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Uneducated Former Children Sue Pink FloydDecember 6, 2004 |
London, England EMI/Capitol Records The band, pictured here during their âsalad days,â when they spent most of their days smoking âsaladâ he disturbingly enduring English space-rock band Pink Floyd has come under fire this week, thanks to a lawsuit filed by twenty former children who sang on the bandâs 1979 hit âAnother Brick in the Wall.â According to lawyers for the now-adults, Floyd never paid them for their services, and also didnât bother to use them on the bandâs 1983 follow-up The Final Cut, which sucked hard because of it.
âThese children gave minutes of their time, time that could have been spent in the classroom learning about fish, to contribute to this album, with only years of local notoriety and a permanent place in rock ân roll history as their reward,â explained the former-childrenâs lawyer, Theodore Chuck. âItâs time this injustice was rectified, and by that I don...
he disturbingly enduring English space-rock band Pink Floyd has come under fire this week, thanks to a lawsuit filed by twenty former children who sang on the bandâs 1979 hit âAnother Brick in the Wall.â According to lawyers for the now-adults, Floyd never paid them for their services, and also didnât bother to use them on the bandâs 1983 follow-up The Final Cut, which sucked hard because of it.
âThese children gave minutes of their time, time that could have been spent in the classroom learning about fish, to contribute to this album, with only years of local notoriety and a permanent place in rock ân roll history as their reward,â explained the former-childrenâs lawyer, Theodore Chuck. âItâs time this injustice was rectified, and by that I donât mean âput up your bum.â As Iâve explained to my clients time and time again, thatâs not what ârectifiedâ means.â
While recording the track for their hugemongously successful 1979 album The Wall, Floydâs management recruited the children from nearby Islington Green School, offering the schoolâs music teacher Alun Renshaw 1,000 pounds and âa shot at Debra,â a reference to one of the bandâs roster of loose groupies. The teacher insists that aside from getting his rocks off with the Floyd groupie, he wasnât compensated in any way for the childrenâs appearance on the album. The 1,000 pounds apparently went to the school itself, which it reportedly spent on adding windows to the grim, lightless building which had originally been used as a slaughterhouse.
âWe were just going to go over how they make pickles that day,â explained Renshaw. âSo I figured what the hell.â
School officials were mortified when they discovered their studentsâ involvement in a song with the lyrics âWe donât need no education, we donât need no thought control, no dark sarcasm in the classroom â teachers leave them kids alone.â
âWe just thought they were terribly hackneyed,â explained Islingtonâs headmistress Margaret Maden. âAnd at the time we were worried that this song would inspire British children to take less interest in their education. But what we quickly learned was that Pink Floyd only inspired prolonged attention in the heavily stoned, and except for those jokers who sang on the album, the rest of Englandâs children quickly went back to their studies.â
Those jokers, however, went about their own not learning with a passion, sure they would be able to coast through the rest of their lives on their association with the psychedelic prog-rock band. The academic habits of the twenty children involved, already questionable, took a turn for the worse after the songâs astonishing success. The children then felt like they needed to respect their newfound roles as spokeschildren for a generation, and feared being branded as sellouts if they were to learn their multiplication tables. Repeated efforts by teachers to point out that nobody in the outside world even knew who they were met with consistent failure. Convinced that stoners everywhere were praising them for their anti-establishment stance and their collective position on dark sarcasm in the classroom, the children succeeded in failing to learn anything for the rest of their academic careers.
After Floyd refused to prolong the childrenâs careers through more backup singing opportunities, Renshaw attempted to wrong that right with the childrenâs follow-up album in 1981, We Donât Need No Hygiene, Neither. But without Pink Floydâs publicity machine the album was doomed to fairly poor showing, selling few copies. Worst of all, Renshaw learned heâd been beaten to the punch by some knob over in Langley, Canada, and was personally sued for stealing a bad idea.
Though thoroughly uneducated, the now-adult claimants are clear on their expectations for a delayed slice of the Pink Floyd pie.
âI donât know, I think we should get a million, trillion pounds,â offered former schoolchild Roary Mills. âA kapchillion maybe.â
âNo way,â argued fellow former child Paul Richards. âIâm not getting ripped off. I wonât settle for anything less than twenty-five pounds.â
Should the matter go to trial, Mills believes the legal process will involve throwing fruit at the band until the truth is revealed. Richards, on the other hand, believes the judge will turn Pink Floyd upside-down and shake them until enough money falls out for everyone to buy ice cream. Stan Chancey, the groupâs expert on the legal system due to his having seen a courtroom drama on television years ago, explains to the others that a jury of their peers will decide Floydâs fate, meaning the jury will be made up of assorted British rock ân roll legends.
