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NERDING DAY

Nerding Day: The KFC DC Crossover🌭

Remember when comic books had dignity? No? Me either. I kind of love that DC will whore Superman out to anyone with enough money.

Today, I want to talk about the Colonel Sanders DC multiverse promotional comics that were given out for free at Comic-Con in 2015, 2016, and 2017 because anytime a marketing company has to expand an original IP so far beyond the realm of the original idea, it will inevitably snap.

It’s like they’re trying to perfect teleportation, but all they’ll get from the end product is a deformed Jeff Goldblum monster. Here’s a good example of what I’m talking about. In issue 2 of the KFC/DC crossover comic, there’s a response to a fan letter that clarifies for readers that Colonel Sanders, the KFC mascot, is a real man who has risen from the dead.

I am a real man; I died, yadda yadda, then came back. You’re yadda yaddaing some pretty important shit there, Re-Colonelizer. I need to know if the chicken mascot is supposed to have died for my sins, or what is the deal? They didn’t have to specify that this superhero Harland Sanders is the real, original Harland Sanders of our Earth, a human man with the godlike ability to return from the dead and fight alongside superheroes.

The KFC marketing department also gave us a breakdown of the special equipment that Colonel Sanders has on him at all times, including his Gravy Pen accessory. This is a “highly specialized fountain pen that supplies fans with tasty autographs and dresses up mashed taters,” which is all fine, but why is it eighty-five thousand dollars? It’s a squirt gun. A squirt gun filled with Colonel-temperature Kentucky Fried Chicken gravy.

I’ll tell you why because DC Colonel Sanders is not just a mascot for terrible, truly dogshit fried chicken that tastes like maybe someone accidentally fried a seagull. He’s the mascot of capitalism. He’s a ninety-year-old man who never ceased being productive. This isn’t even me being abstract. Literally, the moral of the comic sounds like a Russian propaganda poster from the Cold War.

“The easy way does not pay, so heroes do it the hard way.” What a moral. All I can picture when I hear this is The Colonel appearing in shadow to say, “Walking on your normal unbroken legs? Looks pretty easy.” (He pulls out his cane.) “Let me fix that for you.”

The main villain of the KFC/DC crossover comics is Colonel Sunder, and he does things the easy way, which is evil, I guess? Listen, KFC, we all know Colonel Sanders is the real villain in any universe. He’s an old southern white man who demands your labor. Also, he’s obsessed with chicken in the exact same way The Penguin is obsessed with penguins, Cat Woman is obsessed with cats, and Cat Man is also obsessed with cats. There aren’t enough cool animals to base your villain personality around.

KFC has to do all of this zany marketing so that we forget the fundamentally unlikeable qualities of its mascot, and they’re doing such a bad job of it here. We can’t have universal healthcare, but Colonel Sanders can have an $85,000 gravy pen and 3 million dollar glasses that violate people’s privacy? Ok.

They want you to look at stuff like Colonel Sanders calling Colonel Sunder his finger-licking foe and find it so quaint and random. They want you to see Colonel Sunder say, “How easily I drown your mash-potato minds in the grim gravy of your own worst nightmares,” and be charmed, entertained even, but I will not.

I will instead be angry that, as punishment for working with Colonel Sunder to… make KFC slightly worse, Colonel Sanders manages to convince The Green Lantern and The Flash to force The Rogues to work at KFC. So the Colonel believes in forced labor as punishment, and the worst punishment he can come up with is working at one of his restaurants. Wow, KFC.

I thought labor would set us free, Colonel Sanders? Make up your mind. I thought The Colonel’s biggest fear was retirement. He literally came back from the dead just to do more work. Shouldn’t The Rogues be thrilled with the opportunity to do sweet, purifying labor? Checkmate, plantation zombie.

