Shot of the day

Billiard Baby

Beatboxing Clarkson

Lord only knows how long this must have taken to put together, but it's really rather good...

Wear the fox hat

God Bless America

A car dealer in Missouri has devised an unusual approach to combating the crash in the US motor market -- he is offering a free rifle with every truck.

US vehicle sales have plummeted in the recession, so Max Muller of Max Motors near Kansas City is offering a gift certificate for a Kalashnikov AK-47 worth £320 ($450) with every vehicle purchase to boost sales.

Muller only sells American vehicles, giving credibility to his business slogan: 'God, Guns, Guts, and American Pick-Up Trucks'.

He said that he has had a great response thanks to the drug problem in the area. "It's extremely successful. There is a lot of worry about crime, we have a methamphetamine problem around here and people just want to protect themselves. And what could be better than supporting American products in these troubled times?"

The guns are American–made by IO Inc in North Carolina, although they were first developed in the Soviet Union. The AK-47 was used by the Viet Cong during the Vietnam War, and became a symbol of resistance to America.

This is not the first time that Muller has given away free weapons. Last year he gave away a free handgun with the purchase of any vehicle, and claimed that he sold around 35 extra cars during the promotion than he normally would have.

He told CNN: "We're just trying to generate some traffic, generate some interest and enthusiasm and it seems to work real well. We're not just going to give people an AK-47 gun. Felons buy cars, too.

"What we are going to do is we're going to give them a voucher where they can go to their local gun dealer or we have local gun dealers we would strongly recommend where they can go buy a gun and go through the proper background checks so the guns end up in the right hands."

It is thought that this is the first time that the AK-47 has been used as an incentive to buy vehicles.

Ah, the greatest movies ever made: Back to the Future and Back to the Future 2. Of course, the role of Jennifer Parker was originally played by Claudia Wells. However she refused to come back to do the sequel for personal reasons. She was replaced by, in my opinion, the inferior Elisabeth Shue. That meant that they had to re-film the opening on BttF2 replacing Wells with Shue. How well good did they do?



Jennifer Jane Parker is a fictional character in the Back to the Future motion picture trilogy. The character has been played by two actresses in the movies and voiced by a third in the spin-off series. Jennifer is always a secondary character in the stories, the girlfriend of the protagonist Marty McFly.

The character of Jennifer Parker was called Suzy Parker in the original script of Back to the Future. Movie director Robert Zemeckis changed the character's name to Jennifer after attorney Larry H. Parker's daughter, in gratitude, as Mr. Parker was instrumental in settling a copyright infringement suit in favor of Mr. Zemeckis.

The character was played by Claudia Wells in Back to the Future. Wells was not available to film the sequels for personal reasons, and the role was recast to Elisabeth Shue (coincidentally, Shue's mother Anne Harms' maiden name is Wells). Consequently, the final scene of Back to the Future, which leads to Back to the Future Part II and which is shown at the beginning of that movie, had to be re-shot with Shue taking Wells' place. Finally, in the spin-off Back to the Future: the Animated Series, Jennifer was voiced by Cathy Cavadini.

Melora Hardin was at first chosen to play Jennifer Parker, but had to be let go because she was found to be taller than Michael J Fox, who replaced Eric Stoltz as Marty McFly. The producers felt that Marty McFly's girlfriend needed to be of equal or shorter height or the pairing would not look aesthetically appealing. Hence, she was replaced with Claudia Wells, who had no such height issues compared to Michael J Fox.

More at the usual place.

There is a website I read occasionally when I am bored to pass the time called Test From Last Night. It is a collection of the funny texts people have received, usually from drunk friends. Here are a few of my favourites:

(314): So I went on a date with this girl...and whos our waitress? My girlfriend got a second job she didn't tell me about to afford my bday present.

(212): i want you now
(916): you need to stop dating girls with the same name as your mother...or stop drinking so much...I don't want to see this

(308): I just walked in on my mom and dad......It wasn't my dad

(404): Can I crash on your couch? I just came home to find my wife giving two guys blowjobs.
(1-404): Two?
(404): Two.