Chancey envisions seminal British rockers like Eric Clapton, Ray Davies and the Rolling Stones delivering their verdict via an electrifying supergroup courtroom concert the likes of which the world has never seen. If the jury decides in favor of the band, Chancey explains, look for them to reprise the obscure George Harrison classic âNot Guilty,â especially if Harrison himself is on the jury. If Floyd are found guilty, however, the band may compose a brand-new tune to unveil at the verdict reading, with a title something like âTheyâre Guilty,â which will likely feature each of the jury members singing a line of lyrics in turn, sort of like the Traveling Wilburys or that big Dylan benefit concert years back.
Chuck, who has long since given up explaining the British legal system to the former children, hopes the settlement will be large enough for him to retire and never have to deal with the uneducated ever again. The commune news donât need no education, neither, we enjoy sex-ed films purely for their artistic value. Boner Cunningham is no Pink Floyd fan himself, but admits he had to at least learn a few song titles in order to qualify to buy weed.
 | November 29, 2004 |
Seattle, WA Boner Cunningham Leave it to terrorists to make the Cunningham family vacation even more miserable than it already was he Al-Qaeda jig was upped last week when the Texas Transportation Institute dropped their yearly bombshell with the release the Urban Mobility Report, showing that traffic has gone from bad to shitty everywhere nationwide in the last five years. Though the Texas A&M study lists the usual scapegoats of poor urban planning and American aversion to public transportation as the culprits, real Americans willing to talk to commune reporters while stuck in traffic put the blame squarely at the feet of the rogue terrorist network Al-Qaeda, which has been linked in recent years to everything from the 9/11 attacks to the heartbreaking cancellation of some of this reporterâs favorite television programs.
âMan, I was sitting in traffic the other day for like two hours,â bitched ...
he Al-Qaeda jig was upped last week when the Texas Transportation Institute dropped their yearly bombshell with the release the Urban Mobility Report, showing that traffic has gone from bad to shitty everywhere nationwide in the last five years. Though the Texas A&M study lists the usual scapegoats of poor urban planning and American aversion to public transportation as the culprits, real Americans willing to talk to commune reporters while stuck in traffic put the blame squarely at the feet of the rogue terrorist network Al-Qaeda, which has been linked in recent years to everything from the 9/11 attacks to the heartbreaking cancellation of some of this reporterâs favorite television programs.
âMan, I was sitting in traffic the other day for like two hours,â bitched Seattle motorist Clyde Williams, while sitting in traffic. âAnd no shit, there was an Arab dude sitting in the car in front of me. Theyâre everywhere. Motherfucker was playing that easy-listening station on the radio like he didnât know his windows was down, too. I hate that shit.â
Fresh off the successfully disastrous hijacking of a Russian elementary school and complete concealment of their very involvement months ago, Al-Qaeda has again set its sights on our friendly shores, though not covertly enough to fool shrewd American motorists. While going car to car during a recent traffic jam in Seattle, this reporter sampled a broad cross-section of American frustration with Al-Qaedaâs insidious infrastructure-stalling tactics.
âOh yeah, I see that all the time,â agreed motorist Dale Harvey, after this reporter suggested Al-Qaeda might be behind the I-5 backup heâd been stuck in for the last forty-five minutes. âThereâs always some terrorist assfuck driving slow in the left-hand lane or leaving his turn signal on for miles. Women, too. They say Al-Qaeda doesnât ever use women, but then how do you explain all these awful women drivers? I think those bastards leave all the driving up to their terrorist wives. Theyâve probably got camps out in the desert, teaching them to change lanes randomly and slow way down to rubberneck at accidents.â
âCan Chinese guys be Al-Quada?â added Harvey, in question. âBecause those guys drive for shit too. Might be something worth looking into there. Maybe theyâre branching out or outsourcing to the Orient. Tricky bastards.â
While not as dramatic as blowing up a bridge or nuking Chattanooga, Al-Qaedaâs efforts to delay and annoy average Americans have had a significant effect in recent years, according to the Texas study. Over 3.5 billion hours were lost to traffic jams nationwide last year, a number so large as to be meaningless unless put into context: Thatâs like watching Lawrence of Arabia five or six times.
âI wouldnât put it past âem,â confided motorist and housewife Darlene Pickering, gesturing to the wall of cars blocking her route home from spinning class. âDidnât they set off that hurricane over in Florida? And now this. We should stop giving the terrorists driversâ licenses, if this is how theyâre going to repay us.â
During the course of interviewing inconvenienced motorists, it became clear that Al-Qaeda has failed to hide its nefarious scheming from average Americans, or at least average Americans stuck in traffic. The terrorist network may have erred in giving Americans too much time to unravel their twisted dealings while killing time during traffic jams.
