Thursday, March 26, 2026

Welcome To The Grand Finale!



This is, among other things, your information kit for The Big Party in May celebrating Life, Love and the fact we’re all still here, but also remembering those who are not.  Stash it in your rucksack or your cell phone and keep it for further reference.  Share it with your less fortunate friends, if you will.  Our bandwidth is narrow and we need all the help we can get putting out the word.  Early May in Gainesville is luxurious, the temperatures kind and the skies are not cloudy all day.

Despite one Richard Parker’s pleas to the contrary, this is indeed the last tango.  The management is getting old and rickety, the customers less mobile and our doctors less tolerant of our drug intake.  Sometimes the bands forget to show up or they absolutely refuse to play Light My Fire.  Even though the admonition Don’t Take Your Snakes To Town, Will is tattooed on his chest, yesterday elderly William Thacker forgot and was arrested for illegal trafficking of varmints.  Did somebody say “assisted living?”

But that will be then, this is now.  Wake the town and tell the people the final installment of the Hippie Olympics is on the way.  If you have any, be sure to wear some flowers in your hair.


‘Twas The Day Before Blissout

'Twas the day before Blissout, and all through the town,
The natives were buzzing with nary a frown;
The reefer was stashed in the glove box with care
To welcome the visitors soon to be there.

Old hippies were nestled all snug in their pads,
While visions of ancient friends danced in their heads;
And she with her Afro and I in my shag
Dug through the closet to find a peace flag.

When down at Heartwood there arose such a din,
We knew that Wil Maring must just have barged in.
We raced to the porch in the blink of an eye
And heard Robert Bowlin make his old fiddle cry.

Now Cathy DeWitt and her five buckaroos,
Now young Nancy Luca and her eclectic crew,
Now the grand Couch Messiahs with a sackful of tunes.
Now the wild Chasing Rabbits, all gaily festooned.

As dry leaves before the wild hurricane fly
When they meet with an obstacle, mount to the sky,
So the guitars rang out and the mandolins, too,
And the banjos, the bass and the drums fairly flew.

The crowd was awash with both laughter and tears,
immersed in old friendships revived after years;
Old lovers embraced, lost friends reappeared,
Recalling the glories when last they were here.

Ishmael Schwartz got down on one knee
And proposed to Miss Annabelle ("Sunshine") McGee;
Steven the sandal man stood on his head; 
Moonbeam McGonigal took him to bed.

The sweet scent of cannabis flicked through the crowd.
The bands played their hearts out, ably and loud.
The dancers were young again, just for a day,
Their race might be run, but they paused on the way.

Alas, as we’re told, all good things must end,
So the old hippies rose and saluted their friends;
“We’ll all meet again,” they lied to each other,
Touched by the moment, sister and brother.

Then finally Sir Donald strode up to the line
And made the crowd tear when he sang Auld Lang Syne; 
Said Anna Marie in the fast-fading light,
“Happy Trails to all and to all a good night!”


When, Where & Why

Location: Heartwood Soundstage, 619 South Main Street, Gainesville

Dates: May 1 & 2, 2026

Hours: May 1---7-9 p.m. (inside stage).  May 2---Noon to 8 p.m. (outside)

Performers: May 1---Mike Boulware to open, followed by Wil Maring & Robert Bowlin

May 2---In order: Chasing RabbitsPatchwork & FriendsCouch MessiahsNancy Luca BandUncle John’s Band

Closing: Auld Lang Syne by Don David and you

Tickets: May 1---$47.60….May 2---Free.  If you have a Friday ticket, it is ALL ACCESS, and you don’t need another one for Saturday.

All performances will require a ticket from Heartwood, free or charged.  The link is:

https://heartwoodsoundstage.com/shows/the-grand-finale-01-may



Disa & Data

While The Grand Finale is primarily a reunion for old Gainesvillians from the 1960s, 70s and 80s, everyone over 15 is welcome.  Sorry, no pets.  There will be food available from on-site restaurants and drink from Heartwood’s jaunty quaffing crew.  We will have a doctor on the grounds in case you fall down and a minister for impromptu marriages (please tip your minister).  If you become overwhelmed with emotion, Judi Cain will read you calming sonnets by William Wordsworth.  If you are sad, Lily Van Halen will tickle your feet.  If you are naked, we’ll sell you a lovely Finale t-shirt which will last you several decades for a piffling $30.  Bring your own condoms.



Why We’re Going:

I am going to The Grand Finale because it is there, the Mount Everest of Reunions.  I am going to The Grand Finale because I was at the Last Tango In Gainesville and it was one of the best days of my life.  I am going to The Grand Finale because a Bill Killeen event never lets you down.  At the Last Tango, I laughed, I cried, I was hypnotized with emotion.  I was the last one hanging around the grounds, the Heartwood people had to ask me to leave so they could close up.  I went out and sat in my car for a half-hour, gobsmacked by the events and emotions of the day.  You think you’re going to a reunion and you wind up in an unreal cosmic circus with acrobats, clowns and dancing bears.  I suppose I was more affected than many because I’d been struggling with a long-time relationship and was trying to find my way.  And I did, thanks to what greeted me that priceless day in Gainesville.---Arthur King, Charlotte, N.C.

I guess I have become cynical in my old age because I don’t get out and visit as much as I used to.  These days you have to skirt touchy political issues, contend with unreliable air travel and hope to God you can find a place to park somewhere near your destination.  So call me a grouch if you like but I’ll counter with this; I AM going to The Grand Finale in Gainesville on May 1 and 2.  I wouldn’t miss it for anything.  You see, I was one of the lucky ones who took a chance on the Last Tango in Gainesville and that was like an impossible dream and I know I’ll never see its equal.  But I’ll be satisfied with anything close, and I see Nancy Luca and Cathy DeWitt are back again, so that’s a good start.  What I”m really going for is the ambiance of the crowd, the incredible good feelings generated in that atmosphere, the Love Potion Number 9.  See you soon.  I’ll be the one in the tie-dyed skirt, haha.---Betty LaMont, Scottsdale, Arizona

I’ll be there if they’ll have me.  You see, I don’t smoke dope any more (bad lungs), incense makes me wheeze and I discovered I’m allergic to patchouli oil.  I used to play music myself but now I have a tiny tremor than makes me shy away from any venue that is not my bedroom.  Despite all that, I have not lost my interest in the ladies, especially ladies like Myra who I met at The Last Tango in ‘22.  We had a whomping big day at the Tango but Myra was still attached, so that was that.  I’m hoping that the attachment might have frayed by now or that there is a second Myra in the woodwork looking for fun in all the wrong places.---Teddy Sapienza, Naples, Fla. 



I am a person who has always valued community, sisterhood, multiple friendships.  I probably would have been a good candidate for commune life, but at the ones I visited egos always got in the way.  I had a small family, but valued and stayed in close touch with all my family members as long as they were alive.  Incomprehensibly, I now find myself alone in a small city in conservative Iowa, devoid of local friends and amicable neighbors.  I did not go to The Last Tango because my husband’s health was failing (he’s since passed), but you can bet your life I’ll be at The Grand Finale.  I went to school for two years in Gainesville and lived there another four years and I recognize a lot of names in the Finale bulletins and comments.  I have a feeling there are a LOT of people in the same boat as I find myself and an event like this is a Godsend for us.  See you all at the party!---Mary Callahan, Davenport, Iowa



Oh, but now old friends, they’re acting strange.  They shake their heads, tell me I’ve changed.  Well, something’s lost, but something’s gained in living every day.

