relegating it to your FLUSHABLE brain
cells so that useful information, like the fact that "2" is always green
and "3" is always red, can go in the good part of your brain.
-- K.
"2" IS ALWAYS GREEN.
If you don't believe me,
you're colorblind.
/// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 /// 1998 ///
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: alt.recovery.disease.muppet-crotch
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
Date: Tue, 4 Aug 1998 09:51:13 GMT
I just wrote:
>
> Okay, I lied. The only reason I'm making this worthless post is so that
> in twenty years you'll see it in some old archive with tannin-stained
> pages and dog-eared corners on all the icons, and every single proper
> noun in it will be incomprehensible unless you've wasted your entire life
> [...]
Okay, I lied again. I'm going to explain the stuff I mentioned
earlier in this discussion about Muppet Crotch Recovery just so that
when you see the above post in twenty years you'll realize you
didn't need to spend twenty years keeping garbage out of your brain
and could have stuffed your head with "seaQuest" until it popped.
Your head, not the "seaQuest". But that would be good too.
> From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
> Subject: Re: alt.recovery.disease.muppet-crotch
> Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
> Date: Sun, 2 Aug 1998 23:16:28 GMT
> X-Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 8316 centons, 67 microns, .01 abians
Those are things called headers. Headers were a way of communicating
metadata back in the 20th century. Metadata was what came after data
but before nondata, the official language of all 21st-century game shows.
"Alex, I'll take Yak Blarging for purple spiral dollars."
"The answer is: This inside-out walnut-flavored zeppelin defenestrated
a poppy-seed larblax glarpnod."
"What is Muppet Crotch?"
"You bleez!"
(The contestant begins jumping up and down and squealing or crying,
depending on whether bleezing is better that losing or worse than winning
that day. On days when bleezing is worse than losing, the contestant
is put in a soundproof isolation chamber with a nuclear bomb.)
> Matthew J McIrvin (mmcirvin@world.std.com) wrote:
> >
> > Also Cat #1 is using the kitty bed we got for Cat #2, actually the New
> > Number Two because the other Number Two died of a pre-existing
> > condition. Fortunately this one has not died yet but does like to
> > fling cat litter great distances while apparently trying to tunnel to
> > the center of the earth before peeing.
>
> > Of course we find this "endearing" because of the evil Cute Rays that
> > this particular cat emits, even though it is looks nothing like the
> > orange tabbies used in all cat food commercials in the post-Morris era,
Matt was some guy who lived back in the 20th century. He's dead now.
However, in an ironic twist, the original Cat Number Two is no longer dead.
> I've noticed there are no black cats in commercials, even on BET.
BET was a TV channel with fewer honkies on it than The WB.
Honkies were clowns who went around honking their little pink noses.
The WB was a TV channel of sorts. Eventually it was reduced to
half a channel, with an aquarium shown in the bottom half of the screen.
Every day the water level went up a little until everyone drowned.
> Also they'd all have to be dubbed with James Earl Jones saying "MEOW."
> because he's the only black actor allowed to do commercials.
James Earl Jones was the only African-American actor that honkies liked,
because he scared them, but they were scared of all black people, but
they knew James Earl Jones was really only pretending to scare them
so he's okay, not like that creepy Bill Cosby guy!
Mr. Jones, a recipient of twelve Oscars (all for "Star Wars XIII:
Darth's Back"), died in office and his duties were assumed by
Vice-President Jerry Springer.
> For those of you in other countries, American TV commercials are like this:
Commercials were what they had before those darts with the synthetic
memory cells on the tip that the robots roaming the street would
throw into your brain. This was because in the 20th century it was
considered impolite to leave your brain exposed on top.
> VOICEOVER: Introducing new Splurge lemon-line drink! Here are some
> people cooler than you! They drink it!
>
> (Cut to a rap group, composed of three white people with a black guy
> behind them. They hold up their hands and make "peace" signs.)
Rap was the form of music after disco and before farta.
> WHITE GUY #1: It's so RAD!
>
> WHITE GUY #2: It speaks to MY generation!
>
> WHITE GUY #3: AWESOME!
>
> BLACK GUY (James Earl Jones): KICK IT!
This was much like our modern expression, "Twenty-Four Skiddoo!"
> VOICEOVER: Splurge! Kick it in the Splurge and get free Splurgewear!
>
> > but is the color of television, tuned to a dead channel. Of course,
> > there are limits to the effects of Cute Rays, which in Sam's case all seem
> > to have to do with damage to furniture. Anyway she is still
> > hundreds of miles from here, so it is cat party time.
The 'color of television tuned to a dead channel" is a reference to
one of those old-tymey writers like D. H. Lawrence or Bret Easton Ellis,
you know, those square clods whose works are utterly irrelevant in
our modern society.
> You know, if you had said "Cat Potty Time" then you could have tied together
> "Potty's Album" and "It's Potty Time" (with your friend, Mr. Penders)
> or you could have said "Cat Panty Time" and tied "Panty Cat" to the
> famous "Cat Soup" sketch on "Hee Haw", but nooooooooo, you had to MAKE SENSE.
Well, here's the straight dope extracted from the gold-plated slices
of Kibo's brain in the Smithsonian Insta-Tuna. "It's Potty Time" was
a video (those were like radio, only they could be recorded) in which
a Duke University grad student dressed up as "Mr. Penders", got really
small, and followed little kids into the bathroom while singing about
the fun of ALWAYS flushing. "Potty's Album" was some book a friend's
roommate had, containing photos of a kitten. (He was from Korea, where
apparently literary standards are even lower than they were in the
United States, which was the name of the country before it changed its
named to States Plus. Photos were like livos only you couldn't kill
them by slamming the book really hard.) "Panty Cat" was some bizarre
video game from Japan. Japan was a country that was destroyed when they
lost control of a video game -- video games were a popular form of
entertainment which combined realistic depictions of extreme violence
with a complete lack of physics, logic, or desaturated colors.
> Anyway, I think you should feed the cat nothing but soap suds, like
> that Chinese grocery store on Essex Street that doesn't give the cat
> a water dish but keeps mopping the floor.
Cheng Kwong was a store which once sold Kibo a pair of frozen frogs
that were stuck together. This was before Kibo discovered much bigger,
and less odiferous, Chinese supermarkets to the south, such as
The 88 Super Market and Ming's, which had an Aisle Of Jerks.
Jerks were people like President Springer.
> Though it would be better if you exchanged the cat for a wild gorilla
> or elephant or Frankenstein monster or Dracula before feeding it the soap,
> so that it could run around the wild party scene at the end of your
> sixties Peter Sellers comedy spewing soap bubbles all over because
> bedlam is always funny if Peter Sellers is stoned.
This was a reference to Peter Sellers's film "The Party" (elephant)
and Peter Sellers's "The Magic Christian" (Dracula) and Peter Sellers's
film "Casino Royale" (Frankenstein) and a pastiche of sixties comedy
films that Saturday Night Live once did (the gorilla). These films
always ended with five dozen people in one swank hotel room running
around in circles while soap suds sprayed all over them, much like
at the 2040 Presidential Assassination Games.
>
> -- K.
>
> And then he died because
> James Randi performed
> psychic surgery on him.
James "The Amazing" Randi used to appear on Johnny Carson's show while
performing psychic surgery (sticking his hands into other people's business
and pulling out their liver and showing it to them) to demonstrate
how real psychic surgery was. Peter Sellers died because he went to
some Caribbean island for cheap fake psychic surgery instead of
going to Randi. Mr. Randi lived to be 150, although for the last
thirty years of his live he was only kept alive as a disembodied foot.
P.S. "Muppet Crotch" was the disease that wiped out everyone who
didn't cry when the Year 2000 Problem destroyed their TV sets.
The cure was found to involve leaving your brain exposed to
the air at the top, and re-electing Jerry Springer.
-- K.
I'M LOOKING DOWN ON YOU
FROM THE DISTANT FUTURE
AND BOY DO YOU PEOPLE SMELL.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: For the Love of Three Pennies
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 1999 06:28:10 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
Nick S Bensema (nickb@primenet.com) wrote:
>
> I wonder how long it would take for pennies to really go away once
> they stopped making them.
Oh, the government could get rid of all the pennies really fast, and
they wouldn't even have to use that secret bomb that only destroys copper.
Have you noticed that homeless people do a great job picking up all
the beer bottles and cans in the United States for that wonderful 5c
deposit (10c in Michigan)? Well, the government's secret plan is to
give a nickel to anyone who turns in a penny.
-- K.
I like how there's no reward for
bottle caps, so every vacant lot
is covered with just the caps.
But you never see any pull tabs
with them, because the homeless
people save them for Craig Shergold.
P.S. Did you know that if I dropped a penny off the top of the Empire
State Building, my entire first-grade class would have to do the same?
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: !lurk
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 1999 06:36:54 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
David Pacheco (david_pacheco@lineone.net) wrote:
>
> benzilla@hotmail.com wrote:
> >
> > are any of y'all a fan of ee cummings?
>
> Yes, he was the poet who wrote everything in whispers.
I wacky-parsed that as "who wrote everything in diapers".
> > I just discovered ARK, and have lurked, hoping to unleash the inner
> > kibologist, whining petulantly for a chance to post.
>
> You will understand Kibology a lot better when you realize that *you*
> are merely the inner child inside a completely different Kibologist.
My inner child has a creamy center made with 10% real beef juice.
> You will also comprehend more once you are able to explain the quote
> provided to me by Kibological Grand Master M. Otis Beard:
>
> "The Spanish had little interest in pagan gods or gender-bending
> vegetables."
>
> -dp.
> How does one bend the
> gender of a vegetable?
You've never grown zucchini. You can tell the male flowers from the female
flowers a mile away. Oh, sure, they're all big and orange, but only the
female ones have zucchini growing below them. This is because only girls
could ever like zucchini.
Today I was flipping channels and came across some freaky computer-animated
talking vegetables (their ringleader was a zucchini, or possibly a cucumber)
re-enacting the Bible story of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego not burning
up in the furnace because there was a guy who was "all shiny" in the furnace
with them. This is the first time I have seen this miracle re-enacted
by talking vegetables that didn't sing the Andrew Lloyd Weber songs.
It was truly scary. Apparently this is an actual TV series of talking,
computer-animated veggies that meet Jesus every week.
-- K.
It's just like if, as a favor
to Kermit Love, Jim Henson made
some puppets for "Gerbert".
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: In Germany, We Have Ways Of Making You Laugh
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 1999 07:29:52 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
Uncle Ben (benr@netcom.com) wrote:
>
> From www.telegraph.co.uk
> (c) Copyright of Telegraph Group Limited 1999.
> Electronic Telegraph -- the pioneering online newspaper
> Issue Number 1549
> Sunday 22 August 1999
>
> IN GERMANY, WE HAVE WAYS OF MAKING YOU LAUGH
> By Louise Potterton in Wiesbaden
Ooh. Someone should tell her she shouldn't make jokes about Germans
being Nazis. They don't like to be stereotyped. It makes them
very, very, very, very mad.
> WIESBADEN, Germany -- Germans are being persuaded to acquire a
> sense of humour with the establishment of a nationwide network
> of "laughter clubs".
I assume it's like a sports bar only they gather around a television
to watch hilarious American television, like "Murphy Brown" and
that show with Urkel.
> In an effort to rid the nation of its dour, humourless image, they
> are being encouraged to meet once a week to practise laughter
> exercises and tell jokes. The objective is to train them to erupt
> into a hearty laugh at the merest whiff of a jest.