âI think about that shit sometimes,â mused Harvey. âLike how come Arbyâs never has that â5 for $5â deal any more? They think we wouldnât notice that? Shit. Man, I hope some terrorist fuck didnât set his old beater on fire up ahead in the breakdown lane, âcuz I gotta piss bad.â the commune news was once accused by Homeland Security of being the result of an Al-Qaeda plot, but then again so was everyone who suggested Bush didnât really win Florida. Boner Cunningham is the communeâs most enthusiastic and least-discerning reporter, who hopes to one day go for the office Triple Crown should Ivan Nacutchacokov ever step down as the ugliest.
 | Allah throws a little flood action Pakistan's way Christina Aguilera announces engagement to manwhore Dean shouts down opponents to head DNC Report: Guns inappropriately classified as food by oil-for-food program |
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 April 11, 2005 My Dear, Your New Children Have Become a NuisanceMy dearest Deidrebane, it pains me acutely to have to write you this column and expose our personal goings-on to the somewhat wider audience of the world at large, but I can't find any of our personal stationary and I'm not about to go tearing up the entire house when the computer is right here.
Simply put and plainly typed, your new children have become a nuisance.
I can only assume these children were adopted by you on one of your recent humanitarian skylarkings, some time while my attention was turned elsewhere, say to the televised gladiatorial matches or to Bolivian chicken racing, whose season is now thrillingly underway. I know you claim these children to be the fruits of your loom, or loins, whatever it is you have down there nowadays, but needless to sa...
º Last Column: I Promised to Stop Smoking Crack º more columns
My dearest Deidrebane, it pains me acutely to have to write you this column and expose our personal goings-on to the somewhat wider audience of the world at large, but I can't find any of our personal stationary and I'm not about to go tearing up the entire house when the computer is right here.
Simply put and plainly typed, your new children have become a nuisance.
I can only assume these children were adopted by you on one of your recent humanitarian skylarkings, some time while my attention was turned elsewhere, say to the televised gladiatorial matches or to Bolivian chicken racing, whose season is now thrillingly underway. I know you claim these children to be the fruits of your loom, or loins, whatever it is you have down there nowadays, but needless to say, I find this to be horrifyingly implausible. To the best of my knowledge your plumbing has not been snaked in a generation. And word on the street is that things are drier down there than a jerky stand in the Sahara. For the sake of decorum, I shall fail to go into the gruesome details, though believe me when I say the word is out.
I can only imagine how our first wave of real children feel about this latest batch of imposters, suckling at their mother's dry, unproductive teat. Wherever they are, Deidrebane, out in the world making their fortune or spending ours, it is surely a sad day for them. If I could remember their names, I would send my condolences by post card or fruit basket, whichever we have in stock at the moment.
And no, I will not refer to these new hangers-on as "our" children. I fell for that trick once, many years ago, and shant repeat my folly. I'm quite convinced I never had anything to do with the first batch, and so I'm not about to piss my markings onto these latest home-invaders. These are your children, Deidrebane, and I've had enough of them playing "bakery" with my angel dust collection.
Firstly, there's the matter of your oldest new son, Montpellier, who I recently heard through the grapevine was kicked out of the Hentwistle Correctional Facility for Incorrect Boys. It had been my understanding that Hentwistle was nothing more than a nicely-named prison house, and if they're offering expulsion for misbehavior these days I fear for the message this sends to baddies and goodies alike. Montpellier must truly be a special child.
But the one sycophant I truly cannot abide is your new young son, Cartegney. This one is really the tops. Just last week he got into my gun collection, and you don't need a fertile imagination to discern what happened next. That's right; the child organized my guns by model number, then put them all away neatly in the gun safe! Now what am I supposed to do if I need to shoot something in a hurry?
I shall fail, I fear, not unlike your newest daughter Steenburgen when she tried to bake us an anniversary cake last week. You can say what you want, but if a child doesn't understand the concept of needing to bake the cake before hiding yourself inside, I say she has a valuable lesson to learn from the skin grafts. I know I've kept nothing but fond memories from the summer I spent as the Human Torch at a county fair in my youth, and not just because the unpleasant parts are either blacked out from my memory or masked by a thick curtain of Vicodin.
No my dear, these new children just aren't working out, and I think it's time they were sent back. Dig up your receipt and return them to the adoption cart at the mall or Kids "R" Us or wherever it was that you picked up these wayward moppets in the first place. I would rid our house of them myself, but my plot was already foiled by Cartegney, who informed me that the car I had loaded them all into did not have an adequate safety rating and regardless, he was too young to drive. So do what you must, Deidrebane. I won't have these precocious ragamuffins pointing out the folly of my planning. Now if you need me, I'll be in the den, watching the Crusades on pay-per-view. º Last Column: I Promised to Stop Smoking Crackº more columns | 
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Quote of the Day“Learning without thought is labor lost; except in public schools, where it keeps most teachers employed.”
