Love Ad First Sight?
Lisa Catalano is looking for love, and she doesn’t mind paying a hefty price. The Bay Area single girl, 42, just spent a bundle to rent a dozen digital billboards along California’s busy Highway 101 advertising her need to find that evasive butterfly. “I’m putting myself out there,” she admits. “You would be shocked to know how much this is costing me.” Lisa told the New York Post she decided to advertise after several dead-end dating experiences and failed relationships. “This is not a joke, it’s not some gimmick. This is a serious, self-funded endeavor,” she insisted. “I just want to find my husband.”
Catalano’s ad campaign began September 2 and spans the 45 miles between Santa Clara and San Francisco, directing interested parties to her website, MarryLisa.com, where eligible bachelors can apply to be her guy. Lisa is also taking out ad space atop taxicabs, just in case. And she’s not the only one. Eve Tilley-Coulson, a corporate litigation attorney from Los Angeles, previously told the newspaper she’d pay a $5000 referral fee to anyone who helps her find “the one.” Much like Catalano, Mohamed Ibrahim, a New Jersey man on the prowl, has also purchased billboard space, even including expensive sites like Times Square, seeking his soulmate.
Lisa would prefer a man between the ages of 35 to 45 who aligns with her on religious and political beliefs and leads a health-oriented lifestyle. “But if he’s monogamous and looks like David Duchovny, everything else is out the window,”
Keep those cards and letters coming in, folks.
Butt Dial
You can only imagine what it must be like to be a doctor at a busy emergency room on Saturday night. The stress level is through the roof as ambulances pull up and EMTs come racing through the corridors with life-or-death patients in the midst of heart attacks or full of bullet holes or skewered on a metal fencepost. The wild and wooly ER is studio central for cut-off fingers, drug ODs, geriatric collapses, head-on collisions and asthmatic grannies, but it’s not entirely a no-fun zone. There are always the lively “extractions.” The ones involving crowded anuses.
Chicago emergency room doctor Kenji Oyasu has seen it all. One unidentified patient (for good reason) confessed that he and his girlfriend “got a little carried away and put something up there” and then were unable to retrieve it. It was a Yankee Candle, and not the mini stocking-stuffer variety. “I’m talking about the desktop jar, and not just the top but the whole damn thing,” swears Oyasu. “Now, you can’t just reach up there and pull something like this out because the suction causes a vacuum to pull it back in.”
To get the job done, the doc had to intubate the patient and temporarily paralyze him with anesthesia, then put him on a ventilator as one would do for an operation. “You give a medication,” says Oyasu, “which relaxes every muscle in the body so you can eventually work it out of there.” The doctor added that after identifying the object as a candle, he and his staff placed bets on what the scent would be. “I won the bet with pumpkin spice,” he smiled. “It was easy. It was October.”
According to a study in the American Journal of Emergency Medicine, nearly 4000 people are hospitalized each year with objects in their rectums. Of these reported cases, the average age was 43 years old. Nearly 78% of the patients were male. Over half the foreign bodies were sexual objects, including vibrators, anal beads or other sex toys, but there were also things like a can of deodorant.
A 2022 butthole incident in France might be the most stunning. A French senior citizen arrived at the hospital one night with a World War I artillery shell lodged in his rectum. This troubling matter led to the place being partly evacuated due to bomb scare concerns. You can only imagine how thrilled the ER docs were to pry the thing loose. They got it out though, after hours of wrangling. “We didn’t ask how or why,” confessed the lead physician, exploding with laughter. “Really---we didn’t want to know.”
Push It To The Limit
The Chinese news outlet Kwong Wah advises that three drunk men, wary of becoming lawbreakers by driving while intoxicated, pushed their car down the highway for 500 meters, approximately the length of 5 1/2 football fields. One man held the steering wheel from outside the car while the other two pushed from behind. Chinese authorities were flummoxed. “What if every citizen did this?” an unnamed safety officer asked. “We are going to charge them with something as soon as we figure out what.”
Alas, the unfortunate trio fell afoul of the little-known Article 31 of China’s Road Traffic Safety Law, which forbids occupying roads for non-traffic purposes. The boys thoughtlessly used both traffic lanes, disrupting traffic flow and heightening the risk of collisions, or so said the local Commish. “They will have fines and suspensions. We do not want this to become a popular prank activity among young people. The other drivers were very angry and many missed keeping their important schedules.”
In case you were wondering, there is no Guinness World Record for pushing a car in traffic, but the Chinese men’s feat pales in comparison to that of Aleksandar Chekorev and Aleksandar Smilkov, who pushed a car 59.07 miles in 24 hours, which is the Guinness World Record. There is no mention as to whether they were drunk or sober at the outset.
Don't Cry For Me, Argentina
Bored with tired American casketry? Miffed at ballooning prices? Want to put a little pizzazz into the funeral of your choice? Take a look at what those merry men of coffin-building in Ghana are up to. In lovely Accra, you can find caskets resembling a giant pink fish, a beautiful peacock or an airplane painted with the national flag, and that’s just for starters. These are merely a few of the endless variety of fantasy bone boxes (known as abebuos) you can find in this African funland.