SOMETHING SMELLS FUNNY! I BETTER LAUGH EVEN THOUGH IT'S PROBABLY RANCID!
> Research conducted at Berkeley University, California, has shown
> that Germans laugh only for an average of six minutes a day;
> Britons laugh for 15 minutes, while the French, well-known for
> their joie de vivre, laugh for a hearty 18 minutes.
And the guy who travelled from country to country with a stopwatch and
clipboard hasn't laughed in twenty years.
> Michael Berger, the founder of the laughter clubs, said: "Germans
> have no sense of humour. The German is a very serious person,
> and he likes to moan a lot."
Well, then, it's a good thing that there is only one of him.
> When Mr Berger set up the first club he pointed to scientific studies
> done by the European laughter league leaders, the Italians, who spend
> 19 minutes a day enjoying a good laugh.
It sounds like this: "HAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA..."
> He said: "Germans don't laugh enough because they simply don't
> have enough time.
Oh, ja, they love the jokes, they just choose not to laugh to save time.
ALSO THIS GUY BETTER STOP STEROTYPING GERMANS RIGHT NOW! STEREOTYPING
PEOPLE ISN'T FUNNY! EVEN IF IT TRICKS THEM INTO PAYING YOU TO LISTEN
TO THEM TRY TO LAUGH!
> They always think that 'time is money' and everything has become so fast.
> Because of this Germans have lost the art of laughter." He also said that
> in the Fifties they laughed three times more than they do today.
Yes, but Dyan Cannon hardly uses her cork-lined Primal Scream Therapy
room any more. In fact, Primal Screams are down a whopping 100% since
the late seventies. So I'm going to open a new "Screen Your Ass Off" club.
The sound that provokes people to scream for their lives will be a
recording of Germans trying to laugh.
> Since the first club opened last December in Wiesbaden the
> laughter sessions have become more and more popular. There are
> now 22 clubs and 350 members learning how to chortle, chuckle and
> split their sides. The Wiesbaden club, which meets in a disused church,
DEAR MONTY PYTHON,
PLEASE STOP STEALING WACKY SKETCH IDEAS ABOUT SILLY CHRUCHES FROM THE GERMANS.
THIS IS WHY YOU WERE NEVER ON GERMAN TELEVISION
YOUR FRIEND,
BRIGADIER NOT A GERMAN. (RET.)
> has 35 members, ranging in age from 10 to 80.
>
> Mr Berger said the clubs' laughter techniques are not based on the
> traditional methods of using aides such as silly noses and corny
> joke routines.
I agree, jokes aren't funny. I mean, look at Jay Leno.
> Instead, members spend 20 minutes following 11 step-by-step
> well ordered regulations.
IT'S RIGIDLY SCRIPTED ANARCHY!
I bet Germans like "Kids Say The Darndest Things" too.
The only show on TV that's more rigged than "Kids Say The Darndest Things"
would have to be "Columbo".
(True story: While waiting for the subway recently, this toddler was jumping
up and down on the bench next to me, singing "I LIKE COLUMBO! I LIKE COLUMBO!"
endlessly. I fail to understand why any toddler would like Columbo.)
> At the beginning of the sessions the participants form a circle, clap
> their hands and chant "Ho-ho-ha-ha-ha" as loudly as they can.
Aren't they supposed to lie on their backs in a big circle, where everyone
has their head on the next person's stomach, and chant "HUH! HUH! HUH!"
until they all start to giggle? No, wait, that was Morris Kaufman's
acting class in college. There was nothing funny about that. Even though
I got to be the psycho boy in "Equus".
> Later, laughter students are taught to pounce on each other like lions.
Then they are taught to speak with silly Fake German accents just
like Benny Hill did in 90% of his sketches.
> Mr Berger, who always wears a bell on his shoe (just for laughs),
OH, LOOK, THE MAN'S FOOT IS MAKING ANNOYING NOISES 24 HOURS A DAY WHEN
HE WALKS! IT'S FUNNY!
In the United States, if you wore a bell on your shoe, you would be
murdered within minutes. The only thing worse would be if you had
a harmonica. We just don't cotton to that kind of funny stuff here.
> explained: "At first the laughter is of course restrained, but
> when the participants allow the laughter to take over they become
> more and more relaxed. We need to know how to take full advantage
> of this free and easy facility to laugh. Everyone has a sense of
> humour when they are born. One of the first things a baby does is
> smile at its mother. But this has been lost and we need to learn
> it again."
>
> Manfred Leitner, 55, a member of the Regensburg club, said he
> enjoyed the "lion laugh" in particular, which he demonstrated by
> opening his mouth wide, sticking his tongue out and raising his
> hands to imitate a lion's paws - followed shortly afterwards by
> a hearty laugh.
I'm starting to think that I should put "The Special Show" on the air
in Germany.
Hmm, I could open it with Pope Emperor FrogMaN dragging a lady
into a lake.
> He said: "I think the lion laugh looks so funny that I have to
> laugh so much and can no longer speak. Of course, it is strange
> to meet complete strangers in order to laugh with them."
>
> Mr Leitner has scientific evidence on his side when he claims that
> laughter is good for you. Michael Titze, a psychologist, said:
"Finally I can laugh at the utter hilarity of my own name, which is
suggestive of the chestal regions of the female people."
Then he started dancing to Kraftwerk while wearing a black leotard.
> "Laughing strengthens the immune defence system and the heart, and
> it improves the breathing. Laughter peps you up, so even
> depressed people feel better."
>
> And it is often said that laughter is infectious. At the first
> meeting of the club in Preunschen bei Amorbach firemen meeting
> nearby came along, looked in at the windows, and joined in with the
> gales of laughter. "We had a whale of a time," said one member.
Okay, so you have these German firemen in their rubber coats and gas
masks, and a couple of gummikrankenshwesterin, and Pope FrogMaN
carries them all into a lake, while singing about being a lumberjack,
and then this German guy imitates a lion, which gives Terry Gilliam
a heart attack, making the shiny back house burst into flames, killing
Mike Myers, but he keeps coming back from the dead because they keep
forgetting to take away his hockey mask before they bury him, and then
a giant foot from a Bronzino painting comes down and crushes them and
a giant hammer crushes the giant foot and then a giant cutout of
God's hand crushes the giant hammer, and then these lame-o's called
"The State" rip off all their sketches on MTV, before they're
replaced by Tom Green, who should be sent to Germany.
-- K.
Or Singapore. Let's get
him to perform on a public
street in Singapore.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Shocking! Sagan was a pothead!
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 1999 10:30:55 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
Matt McIrvin (mmcirvin@world.std.com) wrote:
>
> > Biographer: Sagan Smoked Marijuana
> >
> > By SCOTT ANDREWS Associated Press Writer
> >
> > SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The late astronomer and author Carl Sagan was a
> > secret but avid marijuana smoker, crediting it with inspiring essays and
> > scientific insight, according to Sagan's biographer.
>
> So... that footnote in _The Dragons of Eden_, about how cool it was that
> some tribe mentioned in anthropology textbooks smoked pot all the time just
> like anybody who had any sense whatsoever, was supposed to be secret?
Well, the paragraph in _The Demon-Haunted World_ about the evils of
government's War On Drugs isn't in the index. I looked up "drugs" and
"war on" and "pot" and "cannabis" and "marijuana" and "illegal" and "legalize"
but couldn't find it. I know it's in there, 'cause I just read the book
last week, but it's definitely hidden in some secret part of it that
I can't find while flipping through. (It's something about how the
government's claims that pot causes bodily harm are pseudoscience.)
The only bit on pot I could find flipping through it right now is
on the first page of Chapter 25 ("Real Patriots Ask Questions"):
[on discussing how we can't predict what social programs will
benefit society without trying them]
... Exchanging needles, making condoms freely available,
or decriminalizing marijuana are all experiments.
Basically, that paragraph hints that we should try making pot legal
to see what happens.
Here's another one, from the chapter "Science and Witchcraft":
Yes, there are Constitutional prohibitions against unreasonable
search and seizure, but we have a war on drugs and violent
crime is racing out of control.
Ah! Found the smoking gun (page 344, the chapter "House on Fire":)
Science has discredited itself. It works for politicians.
It makes weapons, it lies about marijuana "hazards",
it ignores about the dangers of agent orange, etc.
...but that's not Sagan writing (with the malformed grammar and
missing capitals) because he's quoting a letter he received.
Ah, well, so much for my remembering he said bad things about
the War on Drugs. It turns out that in the whole book he only
wrote two of the three pro-marijuana passages.
It's still interesting that "marijuana" isn't in the index,
especially given that the book has a few chapters devoted to
the subject of hallucinations and altered states of consciousness.
"tobacco industry" _is_ in the index, linking to a couple of pages about
how deadly cigarettes are. I think Dr. Sagan was one of those people who
thought pot was less harmful than tobacco.
Of course, an alterate conspiracy theo^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hplausible explanation
for the pro-pot slant of his books is that perhaps they were all actually
written by his wife, Ann Druyan -- who is one of the directors of NORMAL,
the people who want to legalize pot. (She was also the inspiration for the
Jodie Foster character in "Contact" as well as co-author of the screen
treatment that became the novel, which was only credited to Sagan.
She does occasionally get "with Ann Druyan" credit in tiny print in some
of his books -- for instance, in _The Demon-Haunted World_ she's not
mentioned on the cover but inside a tiny asterisk gives her credit for
co-authoring several chapters -- and on other books, such as "Comet" and
"Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors", she gets up-front co-author credit.)
Dr. Sagan was one of the most important scientists in our time --
absolutely THE leading authority on Venus, Mars, etc. -- but
it's understandable why people still make fun of him. After
_Cosmos_ aired on PBS, his hyper-solemn delivery of sometimes leaden
prose, his turtleneck sweater, and -- for reasons nobody understands --
the phrase "billions and billions" endeared him to comedians everywhere.
(I found his repetition of "numinous" in _Contact_ more amusing.)
Then came that bizarre incident where he attempted to sue a
computer company over the internal code name of a computer they
hadn't manufactured, with the trade papers reporting that said computer
company had renamed the model "BHA" ("Butt-Head Astronomer".)
And eventually the movie of _Contact_ came out, featuring Jodie Foster
flying through a Time Tunnel in a space dodecahedron (bringing back
memories of Sagan's discussion of the geometric perfection of the
dodecahedron in _Cosmos_, especially the page with the big painting
showing what life would be like if the Library of Alexandria never
burned down -- people speaking Greek would be exploring distant stars
right now in spaceships with dodecahedrons painted on the sides!)
So, I do respect the late Dr. Sagan's life's work in his field of
expertise, a field in which he was unquestionably the foremost thinker,
but you gotta admit, the pot-head was also a butt-head.
Basically, he would have been quietly revered by scientists (and not
made fun of by millions of people who hadn't heard of him) if he
hadn't made the mistake of trying to popularize science on tee-vee.
(I suspect the "billions and billions" thing is one of those
"Judy, Judy, Judy" or "Play it again, Sam" memes where all the hack
comedians were imitating someone else's impression of Dr. Sagan,
probably Steve Allen, who did a lame impression of Sagan a few times
during PBS pledge drives in the early eighties.)
And now that it turned out that he liked to smoke a joint or two
or three, well, people are going to keep teasing the poor dead guy.