This isn’t a one time thing. Colonel Sanders regularly conquers his foes by forcing them to work for him. Structurally, this is a great way to end the comic with everyone eating KFC. Spiritually, it’s because Colonel Sanders is a monster who infects its host and makes it part of him. Of the three KFC/DC crossovers that exist, Colonel Sanders’s villains end up working for him in two. In the third, they are straight-up dead. Colonel Sanders murders Colonel Sunder in issue #2, and half of the word bubbles over his corpse are about getting back to work.

Larfleeze, the Orange Lantern, you all know him, everybody knows Larfleeze, is the villain of issue 3. He suffers a fate worse than death or conscription: He becomes a KFC franchise owner. He’s never going to get the grease smell out of planet Okaara, which as everyone knows is where Larfleeze lives. Someone should be protecting this poor alien from Colonel Sanders, but the Green Lantern just stands there and watches this happen.

I expected more from the Green Lantern because on the cover of issue three, he’s destroying a bucket of fried chicken. This is what I wish would happen to me every time I think of eating some KFC. If I could hire a superhero to blast a KFC bucket out of my hands twice a year I would, and my digestive tract would thank me.

The third and final adventure of Colonel Sanders and The Green Lantern is where DC crossed the line. They abandoned the Sanders multiverse and did a simple plot where Colonel Sanders wanted to deliver his zesty chicken sandwiches to the hungry aliens of the universe, so he enlisted the Green Lantern Corps to help him. The Green Lantern Corps is a public service and he turned them into an intergalactic UberEats. Then, when Larflezze steals all of the sandwiches for himself, The Colonel hunts him down, using The Green Lantern as a Pinkerton to demand payment.

We already know how this ends. Larfleeze is consumed into the Colonel Sanders symbiote. The Orange Lanterns Corps, famously the lantern that represents avarice, extreme greed, yeah, they all work for Colonel Sanders now.

The KFC/DC comic book universe is canonically Earth 1 (the one WE live on), which is the most threatening way this comic book could have phrased that. In Marvel comics, our universe is Earth-1218, where Superheroes don’t exist, and the Marvel Universe that we read about in comics is Earth-616. In DC comics, the DC universe is called Earth Prime, or Earth 0. Earth 1 is the most dystopian version of Earth in these comics. The Daily Planet is reporting on Colonel Sanders’ battle for chicken supremacy. Was it a slow news day, or does the resurrected chicken man have that much power and influence over the world? Maybe next issue the writers could consider The Colonel throwing some delicious, affordable sides to distract a bank robber rather than enslaving a galaxy in his chicken franchise.

All of these mascots that are powerful, rich men are about to fall way out of favor. I’m looking at you, Mr. Fucking Peanut. We don’t need that shit right now. Don’t give them a multiverse and an intergalactic goon squad. Nobody wants that, KFC. I don’t want to purchase chicken from the best possible version of this man, which is a cartoon with a big head and a tiny stick figure body instead of his weird little bow tie. This intergalactic oligarch might get me to swear off fried chicken forever, or at least hire The Green Lantern to blast it out of my hands.

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Yvonne Clapham who found asylum on Earth-43, where the bloodsucking overlords at least have the decency to call themselves vampires.

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NERDING DAY

Nerding Day: King’s Quest 5

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NERDING DAY

CyberKnight and the Hand Puppet Commandos, Part 1🌭

Some ideas are so good you dare not speak them aloud before filing every possible copyright and trademark. You only get one billion dollar idea in your lifetime, and that’s if you’re lucky. When it comes, you need to be ready to drop everything and devote your whole life to it. Robert J. Gold was ready. He was ready for CyberKnight and the Hand Puppet Commandos.

It’s generally not great if people have notes on your story from the legal filings stage, but CyberKnight, Hand Puppet Commandos & GrayLord and the Metalicans sounds like too many things. That’s the complete failed lineup of UPN Kids. I’m not being fair, CKHPC&GL&TM is intended for a visual medium. Maybe it all gels once you see it in action.