I used to think you could move almost anywhere and make friends, watch sunset on a prairie, find a place on every corner to listen to music, ally yourself with idealists to fight for a worthy cause.  Not so.  Since leaving Gainesville, I have lived in half a dozen okay places with all the frills an outsider might be impressed by, safe little cities and towns with reasonable people and no outstanding deficits.  The trouble is, every one of them lacks soul, that indescribable mist that hangs over a place and gives it a unique style, a singular camaraderie of spirit and ethics and appreciation of the arts.  They say you can’t go home again, but I’m going to try it on May 1 and 2 to see if the phantom vibe is still there, waiting for me at a table outside Lillian’s.  See you at The Grand Finale!---Della Foster, New Braunfels, Texas

See you soon, Della.  As the event shirts says, “here comes the sun.”



That’s all, folks….

bill.killeen094@gmail.com


                    

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Kathygrams II


Ace reporter Kathleen Knight, aware that Inquiring Minds Want to Know, travels the Earth looking for answers to difficult questions, enigmas large and small, messy riddles long unsolved, and she finds them.  More difficult, of course, is discerning the secret questions people hesitate to ask for fear of ridicule or being reported to the Thought Police.  Since you were afraid to inquire, we’ll answer them anyway.



Answers To Questions You Never Asked

1. Where, exactly, is the middle of nowhere?

Ask a farm boy, an irritable ascetic or someone from Wyoming where they live and they will promptly tell you “In the middle of nowhere.”  Obviously, they are exaggerating, overstating their rustic digs, boasting about their extreme isolation.  As we all know, there is a Dollar Store within five miles of everywhere, so how remote can you be?  Well…plenty, it turns out.  And now, finally, some scientists with nothing better to do have figured out precisely where the middle of nowhere is.

Point Nemo is the most remote location on Earth, so far removed from civilization that the closest humans to there at any given time are likely to be astronauts.  In fact, that’s precisely why NASA and other global space agencies have designated Point Nemo in the Pacific Ocean as their underwater space graveyard for falling debris.  In 2031, when the International Space Station comes tumbling down, it will do so at the Point, as far away from humans as geographically possible.

Pointe Nemo is officially known as “the ocean pole of inaccessibility,” or the point in the ocean farthest from land.  Located at 48 degrees, 52.6’S and 123 degrees 23.6’W, the spot is quite literally the middle of nowhere, surrounded by 1000 miles of ocean in every direction.  The closest landmasses to the place are one of the Pitcairn Islands to the north, one of the Easter Islands to the northeast and an island off the coast of Antarctica to the south. There are no human inhabitants anywhere near Point Nemo.  Scientists chose to call the location “Nemo” because it is Latin for “no one” and as a reference to Jules Verne’s submarine captain from 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea.

Not even the man who first calculated the precise location of Point Nemo has visited.  In 1992, Croation survey engineer Hrvoje Lukatela set out to find the exact point in the Pacific that was farthest away from any land using an esoteric computer program.  Ever thought about seeing your creation, Hrvoje?  “I thought about it once,” he smiled, “but  my wife talked me into going to the Terlingua Chili Cookoff, instead.”



2. Do Chickens Really Have A Church Of Their Own?  I Have Seen Photos.

No, chickens profess no religion (although they are a sacred animal themselves in many cultures, including Sheltonism), despite being deeply embedded in belief systems and religious worship practices.  In Greek mythology, Alectryon was the guard of Ares, waiting beside his door to alert him if anyone came close while he was sleeping.  In Ancient Greece, chickens were not used for sacrifices because they were considered exotic animals.  The Greeks believed that even lions were afraid of roosters.

However, there IS an abandoned church called Bukit Rhema located in the Magelang area of Central Java, Indonesia that absolutely resembles a chicken.  The building was erected during the 1890s by Daniel Alamsjah, who claimed to have been inspired by God to build a prayer house in a dream he had.  Now called Gareja Ayam (Indonesian for “chicken church”), construction was never completed and the place was left to deteriorate.  Despite all this, the odd building has become a tourist attraction and a movie setting.  If you go, Gareja Ayam has a cute little restaurant in the chicken’s rear.  Incredibly, no eggs are served. 


3. How Much Fun Was It To Have A Harem?

Perhaps not so much as you think.  One man’s harem might be another man’s dog pound, at least in terms of then and now.  Women’s beauty standards constantly change, just like our taste in fashion, music or dildos.  For a while, one thing is in vogue, then another, like bellbottoms and skinny jeans or Lawrence Welk and Snoop Dogg.  In Tajikistan or Uzbekistan, they sing songs extolling the beauty of a woman’s thick black eyebrows.  Back in the day, when Iran was called Persia, women with light mustaches were considered the bees’ knees.  Persian poets, whose words shaped the cultural landscape, compared a woman’s stache to a shadow on the moon, a subtle enhancement that amplified its radiance.  (“Her lip adorned with a shadow’s trace, Holds a sweetness time cannot erase.”)  Somebody call Burma-Shave.

In the opulent courts of Qajar, Nasir al-Din Shah reigned as both a monarch and a connoisseur of beauty.  The big guy had 84 women in his harem, none of them allowed to shave their mustaches, all of them required to gain weight.  Today, none of them would meet the minimal standards for consideration in the Miss Pflugerville contest.  Think date night at MIT or Carnegie Mellon.  Back then, these beauties were on the tool company calendars while the lean baldfaced lovelies of today were selling pencils in front of the Apadana Walmart.  Jeeves, take me to the nearest Time Machine, my proclivities are boiling over.

  


4. I Am Chronically Indecisive.  Is There A Restaurant Somewhere That Will Tell Me What I Want For Dinner?

Of course!  That would be Tokyo’s unparalleled Restaurant of Mistaken Orders, where every  server has dementia.  Feel free to order anything on the menu, your order will go astray and be replaced by something delicious and one of a kind.  The restaurant exists to challenge perception and celebrate ability.  What a concept!

The idea belongs to Shiro Oguni, a television director who visited a group home for people with dementia and noticed something shift when he was served the wrong dish.  His hamburger order turned into gyoza, but he didn’t protest.  Instead, he realized that society’s view of dementia limited what people believe those living with it can do.

Around the table, everyone ate with such pleasure that for a moment he wondered if he was the one who’d become confused.  Clarity came not with the impulse to correct the mistake, but with a question: what if the mistake isn’t a problem?  What if my need for someone to get it right is?  Shiro took a bite of the gyoza, and it was really good.  Suddenly, the order being incorrect didn’t matter very much.  “Why raise our eyebrows at the difference between sizzling steak and gyoza?” he laughed.

The experience stayed with Oguni for days and he found himself wondering “if one wrong order could cause such a reaction in me, what would happen if someone built an entire restaurant around that feeling?”  He decided to find out.  Shiro opened RANDY, a pop-up restaurant in Tokyo’s Roppongi district.

Rather then hide errors, the restaurant makes them visible.  At one event, 37% of the orders were mistaken but 99% of the customers claimed they were happy anyway.  Servers wear color-coded aprons, and order sheets make use of simple visuals, supporting memory and ease.  One waiter, 85 years old, forgot his clipboard but still greeted guests, delivered dessert and laughed along with customers when things went sideways.  Behind every order is extraordinary planning.  Support staff are positioned everywhere, ready to step in without taking over.  The restaurant exists to help people with dementia succeed, even when success produces results that look nothing like traditional service.