Every time I feel guilty about mocking such a prominent scientist,
I think of all the shots in the TV version of _Cosmos_ showing
close-ups of him staring into the camera grinning maniacally at
how incredibly cool the animated stars going past the window are,
and the scene of him throwing all the chemical elements into
the air in super-slow-motion, and of how funny the words
"numinous", "dodecahedron", and "butt-head" are.
-- K.
In other words, this is the closest I can
come to apologizing for killing him.
P.S. Steve Allen is funny in the same way as Sagan.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Shocking! Sagan was a pothead!
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 1999 11:01:11 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
[I already followed up to this, but I have new evidence...]
Matt McIrvin (mmcirvin@world.std.com) wrote:
>
> So... that footnote in _The Dragons of Eden_, about how cool it was that
> some tribe mentioned in anthropology textbooks smoked pot all the time just
> like anybody who had any sense whatsoever, was supposed to be secret?
I poked around the Web a little, restricting myself to Web pages that
pre-dated the "outing" of Sagan's pot use a couple days ago (this wasn't
hard, as most Web search sites are slow to update -- I used Altavista,
which never finds anything less than three months old) and found a
lot of interesting tidbits just by searching on "sagan and marijuana".
Turns out Dr. Sagan, like his wife, was one of the directors of NORML,
the marijuana-legalization lobbying organization. Apparently that was
something nobody noticed. I would tend to assume that if he was heading
an attempt to legalize wacky 'baccy that he may have smoked it at least once...
...but reporters never notice this stuff until someone reveals A BIG SECRET
in a press release.
Other bits from the Web that anyone could have spotted months ago:
Here's Dr. Sagan quoted on a pro-pot Web site, the quote to which
Matt was referring:
> In defense of the Pygmies, perhaps I should note that a friend of mine who
> has spent time with them says that for such activities as the patient
> stalking and hunting of mammals and fish they prepare themselves through
> marijuana intoxication, which helps to make the long waits, boring to
> anyone further evolved than a Komodo dragon, at least moderately
> tolerable. Ganja is, he says, their only cultivated crop. It would be
> wryly interesting if in human history the cultivation of marijuana led
> generally to the invention of agriculture, and thereby to civilization.
> (The marijuana-intoxicated Pygmy, poised patiently for an hour with his
> fishing spear aloft, is earnestly burlesqued by the beer-sodden riflemen,
> protectively camouflaged in red plaid, who, stumbling through the nearby
> woods, terrorize American suburbs each Thanksgiving.)
> -- Carl Sagan, "The Dragons of Eden, Speculations on the Origin of
> Human Intelligence," footnote on p. 191, 1978 paperback edition,
> copyright 1977
Here's a bit from the Web site of the guy who "outed" Sagan --
Lester Grinspoon, author of "Cocaine: A Drug and Its Social Evolution",
and fellow NORML board member:
> It was August of 1975. Carl Sagan and his wife Linda were visiting me and
> my wife Betsy at our rented cottage in Orleans on Cape Cod. We found a
> telescope in a closet and set it up on the deck, which afforded an
> unobstructed view of the salt marshes, the ocean, and the nearly full moon
> rising above them. We shared a smoke and waited for night to come. Our
> twin boys, age 9, had been visiting their cousins on the other side of the
> cove, and by the time they returned the sky was almost fully dark. They
> had never looked through a telescope before, and their excitement was
> uncontainable as they saw the moon magnified for the first time. Carl
> pointed out the terminator, the maria, and other features as Joshua and
> Peter jostled for turns at the telescope with repeated expressions of
> wonder. When Carl was asked why the face of the moon always remained the
> same, he arranged the twins, Linda, Betsy and me in a shoulder-to-shoulder
> rotating group to represent earth, while he circled it, representing the
> moon. I thought that if the moon could have seen this strange dance, it
> might have joined the giggling. After this demonstration, the boys
> continued to take turns looking through the telescope and pointing out
> features to each other until it was time for bed.
It was in REALLY BIG LETTERS, too. So, the above Web page was sitting
there months ago just waiting for reporters to notice it describes
Sagan getting high and looking into the telescope and giggling at Uranus,
but nobody noticed. The same way they never noticed that Pee-wee Herman's
TV show had lots of sex jokes in it until his little incident.
And here's what Dr. Sagan said on the jacket of a book about drugs:
> Psychedelic Drugs Reconsidered (Drug Policy Classics Reprints Series Number 1)
> by Lester Grinspoon, James B. Bakalar
>
> "An exceptionally well-balanced scientific discussion of every aspect of
> psychedelic drugs.... It is a courageous book which simultaneously
> succeeds for both the popular and scientific audiences."--Carl Sagan
Okay, so he blurbed his friend's book on drugs. In actual print
where anyone could have noticed. Even if they didn't notice, while
reviewing the book someone could have read Lester Grinspoon's bio
and found out that he was on the board of NORML, and looked to see
who else was running NORML, and lo and behold, Sagan would have showed up.
Events at NORML in 1994:
> As for Stephen Dillon, he was a member of NORML's board of directors from
> approximately November, 1991 until September 11, 1994. On August 4, 1994,
> Dillon sent a letter to NORML's board of directors "urging them to support
> Dan Viets' motion to dissolve the current Board, except for Richard Cowan,
> and with the expressed understanding that there was in existence a
> newlyconstituted Board including Dr. Lester Grinspoon, Dr. John Morgan,
> Dr. Ethan Nadelmann and Carl Sagan."
I really don't think it's a big deal that a dead guy liked to get
high. I'm just intrigued by the way the news media are making such
a big deal over something which they could have noticed years ago if
it had actually been a big shocking secret.
-- K.
Next up: MSNBC covers up the
secret that Bill Gates is a NERD!
P.S. If anyone needs a private investigator, I'm available cheap.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Shocking! Sagan was a pothead!
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Wed, 25 Aug 1999 08:35:07 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
Eric Boesch (EBO@dannet.dk) wrote:
>
> James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com) wrote:
> >
> > If anyone needs a private investigator
>
> Investigate me! Then I can go back to watching TV 24 hours a day
> instead of trying to dig up something interesting about myself.
Okay. Your need to send me a check for a million billion zillion dollars
up front. Then I can dig up all the dirt on you, like whether or not
you've been sending checks to sleazy people.
> Also, are there any other newsgroups that are so secret that even
> the group itself is a codename? "Kibology" obviously doesn't mean
> anything.
>
> Since the agenda is hidden, nobody can say, "Please leave. What you
> are saying has nothing to do with the subject of this newsgroup,
> radar-invisible nuclear-tipped zeppelins."
>
> Well, they could. But they'd have to say it in code, so I wouldn't
> understand THAT message either!
Actually, you got the part about zeppelins right. But we have no need
for primitive NUCLEAR zeppelins here in alt.religion.kibology. Our zeppelins
are much more powerful because they're powered by antimatter. This not
only makes them lighter than air, it makes them lighter than empty space!
At this very moment I'm flying a zeppelin entirely filled with negative
five hundred tons of the opposite of lead. Now I just have to find the
exact opposite of the Empire State Building so I can moor it...
-- K.
I wish ALL buildings had
zeppelin mooring points on top.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Shocking! Sagan was a pothead!
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Fri, 27 Aug 1999 02:42:04 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
Stefan Elisa Kapusniak (stefan.kapus@zetnet.co.uk) wrote:
>
> James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com) wrote:
> >
> > I wish ALL buildings had zeppelin mooring points on top.
>
>
> If all buildings had zeppelin mooring points on top of
> them, angry architects would get into small wars about
> whether you measured the height of the building including
> or excluding the zeppelin mooring point.
Then Boston would have to have a third skyscraper so that the Hancock
tower could be the tallest by the height of the roof but the Prudential
would be tallest by the height of the antenna but the Hancock would be
the tallest by the number of floors but the Prudential would be tallest
by the highest-numbered floor but the Polychromatic Evil Zeppelin
building would be the tallest because it had a zeppelin on top.
Also, all zeppelins should have buildings on top. And so on.
In fact, everything should have "and so on" on top.
> We would have to design specially extensible zeppelin
> mooring points so that when somebody built the worlds
> tallest building, you could just extend your mooring
> point so that you had the worlds tallest building again.
>
> After many rounds of extending these mooring points
> we would have a cheap and reliable route to low earth
> orbit by sending climbing monkeys up the zeppelin mooring
> point with spacecraft strapped to their backs.
But only if people wanted to ride in something as smelly as a rocket and as
dangerous as a monkey.
-- K.
Know what would be fun?
Little candy zeppelins you could bite.
NEW "BITE & BANG" ZEPPELINS!
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Yo! Word to Your Stockbroker!
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 1999 11:25:21 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
M. Otis Beard (barbus@uswest.net) wrote:
>
> The following spam showed up in my mailbox a few minutes ago:
>
> > Subject: You have been identified as a Successful African American!
>
> I'm looking at my skin, and it's still white, so I'm afraid I'd have to
> identify myself as an Unsuccessful African-American.
This is like one of those "Twilight Zone" episode written after all the
fun had been wrung out of Rod Serling's brain and he had started to turn
into someone with all the subtlety of Jack Webb.
GUY IN WHITE HOOD: You have been identified as a Successful
African American!
M. OTIS BEARD: There must be some mistake!
GUY IN WHITE HOOD: I am a robot! I cannot be wrong!
(CUE TOY PIANO PLAYING "AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL" AT HALF SPEED)
M. OTIS BEARD: You may be a robot, and a robot may be
smarter than a man, but that does not make you
even as much of a man as a wooden ventriloquist's
dummy in the hands of Genghis Khan, a sick and
twisted little man whose clotted little soul is a
bottomless little pit of evil little thoughts that
spread like a blemish across the face of goodness and--
GUY IN WHITE HOOD: That! Does not! Compute! (HE EXPLODES.)
(SWISH-PAN TO ROD SERLING.)
ROD SERLING: Another tale, filed under "M" for "Moral Lesson",
in... "The Twilight Zone."
(HE SHOVES A SCRIPT INTO A BULGING FILE CABINET LABELLED "M FOR MORAL
LESSON", NEXT TO SEVERAL EMPTY FILING CABINETS WITH OTHER LETTERS.)
> > The North American Registry of Who's Who Among Successful African Americans
> > cordially invites you for inclusion in the upcoming 1998-99 edition of our
> > publication.
>
> As long as you're willing to consider Ireland an African nation, I'm game.
> It shouldn't be THAT hard for you. . . I mean, the British government has
> been doing it for centuries.
I think my free subscription to American Legacy, the magazine about my
black heritage, eventually lapsed because I haven't seen it lately.
I think it's my zip code that made me black. Because my zip code has
A CITY in it!
IN THE UNITED STATES, IT'S EASY TO FIND A REASON TO BE BLACK!
Do those of you who DO have relatively dark skin keep getting ads that
say "You're a white person! Buy this videotape of 'Hee Haw'!" or does
this sort of bozosity only go this one way?
I mean, if it went the other way, it would be racist!
> >This invitation has resulted from you being featured in some publication,
>
> Strange, I don't recall being interviewed in Ebony or Black Business Week.
> Then again, I do quite a bit of drinking, so I guess anything is possible.
You were in "Jet" a few years ago. The article talked about how you
were the only good actor on NBC's "seaQuest DSV". Although, now you're
on that show about the time-travelling icosahedron, so I suspect your
career isn't as successful as the spam would suggest.
Also, why did they make it an icosahedron, given that Carl Sagan
conclusively proved that anything that could travel through time
would be a dodecahedron?
> > Our registry has been developed from the prestigious 100 year old Who's Who
> > tradition and, of course, each edition will be registered with the Library
> > of Congress for future generations to review.