We’ve added five racial stereotypes, a touch of pornography, and the Fermi Paradox. We’re still on page 0. This image has bad vibes. That huge blonde lady is definitely porn DLC for Poser. It feels like the inverse of the White Couch Girl meme. I think those puppets are in trouble.

Visuals aren’t helping. Let’s go back to the text.

I’ve been to a lot of con functions, if you notice the whole room avoiding the snack table except for one wild-eyed dude, don’t go in for cheese. He’ll open his mouth and this will spill out. You’ll be trapped for the next hour listening to his escalator pitch for the story of triple-doc Dr. Daryl Daxler, who discovered a solution – hold on, it’s important you know her adoptive Asian parents were big fans of Yogi Bear – she’s always had this theory about alien communication that – wait, she’s not actually called that, call her Dax – actually let’s talk about some scientists having lunch first. Hold on, Dax is actually called CyberKnight, the scientists got hot dogs but Dr. Iverson refused to eat his because the others made fun of the way he suckled the tip-

Why refine a premise into a satisfying story that suits both characters and theme, when you could just open up with both barrels of the idea shotgun and blow your reader’s attention span to shit in the buckshot of a thousand terrible concepts? Robert J. Gold never had an idea that didn’t have three sub-ideas of its own. His brain is a bullet list that nests to infinity. His dirty talk comes with footnotes. Since we spoke last, triple-doc Dr. Daryl Daxler Dax the CyberKnight also became a master puppeteer and used her community theater puppet skills to put herself through three doctorates. Since I wrote that sentence she invented the solution to contacting alien life. It was so simple! It was synthetic telepathy!

Triple-Doc Dr. Daryl Daxler Dax the CyberKnight and now Paradox Puppeteer’s synthetic telepathy machine exploded, but not before downloading the World Protector Kit into her brain, which didn’t do anything on its own, but let her invent the Personifier, which didn’t do anything on its own, but could be used to give life to her racist community theater hand puppets! I didn’t mention it before, because we had to explain why Dax knows Yogi Bear’s catchphrase, but her puppets are racist.

Every puppet team needs a blademaster, just look at Puppet Master, Thunderbolt Fantasy, or Bert. This one’s name is Wasabi, he’s both a Samurai and a Ninja, but just because he’s three kinds of racist against the Japanese doesn’t mean he’s Japanese.

He’s from all Asian countries at once, except only Japan, inspired by Taiwan. I’m sorry! Inspired by a hot blonde girl’s childhood memories of her parents’ memories of Taiwan.

You’re already exhausted. You need to rally. Drink some electrolytes, we’re here for longer than you think.

Sam is every tough cop who ever lived, but once again filtered through the crowded brain of a tri-genius puppet wrangler.

Don’t worry! She has beams! They have many functions. I’m glad we covered the important part, her beams, because Sam is already dead. She dies early in the origin story. What kills her? I’m glad you asked: Tuberculosis.

No, it’s MORE BEAMS.

Iron Ghost is the team’s problem.

He’s the problem character on a team of nothing but problems. If you want to prove you’re not racist, just give a racial caricature one thing that breaks type. Then when people accuse you of stereotyping, you can say “yeah, he’s an American Indian with a supernatural connection to nature, yes, he comes equipped with an electric tomahawk, but he’s actually a chemist. Don’t you feel the fool? What’s that, say his catchphrase out loud? Oh, I… I don’t want to, is all. But I totally would, if I wanted to.”

Decker is sort of Deckard from Blade Runner, but actually wait! No, he’s Indiana Jones. He’s both, and that makes him just Harrison Ford. He carries a .45 caliber pistol, which is actually a stun gun that does a lot of things and one of them is Ion Beam. I didn’t know “stun” was measured in calibers, but I did know the best fists are measured in wetness.

“BRAINS” is … well, the Brains of the team!

Capitalization matters. Saying Brains is the Brains of the team means all teams have a black woman named Brains, and this one fulfills that role. There’s a word for that, I forget it. I’ll ask my one smart black friend what it is.