You go in, sit at a small pop-up table.  Servers with dementia lead you to your seat.  You order coffee or cake.  Perhaps your coffee comes with a straw or your cake arrives elsewhere.  Mistakes are baked into the experience.  Maybe an older woman shows you to your table, then sits down with you like you’re old friends.  Another server wrestles with the pepper mill, concentrating hard but not entirely sure where the pepper will land.  Maybe you reach over to help.  Other diners join in.  Then someone shouts “We did it!” when the problem is solved.  Everyone laughs with the shared absurdity of how much effort a simple act can take.  Instead of frustration, the vulnerability opens space for connection.  One guest described seeing a server smile after a “thank you” and said it reminded her of her grandfather’s last months.

“I’m still capable,” a waiter might say after his shift.  “This has given me confidence.”  The servers are not looking for pity, they’re grateful for honest work.  They want to contribute and feel useful to their community, but society keeps telling them no.  Ah, but The Restaurant of Mistaken Orders tells them yes! and they finally have a place in the sun.



5. Does “The One” Exist?

No, so stop it.

But The Right One definitely exists, if only we can recognize him or her when we run across them.  Being obsessed with finding physical perfection won’t help.  There isn’t just one perfect person for you somewhere in the world, there’s a raft of them.  That might be one of them over there in the next row at the ballgame or playing guitar up there on the stage at a folk festival.  Some people have great instincts.  Aimee, a young nurse not particularly in the market for a love interest at the time, saw Tom with the Stetson singing a song one day at a club, jumped up and ran right up to the stage, yelling “Clear the aisles, I’ll be taking that cowboy right there!”  Almost 50 years later, they’re still together and the temperature at their place is still high.

Not everyone, alas, is as adept as Aimee.  And even when you get a great notion, it has to be reciprocated by the pursuee.  Fortunately for her, Tom was putty in her hands.  Your first choice might laugh or give you the stinkeye.  At Oklahoma State University in Stillwater, I asked my lovely lab partner Betty Jane Kendrick out on a date.  She looked at me with incredulity.  “But you’re a YANKEE!” she gasped.  I tried telling her no, I’m a Red Sox, but that didn’t help.  “Strike three!” the umpire said.

Dr. John Gottman, with 50 years of research and thousands of couples studied under his belt says “True connection doesn’t always feel like fireworks.  Often, it feels like coming home.  You know you’ve found someone special when being together feels as natural as breathing.  When you can sit in comfortable silence.  When your partner’s presence soothes your nervous system rather than activating it.  This deep comfort isn’t about settling or lacking passion.  It’s about being able to navigate life as a team and having mutual commitment to your relationship and each other’s wellbeing.  Our research clearly shows that couples with lower baseline stress hormones when together have significantly higher relationship satisfaction and longevity.”  Who’s going to argue with comfy stress hormones?

And stop being a baby when you don’t get your way.  Smart couples don’t break up—or threaten to—over minor disagreements.  Gottman says a surprising 69% of relationship problems are perpetual.  This means that successful couples learn to navigate these issues even while disagreeing.  “Learning to communicate through conflict productively is a cornerstone of a healthy relationship.” he avers.

There are, of course, limits to disagreement.  “You do have to align on things that matter most,” says Dr. G.  “When you’ve found the right person, your fundamental views about family, career, spirituality and life priorities will complement each other in meaningful ways.  This alignment becomes particularly clear when you discuss the future.  You both want similar things, whether that’s children, career ambitions, lifestyle choices, a ferret or how you want to spend your so-called golden years.  There’s a natural flow to these conversations rather than constant negotiation or compromise that leaves one person feeling unheard.”

Hollywood has tried to sell us The Beautiful Lie, that we’ll know instantly when we’ve found “The One.”  But they also tried to make Forrest Gump viable and convince us that when we are possessed by the devil, our heads can twirl completely around.  Not so.  That only happens when Dolly Parton is walking by.


That’s all, folks….

bill.killeen094@gmail.com

 


 

Thursday, March 12, 2026

All In The Family


Uncle Arthur

Sprinkled liberally throughout our lifespans are the inevitable surprises inherent in the life of a family, some wondrous, others frightening, that warm the cockles of our hearts or scare the bejeezus out of us.  Any unusual event which does less is not really a surprise and more like a simple twist of Fate.  Today, let’s stick with the surprises.

My Uncle, Arthur Wickey, was a big one, perhaps my first real qualifier.  He just showed up one day out of nowhere, like Zorro, when I was about five.  My maternal grandmother, Arthur’s sister, told me he had been in “The War,” where he served with the U.S. Army’s Acorn Division, which was primarily a replacement and labor outfit stationed in France.  Did you blow up any Germans, Uncle Arthur?  “I like to build stuff instead of blowing it up,” he smiled.

A week after we first met, I came home from school to find the word BILLY painted in bright yellow on the back of my fire-engine-red Radio Flyer wagon.  I was thrilled.  Of all the Radio Flyer wagons in all the world, I was sure mine was the only one with the owner’s name brightly splashed in neon gold.  Turns out Uncle Arthur, among other things, was a talented sign painter.  He rented an upstairs apartment on South Union Street and it was always filled with orders-in-progress, brilliant signs for all occasions resting everywhere, an exciting place for a kid to explore.

Unlike all other adults I knew, Uncle Arthur was never angry.  A constant smile was part of the package, even though he had a loud-speaking girlfriend named Rose, who always seemed to be looking for a fight.  “She can’t help it, she’s Italian,” Uncle Arthur said.  Rose really loved  Arthur.  You could tell by the way she looked at him.  I wondered why one person loved another like that.  One day I got a small clue as we were walking past Conley’s flower store down the street.  Arthur stopped and said, “This is where I get my secret formula that makes Rose smile.  Flowers make ladies weak in the knees.  They never fail, even when Rose is very angry.”  I made a mental note.  I think that was the idea.  I wondered if it would work with Kathleen Carroll.

Uncle Arthur enjoyed taking my sister Alice and me to Canobie Lake, an amusement park about a half-hour’s drive away on the New Hampshire state line.  Our parents brought us there occasionally, but it was more fun with Uncle Arthur because he took us on rides our mother found “dangerous.”  He’d hold us by our little shoulders, look us in the eyes and say, “This is just between us pals, nobody else has to know.”  We got his drift.  And it was fun having a forbidden secret, even if Alice almost blabbed a couple of times.

Earlier in his life, Uncle Arthur had been an amateur prizefighter.  He never pretended to be “a contenda” but he said he “won my share.”  When I was about eight, he pulled out some headgear and extremely puffy gloves and said I should learn to box…or “spar,” as he put it.  At the time, all I knew about fighting is that you and the other kid flailed wildly at one another until someone got in a lucky punch and knocked the other guy down.  Who knew there was a science to it?

“You will almost never lose a fight with someone the same size as you if you learn how to box,”  Arthur said.  “Keep your hands up and you won’t get hit, especially in the head.  Fight defensively and wait for an opening.  Don’t try to wind up and throw a big punch, just throw jabs, that way you don’t leave yourself unprotected for long.  Don’t be too eager to get a punch in, wait for an opening when the other guy gets tired.  If you do get knocked down, get right up, the other guy just got lucky.”

How do I know when the other guy gets tired?

“His arms start to go down.  He’s not covering his face as well.  He’ll take more chances.  It’s hard to hold your arms up even for three rounds.  When you see the signs, take a shot.  A lot of times it just takes one good punch to finish him off.  The real trick is to outlast your opponent.  This stuff called stamina rules the world.”

My Uncle Arthur was not grammatically gifted enough to define what a metaphor is but I think he was trying to teach me about life as much as boxing, which emphasizes resilience, discipline and overcoming adversity.  It mirrors the human experience through themes of taking hits and recovering from setbacks.  I carried his words with me and employed his wisdom often, once just a few years later when confronted by a tough customer in a 3-round match at a YMCA camp.  His name, of all things, was Rodney Gay.

