The Possum Lady
Remarkably, Georgette Spelvin, also known as The Opossum Lady, has been around for years without us knowing about it. This is very disappointing because Flying Pie headquarters is tricked out with the most powerful radio telescope arrays known to man and its refined Nitwit Meter is the envy of nutcake hunters everywhere. Where did she come from, Cotton Eyed Joe?
For many years, The Possum Lady was mild-mannered housewife Georgette Spelvin of Southern California. But then one day while vacationing in Western Kentucky, she stumbled into a strange cave in the middle of a dense forest. As she went further and further into the tunnel, the cave opened up significantly and became brighter. When Georgette hesitated to proceed, a booming voice rang out in the distance. “WELCOME!” it echoed. “Welcome to the lair of The Great Possum.” And at the end of the tunnel, there he was on the Possum Throne.
“I will give you these two stone tablets,” said TGP. “On them are the many truths possumhood has collected over generations, secrets unknown to mankind. You will take these revelations and make them known to the world.” Gotcha, said Georgette Spelvin. And thus, her adventure began.
Georgette started showing up (perfectly coiffed, ala Jackie O.) on YouTube with important messages for the world, like how to take proper care of your own opossum. Possums are apparently style conscious, so we mustn’t neglect their wardrobes, where simplicity rules. It’s also a critical matter to schedule those monthly pedicures. Spelvin, if you ask nicely, will be glad to teach you how to properly massage your opossum, assuming you’re interested.
Now, some folks might be a smidge concerned that Georgette’s partner in crime is one Pearl de Wisdom, a dead squirrel who knows everything. But not us. The Flying Pie feels if there is a deceased squirrel out there willing to share her psychic wisdom with us via an earthly mouthpiece, have at it. Many fans have benefited from Pearl’s thoughtful commentaries on love, money, work, health and etiquette, particularly as it applies to impatient automobile drivers who can’t wait a few seconds for a street-crossing squirrel to make up her mind.
People who scoff at the possibility of psychic wisdom from rodents should take a few moments to remember the vast contributions of Mighty Mouse. And by the way, how much have you really learned from Dear Abby anyway?
Bizarro World
An enterprising Michigan woman who prefers to remain unidentified is looking for a new home today after police discovered she was living inside a rooftop sign above a grocery store. Nicknamed “the rooftop ninja” by police, the lady took up residence above the Family Fare store in Midland about a year prior to her discovery. Police said the 34-year-old woman, who has a job and a vehicle, had furnished her digs with a mini-desk, flooring and a food pantry. She was released without charges and was last seen heading for Times Square.
Some people just love those thrill rides at amusement parks to death. Literally. Recent visitors to Disneyland were bummed to find their seats on the Rise of the Resistance ride smeared with bone chips and ashes, the cremains of someone who must have liked the ride a lot. Dusting the landscape at The Happiest Place on Earth seems to have become a thing in Anaheim, where remains have also been discovered on attractions like It’s a Small World, Pirates of the Caribbean and The Haunted Mansion. The park would like to remind everyone that grandma won’t necessarily stay where you drop her off. Sooner or later, she will be swept up and dumped. Maybe you should try Sea World next time.
It was so hot in Death Valley last July that Belgian tourist Noah Goossens, 42, melted the skin off his feet after losing his flip-flops on the Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes. The air temperature was a mere 123 degrees but the sand has been known to get as hot as 200 Fahrenheit. The scalding temperatures made it impossible for a helicopter to land in the dunes so Noah was hauled off by park visitors to a safer elevation, then flown to a hospital in Las Vegas. Rangers advise summer visitors to Death Valley to stay within a ten-minute walk of air-conditioning, not hike after ten a.m., drink lots of water and carry a salt shaker with them at all times. Goossens says next year he’s going to see the glaciers in Alaska. Keep your shoes on, Noah.
Bet you can’t tell us who’s eaten the most Big Macs ever. That would be Don Gorske, 70, who first sunk his teeth into McDonald’s signature sandwich more than 50 years ago and hasn’t missed a day since. He’s up to a Guinness World Record 34,000 Big Macs lifetime, though he’s cut down to only two a day lately (his max for a day is nine). When he started his marathon, his mother made him promise to eat at least one Macless meal a day and he’s kept his vow. Gorske walks about six miles a day, gets regular checkups and appears healthy. “No one will ever break my record,” Don beams, proudly. Still, there is occasionally a price to pay. “My wife and I were planning a vacation to Russia, then someone told me there were no McDonald’s stores there. Can you believe it? Well, we cancelled immediately, of course. I thought Trump and Putin were friends, for crying out loud.”
Kathygrams
Our alert reporter Kathleen Knight is the Queen of Miscellany, often coming up with significant tidbits unreported elsewhere. These anecdotes are usually brief, bizarre and of great interest to someone, although we are not sure who. With that in mind, The Flying Pie has decided to occasionally publish a gaggle of them for public consumption in hopes that they will somehow reach the odd people who should know about them. Thus, we enter the Era of Kathygrams.1---Surgeons are conducting rare ‘Tooth-In-Eye’ Operations to restore vision to blind patients in Canada. The complex procedure involves extracting a patient’s canine tooth, adding a plastic optical lens to it and surgically embedding it in the eye. Who wants to go first?