Brains’ superpower is her intelligence, which is actually triple-doc Dr. Daryl Daxler Dax the CyberKnight’s power. It’s weird, huh. It’s weird that Dax’s intelligence was a simple combination of innate gifts and education, but the black woman needed it bestowed on her by alien telepathy and she’s still not smarter than Dax.

Let’s meet Swami! It’s too late to say no, he’s already here.

Let’s not talk about Swami’s “Short Rope.” Let’s not talk about Swami at all.

Lupe is the “Tactical” one. Like all the best writers, Robert J. Gold has no idea what quotation marks might be, but “god damn” if that’s going to stop him.

She’s hot-blooded, but not in any stereotypical Latina way – she’s all kinds of Mexican at once, inspired by an ignorant child’s memory of a friend’s big sister’s quinceanera. I shouldn’t joke like that, it’s indistinguishable from Robert J. Gold’s actual writing. Lupe is both a Ripley and a “Laura Croft,” you know, from Tomb Marauder? But there’s one important difference: beams! She comes with an Ion Blaster, “stun” functions, and grenades of many flavors.

Already you can see Robert J. Gold is obsessed with beams, stunning, and grenades. Mentally bookmark that. You’ll need it later.

Our main villain is, don’t laugh, GrayLord. It’s fine that you laughed before. Don’t laugh at this one, though. His tag line is “Obey the will of GrayLord.”

He received the evil version of Triple-Doc Dr. Daryl Daxler Dax the CyberKnight’s powers. Where she used them to bring her extremely racial childhood hand puppets to life, Dr. GrayLord just opened a can of life in his garage and let destiny take the wheel.

GrayLord’s pretty lucky his garage was filled with toxic waste, knives, and assault rifles. If I set off a life bomb in my garage I’d get a supervillain squad made of a sassy neglected exercise bike and six old furnace filters clogged with dog hair. I actually do have a barbecue grill in there, but mine never shot white hot plasma. It mostly just clicks when you turn the knob.

Here’s how the epic tale of CyberKnight and the Hand Puppet Commandos begins:

It’s like lighting a scented candle while drowning in a septic tank, but I have a note on the prose: Robert J. Gold, this is a level of uncertainty I don’t love to see in a first paragraph. Before we even learn Dax’s name, we learn she isn’t sure what things are called, and doesn’t like that they’re called that. I’m being unfair. That’s actually a motif in Robert J. Gold’s writing.

Commitment is a surprising problem for the guy who dedicated his life to the first idea a bored child at a Jiffy Lube has. It’s not enough to apologize in text for the terrible name – the whole comic pauses for a full-on flashback to the moment somebody called the commandos that happened to be hand puppets the Hand Puppet Commandos. I’m sorry, that felt too committed. I meant to say they’re some sort of hand puppet commandos.

It’s been a while since we’ve had some beams. Let’s check in on the beams.

What a ransom letter of an image. That’s what the inside of a dog’s brain looks like at a Pink Floyd Laser Spectacular. Just totally disparate objects devoid of context, mashed together from a dozen different sources, all fighting with bright visual gibberish.

A zoomed out view might help.

From this angle it’s more like a scam game made of stolen Newgrounds assets for Huawei phones only. What are we even looking at there? Beams! Mostly beams. Is that guy flying in a cargo container? I’m sorry, I meant some sort of cargo container?

GrayLord and the Metalicans fly in a shipping container? Why? Is that commentary on the tyranny of international consumerism, or is it because the Spaceship DLC in Beat Beat Garage Slaughter: The 23 Obscurers costs 2000 KWD and installs ransomware on your camera?

Anyway, they were being pounded.

By what? By beams!

BEAMS!

\

That’s all from the first few pages of the comic. Just an unceasing, breathless description of beams, the direction of beams, the countering of beams – with what? More beams! Robert J. Gold wrote the novelization of a Hanna-Berbera cartoon, but somehow less rad than that sounds. If this text was 67 pages shorter, it would be perfectly fine on the cardstock of a dollar store action figure in 1989. But the problem with obsessing over a bad idea is your subconscious knows it’s not working, and if you’re unwilling to confront that, you wind up remaking that bad idea in every possible medium, forever, sure that the right format will finally fix it.