Rodney was a smidge smaller than I was, maybe ten pounds lighter.  He was very polite and proper and would never be thought a tough guy.  But Rodney Gay was a badger, he was steady, he would not back up and he seemed tireless.  He was using the same philosophy I was and I couldn’t get a punch in.  I was getting frustrated but I clearly remembered what my Uncle Arthur told me.  “Steady as she goes, and the fight goes to the last to panic.”  Halfway through the third round, Rodney’s arms were slowly falling.  I didn’t rush, just feigned a couple of punches, but threw a third unexpectedly and he fell back a step and left himself open.  I peppered him with some good shots and the bell rang.  The sympathetic referee called it a draw but both of us knew the truth: Uncle Arthur had won the fight.

Uncle Arthur’s advice came to the fore many more times in my life.  When I drifted from it, Life kicked me in the ass.  When I adhered to it, I prospered.  “Don’t be rash, but when you see an opening, take your shot,  Be bold, but be careful.  Brains over brawn!  Outthink and outlast.”  One of my best girlfriends, Betsy Harper, once told me, “I like you because you’re a risk-taker.”   My calculating Uncle Arthur would have taken her aside for a few words.


On the left, Pat Oullette and Marie Killeen.  They waited for The Mother.

Take Me Out To The Racetrack

In 1986, one of my thoroughbred broodmares, Shannon Rose, foaled an attractive filly by an undistinguished son of Northern Dancer named Fairway Fortune.  I named her Proud Celia after my formidable maternal grandmother.  When Celia was two years old, I sent her to trainer Ned Allard at Rockingham Park in New Hampshire where Nan, living but a mile down the road, could watch her race.  The filly promptly won and my grandmother was thrilled, but no more so than my Mother Marie, who’d bet serious money on the race and went to collect it before a trip to the winner’s circle.  As the track photographer lined everyone up for the photo, Allard spotted Marie, not known for her sprinting prowess, heading his way and admonished “Wait for the mother!  Wait for the mother!”  She finally made it and was included in the happy photo.

Fast forward one month.  Proud Celia is scheduled to run again, a race I will miss due to other commitments in Florida.  Celia and Marie will be alone at the track, which is always a dangerous situation.  By this time, my Mother has learned to check the entries column in the Lawrence Eagle Tribune newspaper and discovers Proud Celia is Number 6.  The next day at the track, already flush with house money and optimistic after a lifetime of consistent success at the local Bingo tables, Marie loads up on her mother’s namesake.  But when they go to the Paddock to watch saddling, her husband Pat Ouellette frowns with concern.  “That horse doesn’t look like Proud Celia,” he worries.  “Oh, don’t be silly, Pat, here it is right here in the Tribune.”

What Marie fails to realize is that sometimes a horse is scratched for one reason or another the morning of the race.  When this occurs, the next horse in the chronological order moves up, inheriting the scratched horse’s post position number.  That number is accurately listed in the track program, but too late for the newspaper to make corrections.  In Celia’s race, the four horse scratched, so Proud Celia moved up to Number 5.  The six horse was a big longshot.

When the horses left the gate, Number 6 went right to the front, the two Golden Girls screaming bloody murder for the leader, who they incorrectly called “Celia” to the utter confusion of neighboring fans who knew Celia was running mid-pack.  Thus, while Proud Celia finished an undistinguished fourth, Marie gleefully pounded the ticket windows and came home with a bagful of money.  “Oh, but WAIT---The Winner’s Circle!  We must rush down to the Winner’s Circle!” she advised.

“Wait for the mother!  Wait for the mother!” Marie hollered, leading her pokey crew to the circle.  And wait they did, though certainly pondering the identities of this boisterous collection of strangers seeking to share their thrilling victory.

“We figured it out after we got home,” Marie told me.  “We were laughing like fools for an hour.  Your grandmother wasn’t too excited when she found out Celia lost the race after we all thought she won.  I gave her fifty dollars though and she calmed down.  What is it you people always say---that’s racing, right.”

Yeah, Ma.  That’s racing at your house.  


Tom Killeen with daughter Kathy, circa 1952

Of Fathers And Sons

My Father, Thomas Joseph Killeen was a serious man.  Twenty-five years older than my Mother, he prowled the long and confusing corridors of the Lawrence, Mass. telephone company, solving problems.  When a big storm came through and left the place broken and in mass hysteria, his best friend Jim Carney would pull up in his old Ford and haul Dad downtown to bring order out of chaos.  Most days, Tom Killeen would walk the mile-and-a-half to work and back, arriving promptly for our 5 o’clock supper.  We were a meat and potatoes family, except on Friday when we automatically had fish, as per Jesus’ apparent request.  Occasionally, the Pope would issue an edict which excused the fish rule for a week, but that wasn’t good enough for my Father.  “Who does he think he is?” Tom Killeen begged to know.  In other words, a rule’s a rule.  Good thing he didn’t live long enough to see the designated hitter or interleague play in baseball.

My Father played catch with me as fathers tend to do, but woe betide me if I didn’t throw the baseball directly to him.  I’m not sure whether it was his age or an effort to better my aim, but any ball that went past my father’s glove, I chased.  I used to sit with him when the Red Sox games were on the radio, listening to the play-by-play and noting his reactions.  A nice hit by the Sox drew a nod, but an error brought an ugly scowl.  And the bane of Tom Killeen’s existence was Red Sox pitching, rarely a pretty sight.  Nonetheless, when I was five, my Dad and I got on a train to Beantown for my first live game.  By the end of the third inning, the Cleveland Indians were up 12-1.

Never one to apologize, Dad looked sadly down at me and remarked, “I guess I could have found a better first game to take you to.”  I pointed to the scoreboard and with the naivete of little children said, “Don’t worry, Dad, we have six innings to catch up.”  A rare smile creased his knowing countenance.  But as inning followed inning, no one in the star-studded Cleveland bullpen could stay the Red Sox bats from the swift completion of their appointed rounds.  When it was over, Boston prevailed 15-14 in a classic comeback for the ages.  “See, I told you we could win!” I celebrated.  He looked at me with the hint of a small grin and said, “Don’t expect that kind of thing to happen very often, Billy.”

Entering Fenway that day, Dad told me I could pick out one pennant for my room.  I immediately settled on a bold white one with red letters.  He said we’d wait til after the game to buy it because he didn’t want to carry it around all afternoon.  “What if they have none left?” I worried.  He told me they’d have plenty.  He was wrong.  Being a sulky and disappointed little child, I would accept no substitutes.  Being a man of his word, Tom Killeen was upset at his error.  When we got off the train, he marched us a mile in the wrong direction from home to Louis Pearl’s variety store on Broadway, looking for that pennant.  Louis sadly admitted he didn’t have one either, but he would “see what we can do.”  Five days later, Tom Killeen marched home from work and a side visit to Louis Pearl’s carrying the white pennant with red lettering.  I told him he was the best father in the world.  He patted me on the head and said he was “working on it.”



The Envelope, Please…

When Little League Baseball came to Lawrence, my Father took me to the tryouts.  Most of my friends were there, looking for a spot on one of the four teams that would open play later in the year.  Being left-handed, I was relegated to being a first baseman unless I opted for the outfield (boring) or catcher (dangerous).  A Little League official hit a dozen ground balls to me, which I fielded adeptly.  Then we threw the ball around the infield, which was a breeze.  I was disappointed that there was no hitting session involved, but I was sure I’d make one of the teams.  My Father sat me down and explained how the world worked.  It was almost an apology.  “Billy, there are only four teams, so not too many kids we know will make it.  Maybe John Barry.”  What?  I was better than John Barry.