>
> Future generations will no doubt find it terribly important and richly
> rewarding
> to spend lots and lots of time looking up the names of random rich dead
> black people.
Well, see, they used to bury the white folks and black folks in separate
cemeteries, in preparation for the day when, in the year 4000, Super Hitler-58
would revive only the Aryans. But now everyone's all mixed together, and
it's politically incorrect to have "I AM AN ARYAN, PLEASE REVIVE ME,
MISTER SUPER HITLER-58" on your tombstone, so the white folks started this
massive conspiracy to get all the black people listed in "Who's Black"
so they'll know who they don't need to revive.
Assuming, of course, that Super Hitler-58 can read it, because it's only
printed in English, and not in his native language, EVIL ESPERANTO!!!
(It's like regular Esperanto except printed in fraktur. And there are
umlauts on EVERY letter.)
-- K.
Fun prank: Send your arch-enemy
an official-looking letter saying
"You have been selected to appear
in 'Who's Who Among People Who
Are Really Stupid'," and see if
they send you $79.95.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Yo! Word to Your Stockbroker!
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 1999 02:54:52 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
M. Otis Beard (barbus@uswest.net) wrote:
>
> James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com) wrote:
> >
> > [Re: Otis being spammed by Who's Who Among Successful African-Americans]
> >
> > You were in "Jet" a few years ago. The article talked about how you
> > were the only good actor on NBC's "seaQuest DSV". Although, now you're
> > on that show about the time-travelling icosahedron, so I suspect your
> > career isn't as successful as the spam would suggest.
>
> Actually, I strongly suspect that I received that particular spam merely
> because my name is Otis, which just goes to show that the bozocity of the
> real world is every bit as mind-bogglingly powerful as the synthetic,
> artificially flavored bozocity we proudly create here in ark using the best
> ingredients on Earth-2.
So who are you as black as, Ned Beatty in "Superman: The Movie" or
the invisible, fictional, made-up Otis Spunkmeyer?
Quick! Spot the actual humans:
Otis Spunkmeyer
Orville Redenbacher
Duncan Hines
Chef Boyardee
Betty Crocker
General Mills
Mrs. Paul
The Jolly Green Giant
Correct answers will be rewarded. Wrong answers will be rewarded too,
but only from my point of view, he said as he took his spanking paddle
off the wall rack.
> > Also, why did they make it an icosahedron, given that Carl Sagan
> > conclusively proved that anything that could travel through time
> > would be a dodecahedron?
>
> For the same reason that Irwin Allen had to go back in time and burn the
> Great Library at Alexandria: because that information is CLASSIFIED.
I suspect Irwin Allen would never have done an episode of "The Time Tunnel"
where Carl Sagan got to live out his boyhood fantasy of saving all the
papyri from the Alexandrian Library because (a) there aren't any black
and white movies set in the library for him to "borrow" the footage from,
and (b) I'm sure Irwin Allen never heard of it. I mean, it was a LIBRARY.
It had BOOKS AND STUFF. Irwin Allen was only an expert in gluing
Ping-Pong balls to factory-reject wetsuits.
> > [...]
> >
> > Assuming, of course, that Super Hitler-58 can read it, because it's only
> > printed in English, and not in his native language, EVIL ESPERANTO!!!
>
> I'd reply to this with something witty, but the name "Super Hitler-58" and
> the concept of Evil Esperanto have rendered me temporarily unable to type or
> think.
>
> ANIMAL 57 + SUPERMAN
> I
> I
> SUPER ANIMAL 57 + HITLER
> I
> I
> SUPER HITLER 57 + FWB-CSBVO
> I
> I
> SUPER HITLER-58
>
> First one to get this joke in its entirety wins a laudatory poem.
I get the feeling a bunch of people on alt.religion.kibology are going
to followup with one-line posts that say "COOH-TER!" Or maybe I'm
thinking of the wacky people over on sci.chem.
I like how you substituted "HITLER" for "MAN", keeping in mind that
syllogism written on the bathroom wall of the Library of Alexandria:
* Hitler is a man.
* Hitler is evil.
* Therefore, all men are evil.
-- Murphy Brown
Speaking of people who got way too much airtime out of making fun of
Dan Quayle, have you been seeing that long commercial for the
"Presidential Bloopers" videotape? About half of the scenes appear
to be of Dan Quayle. Was he President before or after Morgan Freeman?
> > Fun prank: Send your arch-enemy an official-looking letter saying
> > "You have been selected to appear in 'Who's Who Among People Who
> > Are Really Stupid'," and see if they send you $79.95.
>
> I dunno, Kibo. If I were you, I wouldn't attempt to deposit any checks
> drawn on the account of some joker with a name like "Archimedes Plutonium".
Why? Whose arch-enemy is he? I'm only sending this to my arch-enemy,
Orville Rickenbacker, The Popcorn Baron.
-- K.
Here's Joe Sopwith Camel
smoking a cigarette as
he flies his doghouse...
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: New Newsreader
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 1999 11:34:13 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
M. Otis Beard (barbus@uswest.net) wrote:
>
> Mike Zeares (mzeares@mindspring.com) wrote:
> >
> > [re newsreader programs]
> >
> > The only think I wish I could do with Agent that I can't is color code
> > everybody like Kibo does. 'Cause I wanna be just like Kibo.
>
> STEP ONE: Stop burning villages.
And START burning cities!
If you want to be more like me, you need to start talking about how
that commercial where the people all tell strangers, "I DON'T BRUSH
MY TEETH WITH TOOTHPASTE ANY MORE!" is stupid, especially since the
twist at the end is that they use Aqua-Fresh, which, to the best of
my knowledge, is still a kind of tootpaste even if they insist
it's "whole-mouth paste". And then you should reminisce about the
only commercial which was stupider in the same manner, "MY FAMILY
DOESN'T USE TOILET PAPER ANY MORE!" (I wish I were making that one
up. I forget what they claimed their brand of toilet paper was, other
than paper. Probably something like 'soothing cloth-like cleanser wipes'.)
Then you need to follow up to M. Otis's post just to let Mike Zeares
know that I don't color code PEOPLE! That would be RACIST! I just
imagine there are little red laser sight dots on the ones who push onto
the subway train before those of us who need to get off can get off.
I color code ARTICLES here, but only because my computer doesn't
have smellovision.
Yet.
-- K.
"Gateway: It comes in the
box that smells like a cow!"
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology,alt.sex.fetish.wet-and-messy
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: New Newsreader
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Fri, 27 Aug 1999 08:28:29 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
Mark Hill (mhill@epicentre.net) wrote:
>
> James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com) wrote:
> >
> > that commercial where the people all tell strangers, "I DON'T BRUSH
> > MY TEETH WITH TOOTHPASTE ANY MORE!" is stupid, especially since the
> > twist at the end is that they use Aqua-Fresh, which, to the best of
> > my knowledge, is still a kind of toothpaste even if they insist
> > it's "whole-mouth paste".
>
> Well even cooler than that would be "full-body paste".
DEAR INTERNET,
IS IT TRUE THAT ELMER'S WOOD GLUE SHRINKS FOUR PERCENT AS IT DRIES?
HOW MUCH PRESSURE CAN THE HUMAN BODY WITHSTAND BEFORE IT STOPS BEING FUN?
PLEASE LET ME KNOW BECAUSE I'VE ALREADY OPENED THE GALLON BOTTLE AND
IT'S NOT RESEALABLE!!!
-- K.
"Do not save unused portion."
is something I've actually seen
printed on "convenience" foods.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: New Newsreader
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Thu, 26 Aug 1999 02:00:30 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
Sarah Cherlin (scherlin@pacbell.net) wrote:
>
> James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com) wrote:
> >
> > If you want to be more like me, you need to start talking about how
> > that commercial where the people all tell strangers, "I DON'T BRUSH
> > MY TEETH WITH TOOTHPASTE ANY MORE!" is stupid, especially since the
> > twist at the end is that they use Aqua-Fresh, which, to the best of
> > my knowledge, is still a kind of tootpaste even if they insist
> ^^^^^^^^^
> This is my favorite word in the universe right at this moment.
>
> OH NO! I MADE FUN OF KIBO BY ACCIDENT! ON PURPOSE!
You're just tricking me into posting this followup so that I won't
be able to correct the typo in my archive, right?
Well, all I can say is:
IF YOU AUTHORED A HUNDRED INCREDIBLY BRILLIANT POSTINGS EVERY DAY LIKE I DO
AND YOU DIDN'T MAKE A TYPO ONCE IN A WHILE PEOPLE WOULD THINK YOU WERE A BOZO!
-- K.
And for how long were you a bozo?
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: 'Crush videos' decried
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 1999 04:09:32 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
> SIMI VALLEY, Calif., Aug. 23 (UPI) -- Actor Mickey Rooney has joined
> lawmakers and animal rights activists to decry what are being called
> ``crush videos,'' a type of pornography in which women wearing boots or
> open toed shoes crush small animals and insects beneath their feet.
You know, like Judy Garland once did to him.
OOH! I'M SORRY! I APOLOGIZE FOR BEING SO EVIL THAT I MADE THE MOST
OBVIOUS COMMENT POSSIBLE EVEN THOUGH IT WAS KIND OF EVIL!
> At a news conference today in Simi Valley, Calif., Rooney displayed
> still photos showing women in stiletto high heels squashing a mouse,
> rabbit and what appeared to be a guinea pig or hamster.
> ``It's deplorable,'' Rooney said, adding that ``the right of free
> speech does not include crushing small animals to death.''
> Also at the news conference was Rep. Elton Gallegly, who has
> introduced a bill in Congress to impose a prison term of up to five
> years for sale of the videos.
I would just like to say that I have a fetish for collecting Internet
reports of fetishes that are stranger than mine.
I've been following the Crush Videos saga for the past two years
ever since I was first informed of the popularity of these videotapes
showing men dressed as women in their underwear using stiletto
heels to crush white (and only white) mice who had been duct-taped
to the floor:
/\/\/\/\/\/ 1998 /\/\/\/\/\/ 1998 /\/\/\/\/\/ 1998 /\/\/\/\/\/ 1998 /\/\/\/\/\/
A repost of an article I only wrote because my newsreader lit up in purple
when it saw the string "abian".
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: 2die4.com member arrested
Newsgroups: news.admin.net-abuse.usenet, alt.religion.kibology
Followup-To: alt.religion.kibology
Date: Tue, 5 May 1998 05:02:18 GMT
In news.admin.net-abuse.usenet, Fabo (fabian@li.net) wrote:
>
> According to News12 Long Island, he had an opration that sold videos of
> him and other women dressin lingeree crushing white mice that were taped
> by their tails to the floor.
>
> The participants used spiked heels
>
> OUCH !!
This is an interesting fetish. For instance, if he had videotaped
women crushing gray mice whose tails were stapled to the floor, that
presumably would be a different fetish (or at least a different newsgroup.)
If they were crushed with platform heels, that would be another.
And if they were crushed against the accelerator pedal by a bare foot,
that would be yet another.
So the fetish as described involves
a) women
b) lingerie
c) crushing
d) white
e) mice
f) tape (duct or Scotch?)
g) stiletto heels
I.e. it combines lingerie fetish, bondage (tape) fetish, foot fetish,
bestiality, and the ever-popular Crushing Of White Things. Ever notice
nobody ever crushes, or throws, brown eggs? MAKES YOU THINK, DOESN'T IT?