Robert J. Gold wrote 70 pages of comic book (that’s too long for a comic book), a 136 page screenplay (that’s too long for a screenplay), and a 70,000 word novel (that’s not long enough for a novel) about hand puppets fighting barbecue grills. Let’s check out the first page of that book-

Beams! First page. Right to the beams. Just hours upon hours of meaningless beams and rays. I’d make a joke about Marvel Studios hiring Robert J. Gold, but that implies a reality in which screenwriters are being hired. Hey, speaking of the total collapse of human art as a career: A friend of mine does short films he calls “in the margins of a movie,” where he removes every shot with a character in it, leaving behind a haunting liminal exploration of atmosphere.

Let’s try the same thing in CyberKnight and the Hand Puppet Commandos, but with removing beams.

This is a far more interesting story about a young woman’s mental breakdown following a series of loveless puppet threeways in seedy motels. Driven completely mad from the guilt and lack of emotional connection, she tears her house apart and starts building bombs. While she lay dying in the ensuing explosion, her mind comforts her the only way it can: with sexual puppets.

Robert J. Gold, that’s the story! You’ve been obsessing over the beams, when the beams are the problem. This is how you get whatever an Academy Award is for puppet pornography. A Felty?

Hold on, zoom in, enhance, hornify.

Is that the exact same scene, but rendered semi-professionally instead of copy/pasting jerkoff models and Half Life assets? That’s not from the comic book…

That’s from the video trailer!

Yes, Robert J. Gold found yet another way to explore the nature of-

I think the comic book came first, then the screenplay, then the novelization. This video trailer seems like it was last. That means Robert J. Gold is thousands of hours and three formats away from his original idea. If you know any artist working in any medium, you know that means they’ve done nothing but obsess over all the flaws in that time.

Surely the puppet gangbang isn’t still in here-

You can almost forgive Robert J. Gold for using porn assets to build his comic magnum opus. When your wife checks the credit card bill and sees a $69.99 charge for Virtual Misty Melons, you have to get creative. But to pay a Chinese vanity animation studio to re-render the whole thing and still keep the porn asset – that means you were never just doing the best with what you had. You meant for it to be this way.

I don’t know what you call a fetish this repressed. It feels like more than simple puppet fucking, and yet less than advanced perversions like toy cuck macrophilia. Robert J. Gold must be working through some really bizarre shit in his past he refuses to confront. Something involving explosions and beams, no doubt.

Here’s where a normal comedy article would end. But here at 1900HOTDOG, we pride ourselves on always finding the secret crimes behind puppetry. So I’ll see you next week for Part 2 of CyberKnight and the Hand Puppet Commandos, where I successfully track down the explosion and beam-based tragedy that poisoned Robert J. Gold’s brain. I’m not joking: It’s a true story about mad inventors, fringe weapon manufacturing, terrorism, grenade cults, karate maniacs, decapitation, CIA conspiracies, political assassination, the militarization of the American police force, actual war crimes, maybe an exploded baby, and definitely-

This article was thanks to a Hot Dog Tip from Peter S. who had no fucking idea what box he was opening when he sent this along.

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: SpaceJamFan, a small puppet climbing a large woman in search of purpose, only to find beams.

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Nerding Day: Mormon Rap

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Nerding Day: The Magic of the Golden Bear 🌭

Gather around children, for the fire is warm upon the hearth and my grandfatherly voice is just the right amount of gin-soaked. It smells of old leather, even though there is none in the room. And, if you’ll all just close your precious peepers and shut up for five minutes For The Love of God, I’ll tell you a story – one sure to entertain the whole family in their home theatre. See?

Tonight’s tale is called The Magic of the Golden Bear, and then in parenthesis “(Goldy III).”