“John’s father is a doctor, Billy.  These people need money to make the Little League work.  Right now, some of the wealthier kids will get picked.  In a couple of years, there’ll be twice as many teams and twice as many kids will make it.”  Great.  By then I’d be too old.  The neighborhood kids took solace in knowing we could beat any of the four Little League teams.  A few years later, we did at a Fourth of July picnic.  I was sad my Dad couldn’t make it that day to see that money wasn’t everything.

Despite the glories of shared baseball, my Father and I were not very close.  His sense of humor was restricted, perhaps by age and his limitations, and he constrained most of his merrymaking to Thanksgiving and the week between Christmas and New Year’s Eve, when local friends and families intermingled over serious alcohol provisions, one night at our house, next night at theirs.  But whatever a boy’s relationship with his Father, virtually all young tads are looking for some semblance of approval, some hint of pride of father for son, whether they know it or not.  I can’t say that I knew that at the time.  I felt fairly relegated to the role of live-and-let-live junior partner with limited expectations.  Then one day came graduation from grammar school.

St. Patrick’s School made a big deal of commencement, holding the extravagant ceremonies at a church of the same name, with the saintly Monsignor Daly presiding at the altar, handing out diplomas with a nod and a coveted smile.  St. Patrick’s Church, a very large building, was filled to the stained-glass windows with friends and families of the proud capped-and-gowned graduates, a few of which were thrilled just to have made it this far, the girls (as usual) on one side of the church, the boys on the other.  There was much pomp and circumstance, wonderful organ music and a houseful of beaming parents.  A graduate couldn’t help but feel on-stage, like some kind of minor movie star.

Near the end of the big show, the Monsignor handed out a couple of scholarships, one of which was to Central Catholic High School, too expensive for the average family to afford without a little help.  That one, we all knew would go to the earlier-mentioned John Barry, the smartest kid in the class, or Dave Kiernan, next in line.  When the announcement finally came, however, that was not the case.  “The CCHS scholarship goes to William Killeen,” the Monsignor advised.  Unbeknownst to all, Barry and Kiernan had received scholarships to nearby Andover, locally called Phillips Academy, the premier prep school in the country for Yale University.  That left also-ran Billy Killeen to pick up the big scraps.  I was pulverized with astonishment.  What the hell did he just say?  And do I have to walk all the way up there and get it?

A slight smile slowly arrived on my face as I traipsed the two miles up to the altar where Monsignor Daly was enthroned.  “Good work, William,” he said with a smile.  “We’re all very proud of you.”  As if he knew me from Adam.  “Thank you, Monsignor,” I managed, clutching my unexpected prize.  A little more composed, I turned and made my way back to my pew to the eyes of the approving parents and probably a few quiet wisecracks from my friends.  I could see my Mother and Father sitting on the aisle in the distance.  As I neared my row, I noticed my Mother was teary-eyed, as might be expected.  And then I saw my Father, big as life, immaculate as usual in suit, tie and fedora.  He was actually smiling, a big one, an exceptional smile he’d been saving for 13 years for just such an occasion.  My heart skipped a beat.  I realized he was finally proud of me for something.  The scholarship was nice, but I had just received the Ultimate Reward.  It might have been the best day of my life.  Top ten, anyway.




That’s all, folks….

…except to acknowledge the help of Beverly Mack, who researched and sent photos of Uncle Arthur.  Beverly is our family genealogist, following in the determined footsteps of her mother Barbara.  She knows all our secrets and where the bodies are buried.  Thanks again, Bev.

bill.killeen094@gmail.com

      



 

Thursday, March 5, 2026

See The USA In Your Chevrolet!


They’re singing that song on TV again, sometimes three times in two minutes, but it’s a good reminder: vacation time is on the way, whether powered by Chevy, Winnebago or the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe.  Intrepid Flying Pie reporter Gina Hawkins (secret identity—Regina Coeli) is headed west in late March in her trusty 2021 Subaru Crosstrek to sunbathe on the mesas and sniff out stories in 14 states.  If you see her comin’, better step aside--a lot of men didn’t and a lot of men cried.

In July, Bill and Siobhan are headed for Paris to see their niece Kathleen Ellison and visit with the world’s greatest cartoonist Gilbert Shelton, if he’s still alive and crosshatching.  The folks in France have a tendency to fawn over their funnymen---comic actors, comedians, illustrators who have them rolling in the aisles.  Gilbert made the move decades ago and never even thought of coming back to take over his father’s Firestone store in Texas.  It’s hard to see the Eiffel Tower from College Station, after all.

And where might you be headed this Spring or Summer?  To the rockbound coast of Maine to climb Cadillac Mountain in Acadia NP?  To the Florida Everglades to run through the trees from the Everlys?  To see 30 major league baseball parks in 30 days, rain or shine?  To play mini-golf in a former salt mine or pan for gold on the outskirts of Coeur d’Alene?  The world is your bivalve…just  don’t forget to bring along your oyster knife.



Escape To The Past In RetroWorld

“If it’s the real thing, the Del-Vikings will be there.”---Ron Thomas

Kathleen Knight, Flying Pie stringer from other dimensions, is off to Las Vegas to pry loose some secrets from the planners of RetroEscapes theme park, a very large blast from the past.  We know a few things already.  At the park entrance, guests will walk through a time-travel portal into a variety of lands based on American pop culture of different decades from the fifties to the nineties, plus a “Tomorrow Zone,” whatever that is. 

The new park is still in the early developmental stage with no opening date announced.  RetroEscapes is being designed by PGAV Destinations, whose previous work includes individual attractions such as Cosmic Rewind at Epcot, Manta at SeaWorld Orlando and Cheetah Hunt at Bush Gardens.  Also full parks like Aquatica and Discovery Cove in Orlando and SeaWorld Abu Dhabi.

The world’s first ever nostalgia park will have such faded glories in new clothing as an Elvis diner, a rocket bar, a disco, a video game arcade and a skate park, just for starters.  The entire atmosphere is intended to mimic street scenes and amusement park features from ancient times and the illustrations created by RetroEscapes are charming and seductive, but looks aren’t everything.  Let’s hope the antique diner finds a chef who actually knows how to make meat loaf (don’t forget the ketchup).  Anyway, we’ll be there with bells on Day One.  There’s a rumor they’ll have pie.



Not Necessarily The Happiest Places On Earth

If you’d like to combine your theme park visit with a dose of reality, you’ll love, not like the Isgyvenimo Drama set in a Soviet-era bunker near the Lithuanian capital city of Vilnius.  This park takes visitors several decades back in time to 1984 Soviet Lithuania, showing what life was like for citizens living in the USSR.  Along the way, you’ll get to wear gas masks, have your belongings confiscated and learn the Soviet national anthem, among other annoyances.  Like most Lithuanians at the time, you’ll likely be subjected to investigation, which is your best chance ever to say “We don’t need no steenking badges!”

Your prize for surviving a day is an authentic dinner of borscht, black bread and kefir.  Pour a smidge of Stoli into that kefir and you’ll survive just fine.

If you’re a caver, you might look into Salina Turda (no untoward giggling, please) in beautiful Romania.  It has all the ornamentals of an amusement park---a Ferris Wheel, putt-putt golf, etc., but everything is 400-feet underground, set within the grounds of a former salt mine that was excavated during the ancient Roman era and opened to odd tourists in 1992.  Visitors can pamper themselves in a salt-focused spa and take a boatride across a tranquil underground lake which is guaranteed not to have many surly monsters in it.