Known more formally as osteo-odonto keratoprosthesis, the surgery has supposedly been performed successfully in a handful of countries like Transylvania, but never before in Canada where people keep track of these things. In late February, three patients Up North underwent the first part of the complex procedure. If all goes according to Hoyle, they could have their eyesight back by summer. And yes, they’re all using those toothbrushes with the very light bristles.
2---Swiss scientists played music to cheese as it aged. The cheese seemed to like Hip-Hop best. Swiss cheesemaker Beat Wampfler and a team of crazed researchers from the Bern University of Arts placed nine 22-pound wheels of Emmental cheese in individual wooden crates in Wampfler’s cellar and for the next six months, each cheese was exposed to an endless 24-hour loop of one song using a mini-transducer. The transducer directed the sound waves directly into the cheese wheels, a practice called ‘hitting the vein’ by Zurich drug addicts.
The Classical cheese got Mozart’s Magic Flute, the Rock cheese listened to Led Zeppelin’s Stairway to Heaven, the Ambient cheese got Yello’s Monolith and the Hip-Hop cheese was exposed to A Tribe Called Quest’s Jazz (We’ve Got). The unfortunate control cheese aged in silence. The cheese was then examined by alleged food technologists from the ZHAW Food Perception Research Group, which concluded that the cheese exposed to music had a milder flavor than the control cheese. The also found that the Hip-Hop cheese had a stronger aroma and stronger flavor. The cheeses were then sampled by a jury of culinary experts during two rounds of a blind taste test who came to the same conclusion. All of which goes to prove what we’ve long suspected---that the people of Switzerland have too much time on their hands. Asked for his opinion on the matter, American cheese expert J. Ray Cash said, “Don’t take your cheese to town, boys, leave your cheese at home.”
3---The first person in the United States to get a speeding ticket was a New York City taxi driver. Who wouldn’t have guessed that one? In 1899, cabbie Jacob German, a driver for the Electric Vehicle Company, was cited for jetting an astonishing 12 miles an hour by a bicycle officer, of all things. At the time, NYC had a speed limit of 8 mph when going straight and 4 mph when cornering. Horses, of course, had the same speed limit. German was actually hauled in and temporarily imprisoned. The first known speeding ticket in the world was issued in England to Walter Arnold of East Peckham, Kent in 1896. Walter was traveling at breakneck speeds of 8 mph in a 2mph zone and fined one shilling. Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do…whatcha gonna do when they come for you?
4---The Moon has its own Catholic Bishop. No kidding. According to an obscure Church edict called the 1917 Code of Canon Law, when an expedition sets out to discover new territory, that new land then becomes part of the diocese that was home to the expedition. Since Cape Canaveral was under the purview of the diocese of Orlando when Americans landed on the Moon, Bishop William Borders got the honors. Following the success of Apollo 11, Bishop Borders had occasion to make an ad limina visit to the Vatican to visit Pope Paul VI, during which he casually advised the unaware Pope, “You realize, of course, that I am Bishop of the Moon.” Paul VI nervously looked left and right at his advisors. The current Bishop of Orlando is John Noonan, who is much less of a showoff.
5.---The town of Karawa, Japan has released a line of collectible trading cards featuring the town’s male elders. Is this a great idea or what? Instead of a bunch of rich, honky ballplayers, the characters on the cards are the town’s ojisan---middle-aged or older citizens who have benefitted the community. “I thought it was a shame that nobody knew about them,” said Ms. Eri Miyahara, Secretary General of Saidosho center, who created the idea. “The cards went viral and now many kids look up to these men as heroic figures.” The 47 card characters include local ‘Soba Master’ Mr. Takeshita, an 81-year-old noodlemaker and Mr. Fuji, a 67-year-old prison guard turned community volunteer whose card is so popular that local children will often approach him asking Fuji to autograph his card.
Obviously, this is an idea whose time has come. We can see it now…”I’ll trade you two Mayor Wards for one Chuck LeMasters”…or “how about I take that Michael Davis off your hands for six Randall Roffes?” There are all kinds of possibilities. When we were kids, we’d get down on one knee and scale our trading cards at a wall several feet away…the card closest to the wall wins and gets to keep the other cards. Or kids would get together in small groups like baseball general managers and arrange three and four-way trades trying to accumulate an entire set. The old cards came in packages of incredibly bad chewing gum but these new ones could be distributed by hip local institutions like Heartwood or the Hippodrome to supportive customers. “Anybody out there got a Nancy Luca, I just need her and Mark Chiappini for my set?” “Yeah, I got Nancy, but it will take two Jeff Meldons and a Bill Killeen to get her” “There’s a Bill Killeen card? I thought he was dead.”
That’s all, folks….
bill.killeen094@gmail.com