-Confused-ass CarmenFortune 500 CookieYou'll have a brush with death this week, and that fucker has some of the yellowest teeth you've ever seen, so make sure you go first. This time the lyrics to the song you're pretending to know the words to actually are "Watermelon, Watermelon, Watermelon." You'll make the most expensive movie ever made in your kitchen this week, for ten dollars. Lucky strikes, camels, kools, and bel-airs.
Try again later.Top 5 Other Hasselhof Home Videos1. | Whoopsh!: Outtakes From the Drinking Videos | 2. | 5 hours straight of sucking in gut until a rib pops out | 3. | All-nude Batwatch starring some girls from the escort service | 4. | Intense argument with his car over who is the real star of Knight Rider | 5. | Imaginary non-German music awards show where Hasselhoff sweeps every category | |
|   Rappers Now Safer on Streets Than in Studios BY orson welch 3/28/2005 I'm shocked into a rare non-sweating state by the wealth of first-run movies hitting DVD shelves in the next two weeks. So as much as I'd rather banter to fill dreadful column inches, I'm afraid I have actual reviews to get to this week. Lucky me⌠at least until you see the films.
Now on DVD:
Closer
An amazing achievement in film, for everyone who wanted to see Natalie Portman's breasts. Trust me, we're a larger group than you may ever know. I was heartbroken to find out all her really raunchy scenes were cut upon her request—alas, it was never meant to be. But I have other videos where, if you squint just right, you'll swear the girl with the lesbian and the black guy looks just like her. Anyway, the movie—it wallows in de...
I'm shocked into a rare non-sweating state by the wealth of first-run movies hitting DVD shelves in the next two weeks. So as much as I'd rather banter to fill dreadful column inches, I'm afraid I have actual reviews to get to this week. Lucky me⌠at least until you see the films.
Now on DVD:
Closer
An amazing achievement in film, for everyone who wanted to see Natalie Portman's breasts. Trust me, we're a larger group than you may ever know. I was heartbroken to find out all her really raunchy scenes were cut upon her request—alas, it was never meant to be. But I have other videos where, if you squint just right, you'll swear the girl with the lesbian and the black guy looks just like her. Anyway, the movie—it wallows in depravity the way only an aging Hollywood director can. Julia Roberts is not quite convincing as someone who's not Julia Roberts, and Jude Law marks off another one in his contract with Lucifer. Capsulated review: "Pretty people doing bad things."
Elektra
Talk about pretty people doing bad things. Elektra is maybe a third as good as Daredevil, and if you've seen Daredevil, it's twice as bad as you were hoping. That makes for some really nauseating mathematics here. Further proof you should always write your movies before filming them, people. Jennifer Garner, adorable little fledgling superstar that she is, takes her "Alias" TV show to the big screen, although that wasn't really the intention. She was more original in 13 Going on 30, where she ripped off Big, and she was better utilized in Dude, Where's My Car? where her breasts inflated and she had few lines. I like her enough to hang a poster on my dorm wall if I were 19, but making me sit through nearly two hours of this crap is asking too much.
Spanglish
Despite Hollywood's insistence, I must respectfully disagree with them that this movie was actually released. True, I've seen it—on a pirated download DVD—but I have never seen a theater really advertising it. Oh, well, they're in denial. At first you might think this is another crappy Adam Sandler movie— not so! It's a crappy Jim Brooks movie. After making Jack Nicholson almost sympathetic in As Good as it Gets, TV God Brooks decided he'd try something really impossible—make a movie with Adam Sandler where we didn't want him dead. Nice try, Jim, but everybody's got their limitations.
Sideways
One of the big Oscar nominees of the year is, in truth, a pretty dull little trip through wine country. I applaud them for trying make a movie without explosions, but they could have put in explosive something—dialogue, characters, anything. Paul Giamatti is a desperate, meek fellow trying to do anything to make his life not so desperately meek—see virtually every other role Paul Giamatti has ever played. He's just shy enough of being Hollywood handsome that he's the actor Tinsel Town casts when they want to show how little they think of normal people. Thomas Haden Church is quite excellent as every guy's best friend in a film ever. Is it possible, in Hollywood dreamland, for two men to know each other and not have one be a Marlon Brando On the Waterfront screw-up?
That's a trip to bountiful for you. Thanks for indulging my cinematic irritation again this week. Oh, and if someone knocks on your door and asks, " Guess Who?" don't open it. Trust me, it's Ashton Kutcher.   |