In sparkling Ho Chi Minh City, you’ll get your kicks at Suoi Tien, an amusement park for all ages, or so they say.  The management assures us you can go to Hell there---Buddhist Hell, that is, because the park is all about the wonders of Buddhism.  Suoi Tien is not only about grotesque depictions of afterlife torment, however--no, indeedy.  They have a zoo, a few Buddhist temples for the kiddies, many photo-worthy sculptures and a handful of small, unexciting rides.  You can cool down at Bien Tien Dong water park, the site of Vietnam’s first artificial beach.

Some girlies like to swim with the dolphins but real men like to dive with the crocodiles at Crocosaurus Cave in Darwin, Australia.  The park is home to the largest collection of Australian reptiles anywhere, but the crocs get top billing.  Intrepid visitors can jump in with the big guys in the inviting Cage of Death, which consists of a clear chamber semi-submerged in the crocodiles’ enclosure.  More civilized guests are invited to snap photos of themselves with the baby crocs.

Next time you’re in Singapore you’re invited to explore exciting Haw Par Villa, which walks you through Chinese folktales featuring the good, the bad and the ugly.  You might want to fast-walk the kids past the beheadings in the 10 Courts of Hell section, which is aptly named, and into one of the friendlier historical tours.

How about a drive-by visit to Pripyat Amusement Park, never opened, in friendly Ukraine, where the iconic Ferris wheel stands abandoned in the Chernobyl exclusion zone.  Maybe you’d like to see the rusted, toppled dinosaur statues of Spreepark in Germany, abandoned in 2001.  Or, for a real thrill, take a slide at Siam Park’s Tower of Power in exotic Tenerife, which features a 28-meter vertical waterslide “that passes through a tank filled with actual sharks!” 

And we used to think the Fun House was scary.



Swimming With Pigs

Attention Glenn Terry!  By now just about everybody has had a swim with the dolphins, the manatees and The Creature From The Black Lagoon.  Hold up on those vacation swim videos, folks, they’re a snore.  But what if you could be the first in your neighborhood to swim with the pigs?  Oh, you don’t think pigs can swim?  Nobody told you about Petunia’s backstroke medal in the Olympics of 1952?  Pigs, in fact, are excellent swimmers that can paddle and float with the greatest of ease, and they love it.  Not having sweat glands, the porcine community often uses water to cool down.  Swimming is also useful in protecting themselves from insects.  Feral pigs, famous for their natatory skills, often greet boats in the Bahamas looking for burgers or fries.  On one famous occasion, Philbert Desanex, a non-swimmer, was tossed into the ocean by a gang of varlets.  He quickly morphed into Wonder Wart Hog, a champion stroker, who cast a trawler net over the whole gang and brought them to justice.

Anyway, now you, too, can visit Pig Beach on Big Major Cay in the Exumas to join your porky friends for a swim.  Boats leave regularly from nearby islands like Stanley Cay or Great Exuma, and day trips are available from Nassau.  You can even double your pleasure, double your fun by visiting nurse sharks at Compass Cay or snorkeling in Thunderball Grotto.  Don’t forget to bring along a beach ball and some root vegetables.

If cats happen to be your cup of tea, you might want to grab your coat and get your hat and head for Cat Island in Aoshima, Japan.  Though humans (and amenities) are few, the cats are many, numbering in the hundreds and depending on the kindness of strangers to keep Friskies on the table.  You can catch the ferry at Nagahama Port near the train station at 8 am.  No sneaking out any friendly kitties, they put you in jail for catnapping.



Disa & Data

You can visit with Chatty Belle, the world’s largest talking cow sculpture in Neillsville, Wisconsin, but you’ll have to carry much of the conversation.  And hey---no politics, please.  If you’d rather a buffalo, get yourself up to Jamestown, North Dakota to see Dakota Thunder, their 60-ton concrete marvel at the North American Bison Discovery Center.  We always knew there must be some reason for visiting North Dakota—this could be it.

The Florida Keys have their own big critter, Betsy the Giant Lobster, an anatomically correct model measuring 30 feet high and 40 feet long holding forth in Islamorada.  Don’t you dare miss her on your way to gay Key West.

If you’ve had enough of oversized animals, how about a bite to eat at the venerable Spam Museum in Austin, Minnesota?  If you have neither the time nor the cash to visit Greece, you might like to stop in lively Nashville, home of the only full-scale replica of Athens’ famous Parthenon.  England has its iconic Stonehenge but you probably didn’t know that Alliance, Nebraska has Carhenge, automobiles stacked up to imitate the mysterious stones.

The girly girls will go nuts for Barbie’s Malibu Dream House, all pink and beachy with a full-stocked clothes closet.  They can stay overnight and hit up potential Kens at the chummy bar.  They also have bedrooms at the Roswell, New Mexico Missile Silo/Bunker, originally a launch control center and 186-foot-deep missile silo.

If you’re in The City by The Bay in early April and you espy the cops busting a couple of good old girls out on the town, how about hustling over there and handing Officer Friendly a Get Out Of Jail Free card.  It could be Gina and one of her hard-drinking cohorts one toke over the line.  Anyone posting bond for the kids gets a free trip to the Spam Museum.




That’s all, folks….

bill.killeen094@gmail.com   



  

Thursday, February 26, 2026

The Further Adventures Of Florida Man





“A Florida Man needs no introduction.”---
University of Florida handbook.

Florida Man is everywhere.  Gone are the days when he confined himself to the 34.7 million acres of his home state, now he feels free to take his act on the road.  Recently, Christopher John Lubowski, 51, of Ormond Beach was minding his own business driving his 18-wheeler in Montgomery County, Texas when he noticed blue lights flashing in his rear-view mirror.  Now, C.J. considers himself to be a law-abiding citizen who would pull over immediately under normal circumstances but on this particular occasion he found himself in possession of a disturbing amount of methamphetamine and stopping would mean an inconvenient stay in the county lockup.

It’s not as though the cops were looking to bust anyone that day.  Constable Curtis Fletcher of the Patton Village force was resting in his cruiser with a cuppa Joe and a nice slice of pecan pie from the Splendora Cafe & BBQ when he couldn’t help but notice Lubowski swinging and swaying all over the highway.  “Gol-dang it, I was just settling in for lunch,” testified the lawman.  “But, you know, I just had to go.  This crazed addict was going to kill somebody.  He was fried to the gills on meth!”  Curtis promptly instigated a chase, soon joined by the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, but C.J. was in no mood to stop.

In case you’ve has never tried it, you should know that pulling over a rampaging semi is no easy task.  Lubowski raced down the roadway for 2 1/2 scary hours with a string of police vehicles in his wake.  Finally, on an open stretch of highway in Fort Bend County, the cops shot the tires off the big rig and brought it to a stop.  C.J. was arrested on umpty-leven charges, locked up and held on a $150,000 bond.  Constable Fletcher eventually managed to get back to his pie, but by then the coffee was morose.


Oh, the inhumanity!  Or just another boffo performance-art smash by Podwilla Possum's gypsy theater troupe?

The Possum Defecation Blues

If you leave out the Scientologists, Clearwater seems to be a nice enough place.  Sparkling beach, upstanding citizens, first-class softball venues, summer home of Donna the Bakery Queen.  So what in the wide, wide world of sports was Florida Man Robert Wilcox doing there pooping on a dead opossum?  According to the police report, “Wilcox was observed defecating on a deceased opossum with his pants lowered and his anal region exposed.”  Even worse, the nefarious act was perpetrated during rush hour traffic and in plain sight of countless observers.  The perp, of course, denied it.  “I was just airing out my undies and a little slip-up occurred,” he said.  “It could happen to anybody.”