Do you know what parenthesis are? Can you explain why the movie subtitle is in parenthesis? Because I can’t! Nor can I tell you why the number is in the subtitle, even though the first two Golden Bear movies have it the normal way.

Also, how do you go “Last,” then “Saga,” then “Magic?” How is that a build? Oh, and of course by “movie,” Grandpa means the bedtime story he’s about to tell you. We should probably start since my premise is already slipping.

This is the story of Goldy III: The Magic of the Golden Bear!

Once, there was a big fluffy bear, and not the kind that became Daddy’s new best friend when Daddy and Mommy stopped being best friends (even though all three of them still love you very much). This bear’s name was Goldy, and she was the very last Golden Bear. Being the last of something is called being “rare,” like how you don’t see a diamond very often unless you work at the place where they keep big piles of diamonds to keep diamond prices high. Or a steak can be rare, or cows can become rare because steak is so common. Words sure can be confusing!

Here’s some confusing words, letting you know that sharing the story I’m about to tell you is a big no-no, especially if you ask all your little friends for a nickel to hear it. This is called copyright law, and it’s something you won’t have to worry about when you grow up because of A.I. technology. Now, in this story there’s a very scary character called the Ghost Man, so try to be brave. To make the Ghost Man a little less scary, let’s imagine him as someone silly, like Mr. T.

Not Mr. T from our alphabet book, I mean Mr. T the man from the YouTube compilation I showed you. His real name is Laurence, did you know that? What a stupid name. I don’t think a name could get any sillier.

I stand corrected. Cheech’s real name is Richard Anthony, but he shortened it to Cheech because of marijuana. Marijuana is a plant that helps grandpas relax, and the reason you can only eat the brownies in the vermillion tupperware, never the cerise, even though I placed them side-by-side within easy reach and swap them occasionally to keep you on your toes.

There will be other people in the story too, all of whom have porn star names. There’s Danny Woodburn, Jeff Handsomeguy, Fuck Blower, Kevin Broseph and Dick Millionaire. Can you think of a funny porn star name? No, Jonny Spaghetti is not a good porn star name. You suck at this.

Anyhow, one day Goldy’s very best friend, a little girl named Geraldine Vajbyrne, was getting oo-mox from her cranky old teacher Mrs. Dowrimple. Mrs. Dowrimple was mad because Geraldine always had dirty bare feet at school. Even though her dirty bare feet were how Geraldine made most of her income, she didn’t care one bit, and only wanted the schoolhouse to stay clean. Heck, she was such a mean old crow, she even got upset when Goldy stole her bicycle, rode it past the school at breakneck speed, immediately ate shit and totaled the bike against a tree, sprinted back to the schoolhouse, ate all the kids’ lunches and took over control of the classroom!

That old Mrs. Dowrimple sure was a bitch! Can you say “bitch?” That’s right, you can’t. That was a test. Good job. Old Mrs. D was so angry, she made Geraldine and Goldy both wear dunce caps and sit in the corner.

Well, the school only had the one dunce cap, so Goldy had to use a spare Klan hood. This was the rural 1860s, after all. Now to intercut, weaving various threads of the story together in a fashion that disjoints time to maintain a feeling of dynamics. But I shouldn’t patronize – you know how bedtime stories work, you’re seven. So meanwhile, the cantankerous racist who lent Mrs. Dowrimple the hood and his two dumbshit sons wandered through the scrub, probably sucking each other off and murdering buffalo, the absolute assholes.

This sort of behavior made the Ghost Man very mad, so mad that he also decided to indulge in some 1860s-style racism. He jumped out at the men, shaking his appropriative rain stick and looking fierce in his appropriative face paint and headdress! Spellcheck urged Grandpa to change that to “appropriate rain stick” and “appropriate face paint,” but that would be inaccurate.

Realizing that he is fighting racism with racism, which is another big no-no, the Ghost Man came up with a better plan. He fought racism…with fire!

