Monday, January 29, 2007

Saint Vinny and the Venerable Beats

Before the Beach Boys, before the Beatles, and even before the invention of modern English, there was the most remarkable ecclesiastical boy band since Pope Innocent and the Crooning Cardinals - Saint Vinny and the Venerable Beats.

The classic logo for Vinny's monastic Band of Brothers.

Growing up in the small town of Tyneside, Vinny went on to a rather droll career in a local monastery, where he translated Vergil, read his psalms, and secretly composed boy-band songs. Eventually tiring of his vow of silence, he broke onto the monastic musical scene at a late stage in life, but he enjoyed immediate success.

He was initially a solus act, with such hits as "Abbey Woad", "We Will Block (Manuscript) You", and "A Little Less Conversation a Little More Illumination". He soon formed his own band however, the Venerable Beats, and for a long time they were all the rage with the nuns.

Continuing to blossom into an interdenominational musical phenomenon, the band continued to enjoy success with the release of such monastic compilations as Celibate! and Bad Habits. They even introduced new genres of music, such as Latin pop and Soul.

Westminster Abbey was a popular venue for the Beats.

For his contributions to music and the church, in particular his Headbangia Ecclesiastica Dulcimeri Anglorum (roughly translated as "Ecclesiastical Headbanging with English Guitars"), he was made a Saint by Pope Gregory III for "outstanding contributions to the cultural and ethical precepts upon which the church was founded and for some bloody good Gregorian dulcimer riffs!"

Monday, January 22, 2007

The Taj Mall and Other Indian Wonders

Contrary to popular knowledge, the nation of India was quite sophisticated long before any European involvement.

The emperor Shah Jam, tired of being a second rate business Mughal, decided to open an attraction bound to reel in the big rupees - the Taj Mall. After trying for many months, he finally found a willing insurance provider, and thus spent the next twenty-two years perfecting his elaborate mallsoleum. Upon completion, the monstrosity of a mall contained a dozen curry bars, numerous Vietnamese dry cleaners, a very extensive Planet Bollywood, several reincarnated petting zoos and even, over the holidays, a Buddha photo booth for the children.


Families from far and wide gather for their kids to have a picture with Buddha.

Other areas of India also enjoyed commercial prosperity. The New Deli Supermarket became famed throughout the Orient for it's tasty tofu products, including Bamboo on a Stick and Veggie Sikh-kabobs. Other hits were Black Rolls with Low-Cal Butter and Sacred Fig Newtons.

Bollywood, of course, was also just taking off around this time. Movies were slow in coming, since most of the population just wanted to watch reality T.V., in particular Bombay Idol, Bad Karma, Pimp My Elephant, Punjab'd, and Delhi or New Delhi.

Pimp My Elephant, a classic product of Bollywood Reality T.V.

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

The Wong Brothers’ First Flight

Many cite the incident occurring at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina in 1903 as the first manned flight. However, the Wong brothers had already beaten out the Wrights centuries earlier in Shanghai, China.

From an early age, twin brothers Tu Wong and Wai Wong endeavored to make the first manned flight. After graduating from Fu Manchu University in 1553, they attempted to gain a government grant for their experimentations with aerodynamics and human flight. While initially skeptical, the Chinese government provided complete funding after the Wong Brothers built a rice-powered nuclear reactor.

Initial progress was slow, and after depleting the government's reserves of disposable peasants, they finally decided to add seatbelts. Within five years of diligent trial and error tests, however, the Wong brothers finally managed their first manned flight, and became instant celebrities.

Can two Wongs make a flight?

Not only did the Wongs achieve financial success within China, but their fame also soon spread throughout the Asian continent. The new invention even inspired early Japanese cinema, inspiring such box office hits as Wongfully Accused, War of the Wongs, and What Wongs Want. However, there were some terrible flops as well, such as When Hari Met Kari, which bombed at the box office.

Where did they go Wong?