And although rats are generally less popular than mice, nobody finds
killing rats erotic.
And *everyone* is turned on by duct tape. *Nobody* is turned on by masking
tape. And the less said about Scotch Lo-Tack Repositionable, the better.
But it boggles the mind that anyone whose fetish is as specific as
a-b-c-d-e-f-g above would be willing to watch someone else's videotape.
You'd think that by the time they've specialized that much, EVERY other
person's fetish would be "wrong" (i.e. "This sucks! The tape is applied
in an 'X', not straight across the way I need it!") But somewhere out
there is someone who bought the women-lingerie-crushing-white-mice-
tape-stiletto tape.
(Immediately an NBC executive enters the room and says, "Hey! This must
be some hip underground Gen-X trend we're only barely aware of, like
that new 'Macarena' thing! We better broadcast a new TV series to
capitalize on the vast untapped mouse-crushing audience!")
Then NBC makes a new series where fashion models, all wearing red patent
leather stilettos with gold tips, crush mice held down with tape, with
multicolored ribbon bows tied to their tails. It gets a 100 rating
the first week, and the other networks start airing knockoffs within a week:
CBS has TV stars of yesteryear crushing mice in their own homes,
delivered by the CBS Mouse Fetish Team. ABC shows one-on-one hour-long
sessions between Barbara Walters and a single mouse on a black limbo set.
Fox shows midget transvestites jumping up and down in buckets of mice.
WB asks viewers to send in their own mouse tapes and the cost of postage
will be refunded to the person who sends the best one. UPN has the cast
of "Star Trek" Voyager" crushing mice live in grunge nightclubs.
Of course, by Week 2, when all these other shows premiere, they all
get 0 ratings because you seen one crushed mouse, you seen 'em all.
The new Mouse Crushing Network (MCN), a joint venture of Microsoft,
Disney, Paramount, and Ted Turner, goes bankrupt and switches to
showing computer mice being crushed in a hydraulic press 24 hours a day.
Then, of course, all the sitcoms start doing lame jokes about mouse
crushing fetishists. Johnny Carson puts his show back on the air for
one night just so he can dress up as a mouse and say "Eek! Eek!" as
Paula Poundstone puts her foot to his back while Ed McMahon holds
his tail down in a sketch called "PAULA POUNDMOUSE". The show, like all
the others, flops, but... in Japan, it's an enormous hit because
the title contains the phrase "POUND MOUSE". The imitation cycle
begins again... "THE POUND MOUSE HAPPY HOUR", "POUND MOUSE WITH JEN AND KIKI",
"THE POUNDERS OF MOUSE", "POUND MOUSE Z" premiere in Japan in cartoon
form. These "pound mouse anime" shows develop a huge underground
following in America because they're so incomprehensible and poorly
animated that the shows are assumed to be incredibly good. College
students everywhere give up their studies and start trying to learn
Japanese so they can understand "POUND MOUSE Z".
But nobody ever understands "POUND MOUSE Z", because those who do not
learn from history are doomed to repeat their mistakes: "PANTY CAT"
taught us NOTHING.
-- K.
I miss Panty Cat.
/\/\/\/\/\/ 1998 /\/\/\/\/\/ 1998 /\/\/\/\/\/ 1998 /\/\/\/\/\/ 1998 /\/\/\/\/\/
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Animal Snuff (Feet)
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
Date: Tue, 12 May 1998 05:44:38 GMT
Carlos "Froggy" May (froggy@praline.no.neosoft.com) wrote:
>
> Online "animal snuff" business leads to arrest
>
> ISLIP TERRACE, New York (Reuters) - A judge has freed bail a Long Island
> man charged with selling videotapes of women in high steels stomping frogs
> and rodents to death.
Okay, I admit it, I knew about this last week.
Except none of the tapes I have have any frogs on them!
It's odd. Why would frogs be considered erotic objects to crush?
> A Web site on the Internet showed excerpts from some of the hundreds of
> videos which carried titles like "Debby the Destructor," "Vanessa's Frog
> Stomp" and "Vanessa, Topless Crusher."
Vanessa's Frog Stomp. It's either a dance craze or a disease.
(The best are both, like St. Vitus's.)
> Police said Thomas Capriola, 28, of Islip Terrace in Suffolk County, was
> accused of running a ring that sold tapes of guinea pigs, mice, frogs and
> rabbits being stamped on.
I can just see the Reuters copy editors shouting across their desks now:
"DO YOU STOMP ON MICE OR STAMP ON MICE? WERE THE MICE STAMPED ON OR STOMPED?"
> Adam Gross of the Suffolk County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
> Animals said the tapes were a "foot-fetish type of thing".
Then Adam Cool said the tapes were "completely free of perversion."
> Police said Capriola, who was granted bail of $750, faces possibly
> thousands of counts of animal cruelty, each of which can carry up to a
> $1,000 fine and a one-year jail sentence.
Followed by THE STOMPING OF HIS LIFE!
> Some of the animals were bought at pet stores, where Capriola told sales
> clerks he was buying them to feed to a pet snake.
Hmm, he could get an extra year for lying to a pet store employee.
They could sentence him to hard labor on Hartz Mountain, breaking
rocks into millet!
> Police acting on a tip raided Capriola's home Sunday night and found
> marijuana, weapons, several white mice and pairs of stiletto-heel shoes.
How the mice got into the shoes, I'll never know.
> They are still looking for the women in the videos.
Well, duh.
> He was released Monday on bail.
So how come they didn't arrest Hank Ketcham when he drew that Dennis The Menace
cartoon where Dennis just slid into home plate and he pulls some sort of
stringy glop out of his back pocket and says, "I had three live caterpillars
in there!"? That's sick 'cause he's a MINOR!
-- K.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Barbie Photo Designer Digital Camera
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 1999 07:23:59 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
[Warning: This is my monthly Somewhat Serious Rant.]
"Brack!" (tiki@iinet.net.au) wrote:
>
> Subject: Barbie Photo Designer Digital Camera
>
> Should I even be considering this camera?
>
> PROS: Dirt cheap.
>
> CONS: Has pink plastic flower on it.
It's only $70, but I'd avoid it if I were you. The memory in it is
NOT removable, so you have to connect it to your computer to suck the
photos out before you can take any more -- and it can only hold six.
They're also some small size (considerably less than 640x480).
My suspicion is that it's something akin to a Kodak DC20 (which was
made by Chinon) with a plastic flower on it. I hated it when it was
a DC20, and the plastic flower won't trick me into thinking it's a
different camera.
(It's actually not a DC20, I think, but something even more lame.
The DC20, if memory serves, held six 493x373 pictures or twelve
tiny 320x240 pictures, and you couldn't even change between the
two modes without (a) erasing all the pictures and (b) connecting it
to a computer because it didn't a switch on the camera body.
The DC20 also yields nastily artifacted/oversharpened little pictures.)
Barbie camera:
http://www.barbie.com/girls/softwareforgirls/photodesigner/index.html
http://www.mattel.com/branded/Mattel_Media/index2.asp?prod=1
Kodak DC20 / Chinon ES-1000 (no longer on the market, thankfully):
http://www.dcresource.com/reviews/cameraDetail.php3?cam=34
http://www.dcresource.com/reviews/cameraDetail.php3?cam=19
I mention these two cameras solely because they're the only two
digital still cameras I've ever touched that I would consider
to be bad. Neither has adequate resolution or removable storage.
Mattel/Hasbro don't want to tell anyone what the resolution of
the Barbie camera is, but I poked around and found a press release:
> Mattel Media To Ship Barbie(R) Camera
>
> By Aaron Ricadela, Computer Retail Week
>
> Smile, Barbie fans. Mattel Media plans to ship, this fall, a low-priced
> digital camera that lets children snap, print, and e-mail photographs. Ê
> The Barbie Digital Camera, which will retail in the mid-$60 range, stores
> up to six low-resolution digital pictures on board, said Pamela Kelly,
> vice president of worldwide marketing for Mattel Media. Then, with a
> serial cord connection, girls can download the 120 x 280-pixel images to
> their PC to create scrapbooks, postcards, and short movies with the
> software that's included.
>
> Andy Rifkin, Mattel senior vice president of creative technology, said the
> camera saves images in a proprietary compressed format, then converts them
> to one of five standard formats, including HTML, JPEG, and TIFF.
> In a demonstration at the American International Toy Fair in New York, a
> Mattel representative used the CD-ROM software to snap a reporter's photo,
> put him in a car with Barbie, and take them for a spin. The software also
> lets users print a 3-by-3-inch image. Barbie Digital Camera uses an
> on-board processor Mattel Media is sourcing from several companies, but
> not Intel, Rifkin said.
120x280! That's not a photo! That's an ICON! That's less than two
inches tall on-screen! I know Barbie is 1/6 scale, with ankles like
swizzle sticks, but this camera seems pretty puny even for her.
It also appears to have NO FLASH. Meaning that you can never use
it anywhere except outdoors during business hours.
The "short movies" are presumably "a series of six photos taken about
two seconds apart", as it only holds six and it can't be too fast.
And "an on-board processor Mattel Media is sourcing from several companies"
sounds a little fishy. "We don't know WHAT'S in our own cameras this week!"
Hmm, made by several companies, but not Intel... could it be something
like a PowerPC 403GA? (The 403GA is used in things like Ford truck
engines and U.S. Robotics modems.)
I wish *my* camera could put a reporter in a car with Barbie and
take them for a spin. Off a cliff. ONE LESS REPORTER!
AND ONE LESS BARBIE! IT'S A WIN-WIN SITUATION!
(I understand how the CD-ROM that comes with the camera lets kids
put reporters into Barbie cars, but how do you take them "for a spin"?
Does the picture revolve like the steering wheel of The Minnow in a storm?)
Note that the pricing is "in the mid-$60 range", which means seventy-nine
bucks and not sixty dollars and fifty cents.
Hasbro Interactive (the same company as Mattel) are supposed to start
selling a Nascar version soon which will presumably have a racecar
sticker covering the plastic flower. So you can get the toy camera
in your choice of girlie colors or Hot Wheels colors.
Anyway, like I've said before, ALMOST any digital camera -- other than
the DC20 (off the market) or the $79 Barbie camera will take good pictures.
(Don't get one that doesn't do 640x480.) Expect to pay at least $300.
Different cameras may have different features you may need, depending
on what you're doing -- optical zoom of varying powers (digital zoom is
pointless), macro (close-up) mode, different storage media (some cameras
take PC Cards or floppy disks, others require you to connect the camera
to the computer with a cord), and professionalish goodies like manual
focus, different exposure modes, interchangeable lenses, etc.
You can get a good basic digital camera for about $300-400, ones
loaded with features tend to be about $400-$700. (I know of one
that sells for $25,000, a gigantic studio camera for fashion photos.)
If you shoot photos and have them all scanned onto PhotoCD, the
cost per photo (film stock, processing, scanning) can be up to $1 --
so if you use a film camera often enough that you shoot several
hundred shots (to PhotoCD) during the life of the camera, switching
to a digital one could save you money. (I'm ignoring the cost of
recharging the battery, but that's pretty minimal -- even ones that
take handfuls of disposable AAs only consume a few cents worth of
power per photo.) Digital photos tend to have better color than
scanned film, too (and much better than scanned photo prints.)
But if you just want to put a few prints in an album, you shouldn't
get a digital camera. Digital cameras are for people who want to
fill up their Web site real fast.