Are rowdy iguanas keeping you awake at night with their loud reggae music?  Do the massive critters lurk in your trees just waiting for a visit from the Domino’s delivery man?  Maybe it’s time you climbed up on your roof and turned on the Cuban Tarzan Signal, gaining the instant attention of one Andrew Morales, a Florida Man who specializes in invasive animal removal, with a bent to enormous lizards.  If you think size doesn’t matter, try wrestling one of these characters to the ground.  Morales’ latest evictee had a four-foot tail and was the size of an average fifth-grader with claws straight out of a Wolverine movie.  Unlike your average Florida Man, the Cuban Tarzan considers himself a public servant, always on call to save the day for a small remuneration.  “Alligators and crocodiles cost extra,” he advises.



You Meet The Nicest People In A Hyundai

Not just anybody gets to march into their local BMW dealer and get a test drive.  Certain things are taken into consideration, like one’s age and shoe style, bank account statement, that crazed look in his eyes.  That’s why a Gainesville BMW dealer said no dice to Kevin Leiman, 20, when he asked to test drive a BMW M4 valued at $110,000..  Kevin, of course, was outraged and he immediately darted into a phone booth and emerged as Florida Man.  Gainesville Police Department officials said Leiman first went back to the parking lot and sat in his Hyundai SUV, then circled the building twice, hit the gas and smashed into the showroom windows.  Once inside, he began looking for the keys to the M4, but was unsuccessful.  He left on foot and was nabbed by the cops shortly thereafter.  And you thought the everyday life of a car salesman was a big bag of dreary.

In early January, Florida Man Matthew Zaccarino, 39, of Altamonte Springs was confronted by police after being found trespassing at a construction site wearing a red lace bra and a G-string.  Deputies found a handgun cleverly hidden underneath silicone prosthetic breasts that Zaccarino was sporting.  As police approached, the perp attempted to remove his lingerie, claiming he was on his way to a costume party.  Matthew was charged with trespassing while armed, loitering, resisting arrest without violence and bad taste in undergarments.

All children love to visit Chuck E. Cheese, ”where a kid can be a kid.”  Chuck E., himself, is always there to greet them in full costume and get the merriment started, as was 41-year-old Jermel James in full regalia when police barged into the Tallahassee Charles Entertainment barracks and put the cuffs on.  “Chuck E. is a little busy, Ma’am,” one of the cops told an upset mother.  The officers escorted the large rodent out of the arcade to the prowler as stunned children looked on in horror.  One angry mother yelled, “Would y’all put Mickey Mouse in handcuffs?  I think not!.”  Jermel was charged with using a stolen credit card, resisting arrest without violence and being a bad role model for tykes.   



The Best Laid Plans Of Mice And Men…

It doesn’t happen very often, but now and then the Florida Board of Erratic Behavior deigns to confer the title of “Honorary Florida Man” on rank outsiders who have performed feats above and beyond the call of duty.  Their most recent honoree is one Ryan Wesley Routh, a simple Carolina roofer subject to alarming mood swings during which he might run naked through the woods or even attempt to assassinate a would-be president.  On September 15, 2024, one of those mood eruptions caused him to hide in the bushes outside a Florida golf course where presidential candidate Donald J. Trump was hacking away.  As often happens on these occasions, Ryan was carrying with him his trusty SKS-style rifle, trying to get a bead on The Great White Hope.  He lingered there for almost twelve hours before an opportunity arose at 1:31 p.m..,pointing his rifle through the fence line approximately 400 yards from Trump.  Then, wouldn’t you just know it, a passing Secret Service agent espied the culprit and fired four alarming rounds in his direction.  Routh promptly skedaddled the scene but was later captured on I-75 in Martin County.  Seventeen burner phones were found in his vehicle, along with the rifle, a scope, two backpacks containing ceramic tiles which could deflect a bullet and a GoPro camera for remembering those tender moments.  Three days later, Lazaro and Samuel Plata, two brothers who were former employees of Routh, dropped off a box to authorities which contained a 12-page letter that their employer had written earlier.  The first page read:

“Dear World: This was an assassination attempt on Donald Trump but I am so sorry I failed you.  I tried my best and gave it all the gumption I could muster.  It is up to you now to finish the job, and I will offer $150,000 to anyone who can complete the job.  Everyone across the globe from the youngest to the oldest know that Trump is unfit to be anything, much less a U.S. president.  U.S. presidents must at bare minimum embody the moral fabric that is America and be kind, caring and selfless and always stand for humanity.  Trump fails to understand any of this.”

On the day of his arraignment, Routh was seen smiling and laughing with his lawyer.  On April 7, 2025, federal prosecutors indicted Routh for conspiring with a supposed Ukrainian to use a rocket launcher to shoot down Trump’s plane.  Asked to comment on his father’s actions, Routh’s son Oran said “My Dad just really hates Trump…like every reasonable person does.” 

Last week, Ryan was sentenced to life in the Big House.  His many friends are hoping future President Al Franken, a compassionate man, will administer a pardon.



And You Think The World Cup Is A Big Deal…

The 2026 Florida Man Games will be held this year in Bradenton on February 21 at the Freedom Factory.  Either previous host St. Augustine can only tolerate so much wackiness or the games need roomier quarters for their “mud, mayhem and maximum freedom” activities, which include the popular Evading Arrest Obstacle Course and the chaotic Grocery Cart Joust.  New events this year include Bullwhips And Bad Decisions, a caged octagon battle where combatants “test their grit and endurance,” and Naked Rampage, which is not explained but is likely based on Florida Man Carlos Guerrero’s destruction of a rented home with a hammer, mallet and machete while naked.

In Human Beer Pong, two competitors climb into giant inflatable ping pong balls, the offensive player’s mission to stumble his way into one of three pools filled with booze.  The defender’s goal is to take him out by any means necessary before he reaches the pool.  Three rounds, pure chaos, big laughs, or so the promoters promise.

The Mechanical Gator is the Florida Man equivalent of the western bars’ mechanical bull.  Hold on tight as the bucking, thrashing, tail-whipping gator tries to throw you straight into muddy oblivion.  According to the hype, “It’s the ultimate test of grip strength, balance and Florida spirit.  Will you ride like a legend or get tossed faster than a tourist at an airboat show?”

If any of this makes you angry, you can take out your rage in the exciting Smash Room, where you are highly encouraged to “break shit.”  There is, as you would expect, a Mugshot Photo Wall just like the one the cops have down at the station…with the exception that you and a gal pal can don orange jump suits and pose together, which is almost never allowed down at the sheriff’s place.

Florida Man lives!  Once thought to be the last vestige of a dying breed but now returned to prominence by a new appreciation for American ignorance, he fandangoes down the boulevard to the tune of a different drummer, tone deaf but determined.




That’ all, folks….

bill.killeen094@gmail.com  



       

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Critical Info From Bill Pie, The Science Guy



Coffee

“Smells so lovely when you pour it
You will want to drink a quart…of coffee.
It’s delicious all alone,
It’s also good with doughnuts…black coffee.
Coffee stimulates your urges,
It’s served in local churches,
Keeps the Swedes and the Germans
Awake through the sermons…that coffee.”

---Keillor & Battle

Health records from a recent study of 130,000 people showed that habitual coffee or caffeinated-tea drinkers have a lower risk of dementia and marginally better cognitive performance than those who avoid the drinks.  You knew it all the time, right?  The report published in the prominent Journal of the American Medical Association illustrated that over 40 years those who routinely drank two or three cups of coffee or one or two cups of tea had a 15-20% lower risk of dementia than those who went without.  There were no benefits seen with a greater intake of coffee or tea. 