With fame, however, came inevitable plagiarism. The Wong Brothers sued Jackie Chan for making an unauthorized documentary based on their exploits, dubbed Shanghai Flights. Recently, the Wong Brothers have also made news headlines by suing the creators of the North Carolina and Ohio license plates. The case has yet to be settled.

Sunday, January 14, 2007

The Many Wives of Henry the VIII

Large and in charge, King Henry the VIII of England was known for having more wives than the entire male population of Salt Lake City combined. He has been likened by many modern historians to a British King Solomon, both for his obscene number of female counterparts and his rather substantial paunch. However, only six of his many reported wives have actually been documented in history. This is their story.

Had he not been king, Henry said he could have been the next 50 Pence.

Catherine of Pentagon was the first recorded wife. Many suspected her of being a New World spy, but Henry was not too fussed so long as she could give him a male heir. Catherine, however, was reportedly not very good at that (only giving him a daughter, Blood E. Marie) and was also, at 40, a bit crusty for the youthful Henry. After failing to secure the Pope's approval for a divorce, Henry just did away with her and moved on to Anne Barren.

Anne Barren was also disappointing, for what reasons Henry could not work out. After she failed to give him the goods (excepting a daughter, Lizzy Beth), he had her executed on charges of witchcraft, treason, adultery, incest, and bad breath. Next on the agenda was famous actress Jane Seymour.

Jane Seymour was a Tudor T.V. personality and phenomenon, known for her renowned cooking show Sieve and Let Fry and her reoccurring role on Dr. Gin: Medicinal Woman. She and Henry shared many happy, long nights together, before finally having Henry's first male heir, Lil' Eddy. Sadly, Jane died not long after the birth of Eddy due to a quail overdose, for which she had developed a nasty obsession during her pregnancy.

Jane Seymour just had that effect on Henry.

After a brief period of mourning, Henry's eye caught the rather large bodice of Anne of Cleavage, and they were soon married. However, their relationship was a shallow one, and after a few months of broken promises, broken hearts, and broken bodices, they decided a divorce would be the best solution.

Determining "the more the merrier" as his philosophical viewpoint on life, Henry married again, this time to Kathy Howard. Alarmed by his expanding girth, she soon turned to a life of marital unfaithfulness, and she too was promptly executed.

Henry married one last time. By now a very old, knackered, and dreadfully obese British monarch, Catherine Pear was practically taking pity on him when she married him. After a short period of relative bliss, Henry popped his podgy clogs and Catherine Pear went on to cash in on a lot of money (no one had bet on her outliving Henry).

Lil' Eddy, Lizzy Beth, and Blood E. Marie went on to a lives of civil strife and national turmoil before Lizzy finally secured the throne, but that is a yarn for another day.

Thursday, January 11, 2007

Chris Columbus: The Conquests of Merchandise

In 1492, Chris Columbus sailed the ocean blue. But in 1491, he made many bad movies. It was on account of this that he set sail for the "New World" the next year, in hopes of finding inspiration, or at least cheaper film sets.

Columbus had a hard time finding a sponsor, since his Ravioli Westerns had been a dismal flavor in Italy. He eventually was able to find patronage in Spain, but only because Ferdinand and Isabella had terrible tastes in movies and were rather desperate.

Setting sail in his three ships,
La Ninny, La Pinto, and La Santa Barbara, he soon made it farther than any film crew had made before, setting down in some exotic Caribbean Islands which he named San Andreas. Despite initial displeasure with rotten coconuts and rubber palm trees, Columbus was ultimately satisfied by the island's best export - cheap film crews.

A very happy Chris Columbus, having just relieved himself after a long boat trip.

He soon held open auditions for his next movie, something about a British boy wizard, and natives from across the island erupted onto the film set in swarms. Unfortunately, the Europeans seemed to be carrying rather a lot of nasty diseases, so most of the locals popped their clogs during the middle of their auditions.