The coffins, common among the Ga people of Accra, are becoming a widespread phenomenon, offering a colorful alternative to the usual fare. When a local family loses a loved one, they gather at a carpentry workshop to decide how to properly honor their relative. A fishmonger might be remembered in the form of a fish he sold, right down to the exact type. Prominent in the displays are lion-shaped coffins, which are reserved for chiefs, as the animal is a symbol of power. In Labadi, a suburb of Accra, royal families are tied to their emblem, the rooster, a design reserved only for their lineage. The right to a particular casket is never arbitrary, it reflects identity, occupation and status.
Each coffin takes about two weeks to complete. The cost, which starts around $700, varies depending on the type of wood and the complexity of the design. Nicolas Ablorh Annan, a coffin-maker from Accra, says that while the practice of burying loved ones in fantasy coffins started among the Ga people, it has expanded across Ghana. Some caskets never hold bodies at all, destined instead for museums abroad. Annan said that international interest is growing, with many foreign clients ordering coffins primarily for exhibition as art pieces.
At funerals, the presence of a fantasy coffin transforms everything. Mourners burdened with grief find themselves captivated by the craftmanship, the vivid colors, the detailed shapes, the boundless imagination. Laughter blends with tears and is softened by creativity. “People forget for a moment what’s inside; they admire the coffin and the atmosphere shifts,” says Eric Kpakpo Adotey, a carpenter who specializes in the fancy boxes.
Not to say that I’m ever planning to leave this Earth, but departing in a large Red Sox bat might ease the pain. Hank Williams fans might take to a wooden Indian casket, while Jimmy Buffet devotees would likely prefer a multi-colored parrot. For Randall Roffe, a Heineken beer bottle would hit the spot. Chuck LeMasters would have a little dog, of course, and Will Thacker a scary cobra. Mark Chiappini would look dashing in in a spiffy canoe and Glenn Terry would be at home inside Porky Pig. There’s no end to the possibilities. How about you, Mr. President? Maybe a nice waste-removal vehicle or a wood chipper? Don’t cry for me, Argentina, I’m on my way in an orange Lamborghini with a gator-head hood ornament, bellowing all the way.
He’s B-a-a-a-a-ck!
Late on the night of November 15, 1966, two young couples, the Scarberrys and the Mallettes, were driving down a road east of Point Pleasant, West Virginia when they saw what Steve Mallette described to the Point Pleasant Register as “a man with wings.” The strange creature had glowing red eyes and stood almost seven feet tall with a wingspan of 10 feet, the quartet swore. In a perfectly sensible move, Roger Scarberry turned his 1957 Chevy in the opposite direction and floored it.
Didn’t work. The gang soon saw the thing again, right ahead of them. This time, it rose straight up in the air before chasing our heroes down the main highway leading back into town. “We were going between 100 and 105 mph down the straightaway and that thing was just gliding back and forth over the back end of the car,” said Linda Scarberry.
When the frazzled four reported their sighting, they learned they weren’t the first to see the phenomenon. Meg Douglas, a folklife specialist at the Library of Congress says she first heard stories of a “Mothman” as a child. “My roots are in West Virginia and people there always had stories like this.” Then too, the couples had been driving on a road in the notorious “TNT area,” a sprawling former military installation officially known as the West Virginia Ordnance Works, where high-grade explosives were made and stored during World War II. Today, dozens of igloo-like bunkers are nestled into acres of overgrown woods where murky ponds once connected the facilities. “The area is really creepy, especially at night,” says Steve Ward, a local historian.
After the original sighting, several more reports of the Mothman piled into the newspaper, which reported “The whole town descended on the location where the creature was reported, toting guns and ready to hunt it down. They didn’t find it.” Maybe not, but the reaction sparked a legend. Eventually, the Mothman sightings spread out from Point Pleasant to other places in West Virginia and even adjacent states. But sightings stopped in 1967 after the Silver Bridge collapsed, killing upwards of 40 people. Citizens near the sight claimed they had seen the Mothman standing on the bridge the day before, possibly an omen of the disaster. Author John Keel even wrote a book called The Mothman Prophesies.
Point Pleasant embraced the Mothman as a hero, despite the tragedy. “He tried to tell us!” was the typical reaction. Now the critter is a different kind of hero. There is a very profitable monster celebration each year in the little town which brings in scores of tourists to the Mothman Museum and over to the downtown statue of the creature for photographs. At the 2025 Mothman Festival in late September, attendees walked the streets in costume beneath giant inflatables of their hero. The vibe was friendly and uplifting. “West Virginia is just beautiful,” exulted visitor Eric Johnson of Chicago. “And the Mothman is to die for.”
Eyes on the skies, me hearties! The Mothman is out there, riding the wind.
That’s all, folks….