I bought the Sony FD-91 because it has a HUGE zoom lens -- 14x optical! --
and, like most Sony video cameras, can also photograph things right against
the lens, so this camera can both enlarge things that are very far away
and shoot tiny insects up close. Plus it has manual focus and exposure,
which I wanted so I could take action shots without waiting for the
camera to measure and guess. The only drawback is that it takes floppy
disks, which means that it has to compress the images a bit more than
my previous camera, the Kodak DC210, which took sharper pictures but
didn't have much in the way of features. Oh, and the FD-91 requires
me to carry it in a case shaped like a ham hock. It's one of those
camera that's the size of a regular camera with a beer can glued on.
I like big lenses. (Just ask the people at the eyeglass shop.)
Sony Mavica FD-91:
http://www.dcresource.com/reviews/cameraDetail.php3?cam=108
http://www.sel.sony.com/SEL/consumer/dimaging/browse_the_products/digital_mavica_camera/mavica_models/mvc_fd91/index.html
(yes, that URL is longer than Lee Bumgarner's Message-IDs.)
For some reason, the DC210 (my former camera) seems to be unusually
popular among Kibologists; I've encountered at least four
alt.religion.kibology people who have it. Could it be that I
have an unconscious power to influence the buying decisions of
my generation?
Gosh, I hope so.
-- K.
PLEASE WRITE YOUR CONGRESSMAN
AND DEMAND THAT THEY MAKE
CHERRY PEZ AVAILABLE IN THE
UNITED STATES AGAIN.
We now return you to our regularly scheduled anarchy.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Barbie Photo Designer Digital Camera
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Wed, 25 Aug 1999 05:23:54 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
Carol Scheible (carol-s@keyone.com) wrote:
>
> I was searching deja.com in hopes of finding a downloadable patch for the
> Barbie Photo software, which crashes frequently.
"Oh no! The nuclear reactor just exploded! Was it Y2K?"
"No... All I did was plug in my Barbie camera..."
"Now all life on Earth is doomed because of Barbie!"
(I love Sun's disclaimer on Java which says that Java may not under
any circumstances be used to control nuclear power plants.)
> Not sure what this product has to do with this group (or even what this
> group is about!),
That's the most sensible thing said in alt.religion.kibology in weeks.
In fact, I think it's the only sensible thing said here.
Except for this sentence, which seems to also be making a lot of sense,
unless it turns out to end with a nonsense word woxwox.
> but will offer what I know.
>
> I bought this item for my 9 year old daughter. It is dirt cheap as far as
> digital cameras go, but not surpisingly, it gives very poor quality
> pictures. Also, the software is very annoying for an adult to use.
Software hates me too.
I was shopping for software today, and all the good stuff said
"FOR ALL AGES 3 TO 103, EXCEPT FOR AGE 32", so I couldn't use any of it.
> Even my daughter gets annoyed with Barbie talking to her, constantly spewing
> instructions such as "To print your pictures, click on the printer icon" "To
> create a photo collage, click on the ...blah, blah, blah". This is helpful
> for new users, but there is no way to turn it off!! [well, okay, you can
> turn the computer speakers off.]
Oh, joy! They've improved Talking Barbie by making it impossible to
turn her off!
I can imagine that soon we'll be subjected to walking, talking Barbie
dolls that follow us around all day, cannot be destroyed, can run
five hundred miles an hour, and constantly yell "Math is hard! Math is hard!"
> It is also cumbersome to export the pictures as jpg's. The images are
> stored in a custom format by the Barbie software.
Ah, yes, regular JPEG isn't good enough for Barbie. She had to come
up with her own special format which is a million times better than JPEG.
Barbie put millions of dollars of research into developing The Secret
Barbie Picture Format.
Or maybe the programmers were just lazy and said "Aw, heck, the photos
are only 120x280, they're so tiny that they don't need any compression.
Maybe everyone else on the Web will switch to using Web browsers that
can read raw blocks of data straight from the Barbie format and I won't
have to actually implement JPEG."
> I don't recommend this product. If after reading my negative comments, you
> still are interested in buying one, and would like to see pictures my
> daughter has taken with it, email me and I'll be glad to send you an
> attachment.
I think what all this proves is that we grown-ups are fuddy-duddies who
worry about the quality of the pictures that come out of our digital
camera, whereas if we were under the age of ten we'd be happy to have
any sort of camera that had a flower on it. Except for me, when I was
nine I would have wanted a camera that had Evel Knievel on it.
(Hmm, the Evel Knievel camera would have to withstand being dropped into
a canyon...)
I admire the chutzpah of the Barbie camera's manufacturer. They must
have known that adults everywhere would think the camera is junky --
after all, they don't tell you what the resolution is on either the
Barbie or Mattel Interactive Web sites. But I suspect they were thinking
that kids don't know what the difference between a $79 and a $900 digital
camera is, they just want to be able to shoot pictures of any sort.
After all, they sold the PXL 2000 video camera, which recorded extremely
blurry, overexposed black-and-gray images on audiocassettes. I think
it's nice that they at least tried to make a toy which lets girls have
fun and maybe learn a little about computing and photography.
But yeah, I can't think of any real reason to recommend the camera
except that giving kids a $900 camera to play with might be a little
excessive. If I had a daughter, I might buy her the $79 flower with
the camera growing out of it, but if she used it for a day and said,
"Daddy, this camera takes SUCKY pictures!" I'd feel really guilty
about it.
-- K.
Maybe I wouldn't get kicked
out of places so often if I
painted a big pink flower on
my camera before taking my
snapshots...
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Barbie Photo Designer Digital Camera
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 1999 23:18:12 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
"ZnU" (titanium@psn.net) wrote:
>
> James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com) wrote:
> >
> > [quoting a press release from Barbie about her wimpy little camera]
> > >
> > > Andy Rifkin, Mattel senior vice president of creative technology, said the
> > > camera saves images in a proprietary compressed format, then converts them
> > > to one of five standard formats, including HTML, JPEG, and TIFF.
> ^^^^
> Wow. I was not aware that HTML was an image format.
My Sony also saves HTML directly to floppy disk. It's just about the
lamest excuse for HTML you've ever seen. It saves the photo (a big .JPG
or .BMP file), a thumbnail (a .411 file), and adds a link to a .HTM
file -- but the .HTM is a page of plain text that doesn't show the
thumbnail or anything. I don't know why you'd want this; it contains
the same information as a plain directory listing, only badly-formatted.
(I.e. if you throw away the lame INDEX.HTM, most Web servers will
still show a list of links to the images. Given that the camera is
making thumbnails -- albeit in a proprietary format -- why isn't it
making a Web page with thumbnails on it, if it assumes that I'm such
a lazy bozo that the CAMERA has to write my Web pages for me?)
Fun factoid: Those .411 files, which you can't do anything with, are
about 4K in size, and there's one for each file. If you stick the
disk into a DOS or Windows computer, they show up and nothing happens
when you double-click 'em. However, if you stick the disk into a Mac,
the Mac figures "OH, THESE FILES ARE IMPORTANT, I'LL HIDE THEM FROM
THE HUMAN SO AS NOT TO ACCIDENTALLY MAKE HIM THINK," and the .411
files are invisible -- which means you can't delete them. So if you
clean the pictures off the disk, invisible .411 files gradually
collect on it, eating up space. (Unless you re-format the entire disk,
but you get bored waiting for that.) Would someone please tell all
the computers in the world that I want to see all the stuff at all times?
I always want to see the .411 files on Macs, I always want to see the
filename extensions under Windows, and I always want to see the dot-files
under UNIX. Please reconfigure your computer that way in case I
ever need to use it.
> > > In a demonstration at the American International Toy Fair in New York, a
> > > Mattel representative used the CD-ROM software to snap a reporter's photo,
> > > put him in a car with Barbie, and take them for a spin. The software also
> > > lets users print a 3-by-3-inch image. Barbie Digital Camera uses an
>
> Or if you bump it up to say, 600 DPI, a .36 x .36 inch image.
Or, on a typical 3600 dots-per-inch (linear) imagesetter, a .06 x .06 inch
image. That's ALMOST two millimeters wide! And such high resolution!
You wouldn't be able to see the defects at all!
> I've actually seen pictures taken by one of these. Not only are they tiny,
> but they're out of focus, and have compression artifacts serious enough to
> kill a man twice before he can even hit the ground. I only survived by
> chewing off my left arm.
I suspect it's probably fixed-focus, like the average disposable camera,
and I bet it has a loooong exposure time (tiny lens and no flash) so things
would get motion-blurred. The fact that the camera's so light (and
being held by a little girl!) means you're always going to get some
blur from camera wiggle (my DC210 tended to get that, it was pretty small
and took up to half a second to take pictures in dark areas when I didn't
use the flash.) And the fact that the Barbie camera has one of the world's
tiniest camera lenses (most cheap cameras have really little lenses) means,
again, it's harder to get a sharp image (and the camera needs more light.)
I suspect the best way to judge the quality of a camera without actually
using it is to just look at how big the lens is. If the lens looks like this:
_
(_)
...then you've got a Barbie digital camera or other little camera.
If the lens looks like this:
___
/ \
| |
\___/
...then you have a typical digital camera or consumer-oriented film camera.
If the lens looks like this:
(SKILLFULLY-CRAFTED PICTURE OF A CIRCLE
ABOUT THE SAME DIAMETER AS A COKE CAN)
...then you have an expensive camera that can make anyone look beautiful.
I pointed my camera at Bob Hope and it took a picture of Cindy Crawford.
I can't wait to see what happens when I point it at Cindy Crawford.
Most digital cameras inherently have a slightly soft focus, and try to
make up for it by using a "sharpen" image-processing algorithm -- which
doesn't really help the focus but makes edges more prominent. Many of
these cameras, particularly the cheap ones (and some very expensive ones!)
do WAY too much "sharpening" and high-contrast objects (like signs)
develop light haloes around dark objects and dark haloes around like objects.
OH WOW! IT LOOKS JUST LIKE A KINESCOPE OF AN IMAGE ORTHICON! I FEEL
LIKE I'M WATCHING "THE HONEYMOONERS" IN CONVENIENT STILL PICTURE FORMAT!
The JPEG compression done by most cameras (some can save lossless TIFFs
or BMPs) also tends to muss up edges and things with fine textures,
in a way that's hard to describe -- with too much JPEG compression, edges
tend to develop these strings of 8x8-pixel glass blocks around them.
So, if you keep your camera set to the "highest compression" setting
to save space, be sure to take photos of street mimes to make their
glass boxes visible.
-- K.
I APOLOGIZE FOR TELLING PEOPLE
TO TAKE PHOTOS OF STREET MIMES,
WHICH MIGHT ENCOURAGE THE MIMES.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Earthquake Preparedness Kit
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 1999 23:37:05 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
Edward A Lowther (eal34@sawasdee.cc.columbia.edu) wrote:
>
> *Sigh* Saw a really cool cone-down-a-gully with other junk. This
> is the kind of thing they don't show on Discovery Channel or even
> When-Cones-Attack Channel. Sorry, no heartstring-tugging photo!
I would just like to say that I honestly wackparsed that as
"Sorry, no heartstring-tugging potato!"
And then I imagined Edward having a potato tied to a string hanging
from his heart. And his chest was transparent so we could all see.
The people who make wax and silk fruit make very nice potatoes these
days, with little tufts of peat moss glued on to represent dirt.
I bought a plastic eggplant so that we can play "spin the eggplant"
at the alt.religion.kibology party.
-- K.
Actually, it's a different game,
but it does involve a movable eggplant.