This scared the bad men all the way back to town, where there would be no more racism at all (as long as you don’t count wooden drugstore indians).

Needing to further dirty her feet for reasons Grandpa will explain to you when you’re older, Geraldine headed out into the wilds, her loyal bear and companion Goldy by her side. The only problem was, at least one of them – and maybe both – were fools, to be pitied. The Ghost Man had no choice but to scare them away too, even though Goldy has a bite power of roughly nine hundred pounds per square inch, which would act upon the Ghost Man’s bones much like an industrial press upon a bundle of reeds.

The Ghost Man would probably have chased them all the way home! Luckily, his reasonable crow friend talked him down, explaining that he had observed Geraldine and Goldy, and knows them to be friends to animals, lovers of freedom, and owners of some of the filthiest feet around.

CAW! said the crow! OH! said the Ghost Man! I DIDN’T KNOW THAT! THANK YOU CROW!

The Ghost Man could talk to animals, see, or else was seriously mentally ill. Or both! Sometimes more than one thing can be true at the same time, like how Grandpa’s drink can be tequila AND rum AND vodka AND triple sec AND lemon juice AND simple syrup AND a splash of cola. Anyhow, the crow had been canceled for his previous work on Dumbo but was trying to make a lowkey comeback in the world of straight-to-TV. Sorry, I mean straight-to-bedtime-story-I-wrote-for-you.

That night at dinner, Geraldine told her clod-hopping family all about the Ghost Man. While they were distracted, Goldy ate their pie right off the windowsill! It made everyone laugh, both because it’s just such a silly thing to do, and because of the bite pressure dry reeds thing I mentioned earlier.

Seriously, Grandchild, look at the guy on the right – that’s a terror-smile. But it’s nothing compared to the terror-smile an egg-eyed little person with a fu-manchu mustache had just at that moment given to a poster of his master, the great magician Borgia.

For Master Borgia’s first trick, he kind of did a match cut between the poster and himself making the same face…kind of. In your mind’s eye, please imagine legendary stoner comic Cheech Marin as the great magician. If you also get a little high, some of the back half of the story will make more sense. Go ahead, Grandpa won’t tell. Look, I’ll go first. What are you, chicken?

Anyway, trick two was to shove a sword right through his throat, which was pretty wicked.

Master Borgia also had the power of hypnosis, which he showcased as his third and final trick. That was the whole show: a knife to the neck and the power to bend men to his will.

Keep in mind, this was history times. The Masked Magician had not yet taken to FOX to reveal The Magician’s Secrets, so people were more easily impressed by simple tricks like mind control.

Using his power to see the future through a crystal ball, which arguably would have been a good way to pad out the show a bit, Master Borgia became aware of Goldy. Since Goldy was the very last Golden Bear in the world, she was imbued with a lot of natural magic, and the evil magician decided to try and steal her to make her part of his show. It was a real 101 Dalmatians situation, if the dalmatians could have swatted Cruella to the ground and crunched her face off at will.

Of course, fifteen minutes had passed so it was time for another long look at Geraldine dirtying her feet. What’s that? You don’t like that part of the story? Shh, let Grandpa have this. Let Grandpa cook. Anyhow, once Geraldine’s feet were nice and filthy, she said goodbye to Pa and set off barefoot with a pair of boots over her shoulder.

Then, in a surprise twist, the story pulled out to reveal that they apparently live in Chernobyl.

She swiftly made her way back to the town concentration camp, I mean schoolhouse, to scrabble in the dirt with the other drab moppets and learn about what her life was unfortunately going to be like.

This meant Goldy had to stay home alone with Pa, which made her none too happy! She missed Geraldine, and wasn’t afraid to say so.

ROAAAAR! said Goldy. Pa just stood there a-cleanin’ his rifle until she got the idea and went and threw on one of Ma’s old dresses (rest her soul). Then Pa and Goldy did some roleplay, which Grandpa will tell you about when you’re significantly older than you will be when Grandpa tells you about the dirty feet stuff.