Determined not to go back to Spain empty handed, Columbus gathered the few remaining Indians (or so he thought!) and returned to the courts of Ferdy and Isabelle. There the Indians established quite a name for themselves, and became the well known band, Euphoria.


Upon returning to Spain, the Indians cleaned themselves up quite nicely.

Chris Columbus continues to make a name for himself, and is currently the only living explorer/filmmaker who has a holiday named after him.

Saturday, January 6, 2007

Samuel Adams and the Boston Beer Party

Samuel Adams once said, "Give me a half-decent, untaxed, all-American beer, or give me death!" Or maybe that was someone else.

Either way, Samuel Adams was truly a "Renaissance Man": he was an astonishing contributor to the American War for Independence, skilled diplomat, loving husband and father, and (most importantly) a prolific beer manufacturer, which made him rather popular with the minutemen.

Sammy Adams enjoying a cold one.

Born in Boston in 1722, Adams went on to Harvard, where he received degrees in Beer Composition and Beer Theory respectively, before going on to start his own local Boston brewery in 1745. He met with only mild success, due to the huge amount of imported British Beers (despite American protest) and high taxes on local brews. Determined to succeed, he began to branch out into new realms of brewing brilliance, gaining widespread success with his cold beers.

But the British soon got in his way. After declaring innumerable taxes on American products, the Beer Act was the law that broke the brewer's six-pack. Assembling a band of fellow cold-beer lovers, the Sons of Brewery, in 1773 they proceeded to dump several tons of Newcastle Brown and Guinness into the Boston Harbor. Fishermen later reported that the local sea-life was completely wasted for months.

Locals rejoice at the prospect of no more warm beer. The fish will take whatever comes their way.

Shortly after, war broke out among the colonies, and Samuel Adams assisted the revolutionaries, while still maintaining his brewery in the interests of "morale." He began to branch out into other alcoholic beverages and international markets, first coming out with the Declaration Draught for local and foreign patriots, before distilling his award-winning Spirit of '76, which did remarkably well internationally, often marketed under such slogans as "The Shot Drunk Around the World" and "It will get you drunk!" It is often believed that it was this success that brought the French, who were starting to find champagne highly over-rated, into the War on the side of the Americans.

Even though Tea may have "won the war" for Britain in the 1940's, it was most certainly Samuel Adams' Boston Lager that did it for the Americans in '83.

Thursday, January 4, 2007

Teenage Mutant Ninja Renaissance Painters

Known for many years before their famous appearances on children's prime-time television, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Renaissance Painters were at large in the Italian Mafia as far back as 1492, when Chris Columbus was only just starting to make half-decent films.

Leonardo, Raphael, Michelangelo, and Donatello were all humble contributors to the Renaissance tradition by day, but by night they formed the most feared and notorious gang of antidisestablishmentarianists since The Boys from the Basilica, defenestrating Protestant backside since 1517.

"La Pita", one of Michelangelo's most famous bakery product sculptures.

Many have questioned these mysterious ninja painters' (and sculptors') intentions, some citing them as more deranged than Vincent Van Gogh on opium, while others have since hailed them as the 15th and 16th centuries' guardians of the Roman Catholic Faith. Some leading historians even go so far as to say they were bribed by the Pope with indulgences. A smaller, but equally reputable group of historians, suggest pizza.

Fanatically loyal to the Pope, their religious terrorist activities in Protestant Europe are legendary, including (but not limited to) the Revolting Peasant's War of 1524, the Diet of Radioactive Worms, the sinking of the Mary Rose, the framing of Catherine Howard and Anne Boleyn, and (allegedly) placing laxatives in Martin Luther's cornflakes.

Martin Luther, after having a rather nasty laxative in his cornflakes.

While they have long since passed into the alfredo sauce of time, their exquisite paintings and calabunga T.V. show lives on in the hearts of stuffy art collectors and small children everywhere.