Anyway, I know everyone likes eggplant.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: MY interaction with Famousnessess
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 1999 23:41:03 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
Lots42 (lots42@aol.com) wrote:
>
> I once held the door open for noted Maryland based children show host
> 'Captain Chesapeake'.
The first time I read it, it said "Captain Cheapskate", which I think
would be an even better children's show:
BILLY: Captain Cheapskate, what's today's cartoon?
CAP'N CH'SKATE: Ahr! Avast! Today's cartoon be one of those
stickers that changes from one picture ta another when
tilted! I found it in your box o' Cracker Jacks! Ahr!
Now keep pedalling the generator if ye wanna stay on the air!
-- K.
And then you'd want to hold
the door closed for him.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Flying
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Wed, 25 Aug 1999 00:13:23 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
Simon de Vet (sdevet@istar.ca) wrote:
>
> A couple of observations, from a trip to the Netherlands...
>
> a) The airport parking lot is full of mysterious little signs. We were
> parked on the "Rocketship Level"
Cool! In Boston, Logan airport just has all the levels named after
stupid touristy things like "Swan Boats Level" and "Hatch Shell Level"
and "Minuteman Level" and "Big Dig Level". Okay, I made the last one up.
But one of the chains of local ice cream parlors has "Big Dig" flavor
ice cream, advertised as "FRESH OFF THE STREETS OF BOSTON!"
Anyway, those levels of the airport parking garage all have little loops
of fiteen seconds of Muzak playing over and over, as part of
Standard Parking L.P.'s Musical Floor Reminder System, U.S. Patent #4,674,937.
I've made fun of it before, and I'm going to keep making fun of it
until someone tells me why U.S. Patent #4,674,937 (printed on the signs)
isn't in my favorite computerized database of all patents ever issued,
except for the two that Archimedes Plutonium thinks were accepted because
the Patent Office never wrote back to him. Hmm, maybe he invented the
Musical Floor Reminder System. Naah, he can't have, otherwise all the
floors would play German music. And each would smell like a different
kind of candy.
> a) The airport was covered in signs that said "Noodstop!"
TIRED OF WALKING? RIDE THE PUBLIC NOODLE!
> a) The airplane had a little card depicting the things you were, and
> were not allowed to do. We are allowed to look out the windows, but we
> are not allowed to see clouds, fire, or crashing airplanes.
What is the icon for "you're allowed"?
(I've always assumed it's just the lack of any other icon.)
> a) Advertisement: "The Luxury of Dirt. Think about all the bad things in
> the world. Now think about shopping. That's why I like shopping."
So treat yourself to a trip to The Expensive Dirt Store!
I would repost that article where I talked about the wire-service report
about that store in Georgia that sold bags of dirt because people in
Georgia like to eat dirt, but I've reposted a couple of old articles
already this year.
-- K.
They put flavoring in
library paste because
it makes little kids eat
more of it. So why
not flavored dirt?
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: soc.libraries.talk,alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Newspaper department reading room at city of Boston public library department
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Thu, 26 Aug 1999 07:27:39 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
In soc.libraries.talk, Don Saklad (dsaklad@berne.ai.mit.edu) wrote:
>
> Irritating library users/customers/consumers is the norm at our urban
> public library in Boston.
NEWS FLASH! PEOPLE ARE BEING IRRITATED IN THE LIBRARY THAT DON SAKLAD IS IN!
ALSO, FIRE CAN BURN YOU!
> In closing the newspaper department reading room, an announcement
> is made in a manner that sends a message that you are not welcome
> during the remaining minutes.
As opposed to those OTHER libraries that have loudspeakers constantly
suggesting that you stay past closing time.
> Chairs are scraped and shoved in a performance to get people's
> attention indirectly. The chairs are new. It damages the chairs over time.
Dear Archimedes Saklad,
Please post diagrams of the proper redesign of chairs for reading
newspapers in public libraries that you don't like. Also please
post your grocery lists for the past six months, something about
how professional wrestlers should have to open buckets of maple syrup
in your living room, and something about infinitely long integers
made entirely of two 7's with an infinite number of dots between them.
> Closing should be more cheerful and a message that you will be welcome
> next time you visit should be clearly conveyed.
What's this? Clearly Conveying a Cheerful, Courteous Closing?
Will the Boston Public Library put up a big banner saying
"DON SAKLAD WILL BE WELCOME NEXT TIME HE VISITS"? Tune in tomorrow!
Same BPL-Time, Same BPL-Channel!
> On leaving city of Boston public library department's building on
> Dartmouth Street,
Dear Archimedes Saklad,
Please also post something about the Kiewit library on Boston Street.
Thank you.
> library personnel are gathered and glowering at remaining library
> users/customers/consumers. It is as if library
> users/customers/consumers are an impediment to the lib.
I'm an irate library customer and I WANT MY MONEY BACK.
-- K.
All those late fees I was charged.
I mean, it's unfair, the book was
so thick that it took me an extra
week to circle all the dirty words!
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: soc.history.science,talk.philosophy.misc,alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Transition Phase; AP mission to visit the famous scientists
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Thu, 26 Aug 1999 08:06:14 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
Followup-To: alt.religion.kibology
In soc.history.science and talk.philosophy.misc,
Archimedes Plutonium (arc_plutonium@hotmail.com) replied to himself:
>
> Archimedes Plutonium (arc_plutonium@hotmail.com) wrote:
> >
> > MY NOTES of 10Aug-22Aug:
>
> Continuing from previous post of my sojourn in Canada
> 10Aug-22Aug99
>
> Today, Sunday Aug15 pouring down rain for 12 hours. And a good
> time to check out the cap to the Toyota whether water-resistant.
I also hope the cap on your head is water-resistant. I mean, your head
could burst at any time, and I'd hate for it to soak your cap.
> Always get aluminum, not fiberglass as too heavy for one person.
Besides, people expect The King Of Science & Logic to wear an
aluminum cap. Made from the finest crinkly foil.
Keeps the evil people from stealing your brainwaves, you know...
> I am enjoying my property. After closing on Thurs about 1pm, I
> have had a nonstop marathon of cleaning and fixing up. Such as
> changing the lock to a double-deadbolt. And I seem
> unable to find any grass whip
Mmm... grass whip. It's green, creamy, and is the whip-tastic taste sensation!
> or long handle sickle and I get strange stares from stores like WalMart
The people in Wal-Mart think you look weird?
Gosh. Even *I* don't look creepier than the people I see at Wal-Mart.
Next you'll tell me that the people at the Department of Motor Vehicles
said you were slow and surly.
> as that they never heard of such tools.
Grass... whip?
You are cutting grass with a whip?
> From closing until this moment I have not thought about any physics,
We never expected you to start.
> except for the time when I tried getting water out of the well
> without running the electric pump.
I... see. So, you figured turning on the device that was meant to
get water out of the well would make it too easy.
Explain to me again about how you crowned yourself the King of Logic?
> Using plastic 5 gall. buckets and how to make the
> lid sink to catch the water. It floats too much. I solved it
> by attaching a weight onto the lip of the bucket. I suppose in
> past history they never had that problem because they had metal
> buckets.
I get the feeling he's about to talk about the glorious days of
whattle-and-daub construction, and how ruffians would steal from
barrels by loosening the staves. Arch, have you been playing
with the burlap doors again?
> With my South Dakota farms circa 1986-1987 most of my mind was absorbed
by the giant sponge the surgeons left in my brain after my lobotomy
> with growing things
especially brain fungus
> and property concerns of fixing and maintenance. However, in this
> new cycle
which has one wheel, I ride around town in my clown outfit
> of property ownership I cannot allow property to absorb my mind.
> I am the King of Science something I must not forget and thus,
Oh, yeah, you don't want to be one of those Kings of Science who
keeps forgetting who he is. Those Kings of Science are real dopes.
> all of my time must be devoted to science and
being openly mocked on the Internet.
> weighed and parcelled out for nonscience. Like an Alien Abduction
> I cannot allow for my mind to be abducted from science,
Exactly what planet is it where they want your brain?
> or like Body Snatcher, I cannot allow my mind to be taken away from
> my fate as the King of Science. Owning property now, unlike out in
> South Dakota in 1986, means convenience and help towards science,
> not a taking of my time, and not a stealing away of my mind on
> nonscience.
DEAR NONSCIENTISTS,
PLEASE STOP STEALING ARCHIMEDES PLUTONIUM'S MIND. IT IS A GREAT STRAIN
ON OUR BUDGETARY RESOURCES TO PROSECUTE SUCH PETTY THEFT.
THAT IS ALL.
> God gives us signs and signals and we must look for these signals
> and signs to carry out our lives.
Yesterday I saw a cloud shaped like Archimedes Plutonium riding a unicycle
in a clown suit with aluminum foil wrapped around his rainbow wig, and
then a lightning bolt hit it and it turned to a shower of tadpoles.
> For example, yesterday I mended a broken window.
SURELY A SIGN FROM GOD!
IT'S A SIGN...
THAT GOD ALLOWED YOU TO FIX A BROKEN WINDOW!
> Only it was a difficult mending because it had tar-like caulking.
Please stop talking about Milton Berle's lungs.
> And I cut myself 3 times, one good one running 4 cm down one finger.
I agree, any cut Archimedes Plutonium suffers is a GOOD one.
> And alot of little chips that I had to "special wash" my skin.
A skill you learned when riding the special bus to special school.
> And it was at that moment where I realized that this cabin property
> of mine was no longer worth more of my time.
Yeah, you've only lived in it a day and already it's in significantly
worse shape than when it started.
> And that more fixing had to be of an "essential need for
> essential purpose" for me to fix it.
> Another example of heeding God's signs and signals. I slept in
> the cabin the night of the 12August closing.
Didn't you say something above about how you were now talking about
science?
I mean, if science was just about who slept where, then then entire periodic
table would be named after George Washington and people from "Melrose Place".
> And I should have remembered "more fully" my last cycle of property
> ownership of South Dakota,
HOORAY! THE PEOPLE OF SOUTH DAKOTA ARE NO LONGER ENSLAVED BY ARCHIE PLUTONIUM!
> that there will be mice in a building.
Science proves that mice are required.
> Sure enough I heard this "noise" and got the flashlight to discover a mouse.
Archie's greatest scientific discovery.
Although I suspect the mouse discovered Archie first. Mice are smart.
> I do not know if it is true that if you see one mouse means that
> there are 100 around. Regardless, I had forgotten that last cycle
> in SD where I bought stainless steel mouse trap cages and had a
> "resident outside cat". Systematically I killed the mice in SD.
Oh, yeah, there ain't no mice in South Dakota now thanks to
Saint Plutonium driving them out.
> But come every autumn-winter the wild mice would get in through
> the spaces in the outside walls. Mice have the extraordinary ability
> to "flatten-out" their bodies and to enter a building from a small
> crack either in wood or concrete.
(Suddenly, Archimedes Plutonium's house is invaded by hordes of planaria!)
> And mice see a building as just a tree
and they see Archimedes Plutonium as just a nut.
> which is their natural home in the wild and thus they will
> make attempts on entering and occupying. Compound the fact that
> most humans are "dirty"
That's right, I keep forgetting that to become King of Science and Logic,
you must first become celibate.
> and they always leave food laying around.
> Well, upon that night which was about 3am I packed up my bedding
> and went outside to sleep in the Toyota.