Finally, it was time for the Big Town Talent Show that I forgot to mention until now! Everyone was very excited as they filed under the big poster with the traditional symbol of a talent show on it: one black cat with a neck ruff standing atop two kittens who are themselves stood atop two kittens apiece, astride three balls of yarn that form the base.

Master Borgia was in town looking for Goldy, and took the stage first. He dazzled everyone right away with a trick even better than mind control or immortality – the ability to vomit paper for a long long time. Think of the applications!

Geraldine knew she would have to pull out all the stops to win against such a magical magician, so she and Goldy practiced all night on their acrobatics routine, which they had to perform that afternoon for the whole town.

Goldy didn’t do shit. Geraldine flipped all around and cheated her feet toward camera and did everything that was asked of her, but Goldy just sat there trying to use forced perspective to make it seem like she was standing on a ball. She wasn’t. “This is going to be harder than I thought!” thought Geraldine. “Fuck!” It was the first time she had ever sworn in her head. It felt good.

But with Goldy unable or unwilling to do any proper tricks, Geraldine knew she had only one hope of winning that Big Town Talent Show. Taking the stage, she forgot all about her acrobatics routine and fell back on pure instinct. Thus, after a brief Ace Ventura impersonation, she bent all the way over and let out a long, high, keening whistle of a fart for four whole minutes.

And then everyone clapped.

Even Master Borgia had to admit it was the finest work of art and affirmation of the human spirit he’d ever been privileged enough to witness. That fart was so beautiful, in fact, that it shattered the will of Master Borgia’s assistant, who left town to “go find himself,” which in this case meant working shifts as a night watchman at a feed and grain operation up in Tulsa.

Spotting his opportunity, Borgia tried to hypnotize Pa into giving him Goldy, but Pa passed a Will Saving Throw and shrugged off the attempt.

This left Borgia no choice but to try and rig the big shooting contest, so he could win a pot of gold and buy Goldy anyway. Again, owning the bear would amplify his magic abilities for reasons I can’t and won’t be goaded into explaining.

Somewhere, a rainbow wept and a leprechaun went without, because that pot of gold was brimming, let me tell you! Everyone in town took a turn shooting at targets, hoping to win that big shiny pile of coins. There was Calamity Ma’am…

…Gentleman Jim “Dandy” Léon…

…Brad from Homeroom…

…and of course, Jesse Plemons.

When Pa’s turn finally came, Master Borgia unleashed his most powerful spell of all – a handful of loose glitter!

And believe it or not, that was enough. Pa missed his target, leaving Borgia to win the gold. He then immediately tried to buy Goldy from Pa, a man who had just that morning resisted magical ensorcellment. Shockingly, that also didn’t work, since Pa could just say “no, I don’t want to sell you the bear for a pot of gold” and then Borgia was essentially out of moves.

…and that’s how Goldy the Bear and Geraldine the Foot Model didn’t win a pot of gold but did turn from pitiable fools into the ones pitying the fool, which their rival the magician Master Borgia now had become. Honestly, pretty straightforward. Dry stuff.

Oh, you’re not asleep yet? But the fire is no longer warm upon the hearth. Okay, shit, well, I guess we haven’t checked in with Mr. T in a while. So, realizing Goldy didn’t rightly belong to anyone, Geraldine and Pa released her into the wild, where she and the Ghost Man hung out and did bear stuff for the rest of their days.

What? Who ended up with the pot of gold? I guess Borgia did according to plot logic, but that doesn’t seem right – bad guy leaving with the gold. Hm…okay, let’s say Ghost Man beat Borgia to death later outside town. That wise old crow ate his eyes, I guess. Goodnight!

—-

Michael has moved from X to Bluesky. He also has a Patreon and a Substack, and releases new videos on the Cracked YouTube channel every Sunday.

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Russell Bauman, who is very relieved nobody fucked the bear in this one.

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NERDING DAY

Nerding Day: Dial H For Hero

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