“Our study can’t prove causality, but to our knowledge it is the best evidence to date and it is consistent with plausible biology,” said the study’s lead author Yu Zhang, who studies nutritional epidemiology at Harvard University.  Coffee and tea contain caffeine and polyphenols that may protect against brain aging by improving vascular health and reducing inflammation and oxidative stress, where harmful atoms and molecules called free radicals damage cells and tissues.  Substances in the drinks could also work by improving metabolic health.  Caffeine, for example, is linked to lower rates of type 2 diabetes, a known risk factor for dementia.

The researchers analyzed records of 131,821 volunteers enrolled in two big U.S. public health studies, the Nurses’ Health Study and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study.  Both took repeated assessments of the participants’ diets, dementia diagnoses, any cognitive decline they experienced and scores in objective cognitive tests for up to 43 years.  Overall, men and women who drank the most caffeinated coffee had an 18% lower risk of dementia compared with those who drank little or none, with similar results seen for tea.  The effect seemed to plateau at two to three cups of caffeinated coffee or one or two cups of tea.  No link was found between decaffeinated coffee and dementia.

You’ll have to excuse us now while we put on another pot:

“It’s so nice to take to worky and it really makes you perky, it won’t let your thoughts get murky and it’s even great in Turkey…coffee!


Attraction

Do pheromones exist?  If physical beauty is a leading attractant of one person to another, how do we account for those couples where it seems out of balance?  Is there some esoteric element out there that helps to account for love at first sight?  Who put the bomp in the bomp bah bomp bah bomp, who put the ram in the rama lama ding dong?  Inquiring minds want to know.

Pheromones do exist.  They are substances which are secreted by an individual and received by a second individual of the same species.  While they appear to play an important part in the attraction of one animal to another, they seem to have no role in human interaction.  Humans have no functioning vomeronasal organ, which processes pheromone signals and rings the gong for animals.  Why in the wide wide world of sports has no blues songwriter ever tackled the sad fate of the lacking vomeronasal organ?  It’s a poser.

There is, however, a steroidal compound called androstadienone.  A pharmacological dose of “Andy” is known to facilitate a woman’s sexual response and increase the attractiveness of potential male suitors.  A putative pheromone secreted particularly by women is estratetraenol, which (close your eyes) was first isolated from the urine of pregnant gals.  The effects of estratetraenol are smaller than those of androstadienone but go in the same direction.  Neither of these two compounds, however, is considered anywhere near as effective as the better-known Love Potion #9 whose ingredients are a secret known only to Jerry (the nose) Leiber and Mike (the earlobe) Stoller.

Another possible attractant could be copulins, fatty acids found in vaginal secretions which when smelled by men can affect male hormone levels and perceptions of attractiveness.  You have to get awfully close, however, to feel the mighty pull of copulins.  Odds are by then you’re pretty attracted already. 



Third Penis Never Fails

You’re not going to believe this (and it might make some women nervous) but in 2024 doctors in the United Kingdom reported a case of a man with three penises.  It must have happened more than once because the medical people even have a name for the phenomenon—triphallia.  People with three penises probably don’t go around talking about it unless they are in the circus so this discovery was only made upon the death of the big swinger.

This startling discovery lends a whole new meaning to the word “threesome.”  Also the expression “one on the side.”  Sex addicts are relieved to know there is now an alternative for the third wheel while the other two are getting it on.

Meanwhile, back at the ER, physicians report a jump in the number of Headspin Hole cases.  The HH is a chronic, benign scalp injury common in breakdancers, characterized by hair loss, inflammation and a tender, fibrous lump on the vertex of the skull caused by years of repetitive friction and pressure during headspins.  This activity is not what yo mama meant when she told you to start using your head.

We hate to bring this up but it’s always important to pay attention to the dangers presented by Butt Eels.  Doctors in Vietnam reported a patient’s horrific experience after inserting a two-foot-long eel into his rectum just for sport.  The eel, hungry, as eels are wont to be, started chewing through the man’s intestines until he cried uncle and dashed off to the hospital.  Smirking surgeons were able to save the man’s life, extracting the critter and part of his intestines as well.  “Next time, I go back to breakdancing,” the victim said.

Never undercook your bacon.  Like Secretary of Health & Human Services Robert F. Kennedy, a 52-year-old Florida man was discovered with a brain worm.  We don’t know the cause of RFKJ’s problem but the Florida man had an infection called neurocysticercosis after eating uncooked bacon and subsequently infecting himself through poor hygiene, transferring eggs from his own feces to his mouth.  Just to be on the safe side, it’s probably best not to be kissing RFK next time you see him.

Before you go off on a tangent dissing fecal bacteria, however, you should know that recent studies have solidified the notion that fecal transplants (removing fecal bacteria from a healthy person to an unhealthy one) can be an effective treatment for certain severe infections.  So let’s not have any more of that talk about “I don’t take no shit from noone.”



Phenomena

1. Elephant Dung Leads To More Guitars.  Researchers with nothing better to do recently discovered a critical link between African elephants and ebony trees, which provide the wood traditionally used in guitars and piano keys.  The big guys eat the fruits from these trees, carrying the seeds in their digestive tracts for miles before depositing them still intact on the forest floor.  UCLA biologist Thomas Smith noted that in areas where these elephants are hunted to extinction there are 70% fewer ebony saplings.

2. Close The Door, They’re Coming In The Windows!  Scientists are warning that a little-known group of microbes called free-living amoebae may be posing a global health threat.  Found in soil and water, some species can survive extreme heat, chlorine, rap music and even modern water systems—conditions which kill most germs.  One infamous example, the “brain-eating amoeba,” can cause deadly infections after contaminated water enters the nose.  Even worse, these fiends can act as hiding places for dangerous bacteria and viruses, helping them evade disinfection.  Where is RFK Jr. when you really need him?

3. But Officer, It Might Have Been The Fennel!  Researchers have now discovered that some people get “drunk” without drinking.  Apparently, their gut bacteria can produce alcohol from food.  The lab boys have now identified the microbes and biological pathways behind this inconvenient condition as Auto-Brewery Syndrome.  Testing has showed that the gut samples of patients with the problem produced far more alcohol than those of healthy people.  In at least one case, however, those snappy fecal transplants mentioned above came to the rescue, leading to long-lasting symptom relief.  “Holy shit—what a relief!” exulted one of the victims.

4. God Is Not Going To Like This, but researchers at Hiroshima University now contend that life may have started in sticky, rock-hugging gels rather than inside cells.  Those wily Japanese suggest these primitive, biofilm-like materials could trap and concentrate molecules, giving early chemistry a protected space to grow more complex.  Within these gels, the first hints of metabolism and self-replication may have emerged.  We’d be more impressed if Chuck LeMasters hadn’t been telling us the same thing since 1985.

Coffee.  And just to complete the cycle, scientists now tell us that roasted coffee may do much more than just wake you up and get you on the bus.  It might even control blood sugar.  Researchers recently discovered several new coffee compounds that inhibit a-glucosidase, a key enzyme linked to type 2 diabetes.  Some of these molecules were even more potent than a common anti-diabetic drug.  The study also introduced a faster, greener way to uncover health-boosting compounds in complex foods.

“It can rock it, it can roll it, do the stomp and even stroll it…coffee!

“It warms you to the bone, it complements your scone, it plays your saxophone…coffee!

“You can’t really live without it, there’s no two ways about it, and if you start to doubt it just add some sauerkraut, it makes you want to shout, it saves you from the gout, it turns you inside-out, it’s vital in a drought, I think I’m almost out…COFFEE!”



That’s all, folks….

bill.killeen094@gmail.com