> I am at the point in my life where a good night sleep in clean
> environment means more to me. And in my Toyota where there will
> never be a mouse problem I began to realize what God was signaling
> me that as a dream of my father to own a Airstream and live in an
> Airstream. That this was the signal to fulfill that dream. That the
> metal and tires of an Airstream was a good mouse prevention.
Yeah, but Airstreams tend to get damaged in a collision with a moose.
Wouldn't you rather have a mouse than a moose?
> Luckily I did learn alot from the SD experience with mice. And
> basically what I learned there was that wood cabinets are bad. That
> cabinets in any house are a mice increaser.
Archimedes Plutonium-inspired Hanna-Barbera cartoon rock band name #22:
KING OF SCIENCE AND THE MOUSE INCREASER
> Because the cabinets are a favorite site for mice with all
> that food around.
So, stop eating food.
> Mice can easily get into anything that is packaged.
So, keep everything in loose piles.
> So, the only modern mice protector is these 5 gallon plastic buckets
> with lids,
But aren't those hard to seal from the inside?
> other than the refrigerator and freezer. Luckily I saved these buckets
> and had enough to put most of my materials inside.
> I do not know the best way to reform the cabinet making industry
> but it needs reforming so as to address the problem of mice.
Maybe you should run for President on the "People should use plastic
maple syrup buckets instead of cabinets because all homes have mice
except for South Dakota" platform.
Then you could be President of Science and King of the United States.
> So I resolved in my mind as of 13Aug99 that I will make a
> determined effort to buy myself an Airstream trailer and to have
> that as my permanent home.
> And I think that as a biologist and a human, that it is never
> cruel to experiment with mice for the advancement and furtherance
> of science, perhaps cruel to other animals such as cats and dogs
> but not mice because they certainly take advantage of humans
> in moving in and dirtying up human residences and eating human
> foods. Mice will not leave us alone, so make full use of them
> in research.
How about cockroaches?
You NEVER hear about scientists testing new drugs on cockroaches.
It's a massive cover-up!
> The Plutonium Atom Foundation now owns two properties. One I
> call the South Dakota land of 1/2 hectare, and now this Halifax
> property of 1 hectare. If my previous land owning cycle is anything
> to judge by, I will probably end up owning about 6 parcels of land.
Does this count that imaginary island? Did you sell your imaginary
tropical island before you made millions of dollars off the stock
market while bumming free Internet access off your $7-and-hour
dishwashing job, or did you put it in one of the buckets and take
it to Halifax?
> Why so many? I suspect that it is somewhat like music in that
> the desire to own is a strong desire and one is not satisfied until
> one reaches a saturation point.
Oh, yeah, music always makes me buy six homes and then still sleep in
a trailer.
> Like in music of a favorite tune. One has to hear it over and over
> until a saturation point is reached
I think I'm going to go watch TV now.
[...long pause...]
Okay, I'm back. You can resume repeating yourself about how
people get tired of repetition.
> and then the tune is no longer needed to be heard.
> What I believe, and I should include this theory into my website
> is that music scores that one likes is a replay of a past lifetime.
So there were lots of cavemen who liked disco, rap, and John Tesh music?
Well, okay, I can understand cavemen liking John Tesh. I mean, look
at his skull structure. But I don't think cavemen were sophisticated
enough to discover disco.
> A song or melody or sound which one loves and plays over and over
> again is a connection of that person to a previous past incarnation
> life. Whether it is a grassblade with a sound of grass
Wait, first you were talking about grass whips, and now grass blades.
What's next, a grass bazooka?
Archimedes Plutonium-inspired reggae band name #23:
GRASS BAZOOKA
> or a insect of a sound of insect -- the current favorite music that one
> listens to over and over is a connecting back to a reincarnated
> past life. And then the mind gets tired or saturated of the music
> tune.
> So, I suspect that I will get tired or saturated "in my mind" of
> property ownership with about 6 parcels. And of course my property
> ownership is concomitantly dependent upon whether the stock market
> continues to reward me.
>
> It is remarked that Hell is a place where there is no room for
> Reason or Reasoning.
Hell is an endless nine-dimensional matrix of disembodied Archimedes
Plutonium heads stretching to infinity in all directions, all talking
about how much they like plastic buckets.
> Pragmatically, also, I would add that Hell is a place where there
> is little chance of achieving cleanliness, order, and sanitation.
Hell is like a gas station's restroom without the toilet.
> Thus, to me an Airstream out competes any house for health
> and sanitation possibilities. No house is mouse proof and thus
> the critters walk and piss and poop all over your home.
Have you considered just living in a giant toilet? That would
be the most sanitary because then you could just flush it.
Also maybe you'd enjoy riding in that little rowboat with the Ty-D-Bol man.
> But an Airstream has the potential of being mouse proof, at
> least it has a better potential of mouseproofing.
I am convinced of the correctness of your science theories,
o Mighty King of Mouseproofing.
-- K.
Maybe you should invent a
better mousetrap.
I'd buy one, provided it's
big enough to crush an
entire mad scientist.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.fan.mike-jittlov,alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: is anyone actually making real $100 bills by using MIKE JITTLOV'S SECRET FORMULA
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Fri, 27 Aug 1999 03:19:58 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
In alt.fan.mike-jittlov, "CA (was) in NJ" (cainnj@mailandnews.com) wrote:
>
> 1234335@my-deja.com wrote:
> >
> > I would like to know if there are people who are (or have been)
> > making real $100 bills by using MIKE JITTLOV'S SECRET FORMULA and if
> > YES,how much real $100 bills are they(or have been) making since now?
>
> By the way, does anyone know if Kibo has been vacationing near Mauritius
> recently?
I don't know if it counts as taking a vacation when you buy the whole island.
-- K.
Archimedes Plutonium sold it to me.
-----------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: alt.religion.kibology
From: James "Kibo" Parry (kibo@world.std.com)
Subject: Re: Briton sets off across country on motorized toilet
Url-Of-Www-Dot-Kibo-Dot-Com: http://www.kibo.com
Battlestar-Galactica-Date: 3196 centons, 99 microns, 0.04 bozons
Date: Fri, 27 Aug 1999 06:41:17 GMT
Organization: Stately Kibo Manor
David Pacheco (david_pacheco@lineone.net) wrote:
>
> Oh great, an article that lives up to its Subject: line, in spite of the
> fact that you REALLY don't want it to.
>
> > Briton sets off across country
> > on motorized toilet
>
> If he's going cross-country I sure hope it's a four-wheel drive toilet.
> Hey, is this the handbrake? [ FLUSH ]
>
> Just don't push the windshield-wiper fluid button.
Only bidets have those. And then there are the little ones clowns
ride, the unidets.
> LineOne news dutifully informs me from:
> > PLYMOUTH, England (AP)
>
> Hey, I just thought of a weird coincidence... the Puritans got onto a
> boat that left from Plymouth, England, and they eventually arrived to
> the U.S. in... Plymouth! Geez, what were the odds of THAT happening?
And by an even more amazing coincidence, they landed at Plymouth Rock!
Imagine, there must be HUNDREDS of rocks in the United States, and
they had to land at the one that was named right!
> > -- Hank Harp settled into the driver's seat
> > Saturday morning, checked his headlight and handlebars and set off on a
> > cross-country trip at top speed, a whopping 4 mph -- on his motorized
> > toilet.
>
> Is it gas-powered?
I don't know, but I'm sure glad there aren't any vehicles with toilets
in them travelling around in the United States! Imagine a hideous
dystopia where people travelling from city to city could actually
go to the bathroom while crossing state lines! The horror! The horror!
> > Harp and his traveling comode set off Saturday from Land's End, in
> > southwesternmost England, on a 874-mile journey to John O' Groats at the
> > northern tip of Scotland.
>
> Country band name: "The Traveling Commodes"
>
> Rights. Mine.
"Commodes Of Transportation." Dibs timesed by infinity.
> > The charity trek was the brainchild of Steve Gilks, who runs Cash for
> > Trash, a charitable group that recycles household rubbish to raise money.
>
> Cash for Trash: we raise money into a big pile in the backyard, and then
> mulch it. Wouldn't "Trash for Cash" be a more appropriate name?
>
> How do they raise money by recycling? "Look, I have a three-foot pile
> of moldy old newspapers. Give me a shilling or I'll throw it on your lawn."
Hey, it gives Cub Scouts something to do involving riding around on
top of station wagons because the safe part of the car is completely
full of five hundred pounds of old newspapers (approximate cash value:
five cents per ton.)
I did that a few times when I was a kid. So I figure someone still
owes me a penny for all those papers I rode around on top of for charity.
> > Harp's potty, complete with three wheels and a 24-volt motor, is expected
> > to reach its destination Sept. 20.
>
> Harp's journey will take a lot longer than originally planned, because
> instead of traveling in a straight line, he has to drive his potty in a
> counter-clockwise ever-increasing spiral due to the Coriolis Effect.
I think "Harp's potty" also has great band-name potential, much as
"Potty's Album" did when I first mentioned it around 1993.
> > A wheeled rubbish bin is trailing along behind the toilet, and he plans
> > to collect trash along the way. Gilks plans to present equipment to
> > hospices and physicians along the route to help patients with breathing
> > problems.
"HEY, I'VE BEEN SITTING ON A TOILET FOR SIX HOURS, NOW INHALE FROM THIS TUBE."
Sorry, it doesn't work for me either.
I love it when people perform pointless activities to appear as if
they're _really_working_hard_ for charity.
"LOOK, KIDS! THAT MAN IS WEARING A GORILLA SUIT BECAUSE YOU HAVE CANCER!"
> > Ten years ago, Gilks made a cross-country trek of his own -- in a
> > motorized shopping cart.
>
> So let me get this straight: he's done the trek previously on strange
> items of transportation... of his own accord, not due to any charity
> event.
"LOOK, KIDS! THAT MAN IS DRIVING A TOILET EVEN THOUGH YOU DON'T HAVE CANCER!"
> I NEED PHOTOS OF NUDE WOMEN IN HIGH HEELS FLOORING THE ACCELERATOR IN
> SLOW MOTION ONTO A MOUSE = "perverted psychopath"
>
> I NEED PHOTOS OF NUDE WOMEN IN HIGH HEELS FLOORING THE ACCELERATOR IN
> SLOW MOTION ONTO A MOUSE... FOR CHARITY = "news-worthy altruist"
I'm just upset because I sent Dick Clark Productions $20 for a tape
of The Very Super-Best Of Mouse-Crushing B*L*O*O*P*E*R*S and my tape
of wacky wacky bloopers still hasn't arrived, just a really flat mouse
in an envelope.
I wonder what Accelerator Boy's been up to lately? I'm still scanning
all the perverted newsgroups for interesting fetishes to co-op, but
I haven't seen him requesting women to take pictures of their feet
pressing accelerator pedals while wearing flat shoes lately. Or seen
that guy who could only become aroused by the smell of burning penny loafers.
The best one I've seen lately -- slightly edited for this family newsgroup:
-> I'm wondering if there are any men or women out there who might have
-> the same interests as me or could offer me some advise. I enjoy taking
-> a metal nutcracker (preferably chilled in the fridge) and squeezing it
-> together around my [koo-koo] lips which snugly encases my [koo-koo],
-> and [koo-koo]. I then tied the other end of the nutcracker together
-> with a rubber band. It fits nicely underneath my panties and I have
-> enjoyed making shorts trips to the grocery with my [koo-koo] sort of
-> clipped together in this manner.
I probably didn't really need to censor "outer labia" but I like saying
"[koo-koo]".
Note that people with these really weird fetishes are often