(612): What started out as a threesome has become me sitting here watching them have sex... Can I get a ride home?

(619): just caught grandpa beating off in the living room

(216): Where the fuck is Rob at, he hasnt answered his phone in like 2 weeks.
(440): Dude Rob died 2 weeks ago wtf?
(216): Holy shit r u serious? How?
(440): Just kidding, but im pretty sure he boned your gf and doesnt want to talk to you.

(407): i went to disney world today with my friends, met snow white, then saw her later at a bar. she is naked next to me in her bed, passed out. When you wish upon a star...

(703): Just woke up wearing a top hat and simpsons boxers. i also found more money in my wallet then what i had before going out, about $1000 more.

(312): I remember going home with 2 girls. Woke up with 4.

(909): I thought it was weird that her dad told me to finish and get out after he walked in on us. I like him

(843): the red head has a bf
(1-843): just because there's a goalie doesn't mean u can't score

(401): This is a mass text. Does anyone know where I am?

(330): I don't know where I am but the food in the fridge is awesome.


You get the idea...

The Glitch

It is classic tabloid territory - using the latest computer technology, the showbiz pages tell us what the stars of the day will look like when they get old.

Oh how incredibly wrong they were with Michael Jackson. While it would have taken an extraordinary piece of software to get him right, simply adding a very 1980s 'tache to a contemporary photo and a horrible jacket and tie combo straight out of the 80s too is a very poor effort indeed.


Note the caption: "Michael Jackson at 40 will have aged gracefully and will have a handsome, more mature look. In number, his fame will have grown tenfold by the year 2000".

I would say they got that wrong on every single count.

(Yes! I managed to get through a Micheal Jackson post without making a tasteless gag about his death. It is definitely time to let him rest in pieces...)



It ain't no use to sit and wonder why, babe
If’in you don’t know by now
An' it ain't no use to sit and wonder why, babe
It’ll never do some how.
When your rooster crows at the break of dawn
Look out your window and I'll be gone
You're the reason I'm trav'lin' on
Don't think twice, it's all right

It ain't no use in turnin' on your light, babe
That light I never knowed
An' it ain't no use in turnin' on your light, babe
I'm on the dark side of the road
but I wish there was somethin' you would do or say
To try and make me change my mind and stay
We never did too much talkin' anyway
So don't think twice, it's all right

It ain't no use in callin' out my name, gal
Like you never done before
It ain't no use in callin' out my name, gal
I can't hear you any more
I'm a-thinkin' and a-wond'rin' walkin’ down the road
I once loved a woman, a child I'm told
I give her my heart but she wanted my soul
But don't think twice, it's all right

So long, Honey Babe
Where I'm bound, I can't tell
But Goodbye's too good a word, babe
So I'll just say fare thee well
I ain't sayin' you treated me unkind
You could have done better but I don't mind
You just kinda wasted my precious time
But don't think twice, it's all right

Lottery Losers

Vivian Nicholson famously claimed she would “spend, spend, spend” after winning £152,300 (worth about £3 million in today’s money) when playing the Castleford football pools in 1961. Since then she has been widowed, married five times, suffered from a stroke and been treated for alcoholism, deported from Malta, became a Jehovah’s Witnesses, tried to commit suicide and spent time in a mental institution. She spent her winnings on Harrods dresses, luxury cars and holidays and was the subject of the West End production of her life, aptly called “Spend, Spend, Spend”, with Barbara Dickenson playing her role. She is now living on £87 a week pension.


Other amusing stories, including the King of Chavs, here.

This is without doubt the most sinister, scary, messed up thing I have ever seen. It truly is terrifying. What in the name of the sweet Lord is going on here?! This man needs to be locked up, he is clearly abusing his very sinister talents. His laugh is like something out of a Batman movie.

Extreme.



Action Park was a waterpark/motor themed park open from 1978 to 1996 in Vernon Township, New Jersey, on the property of the former Vernon Valley / Great Gorge ski area, today Mountain Creek.

Its popularity went hand in hand with a reputation for poorly-designed, unsafe rides; inattentive, underaged, underpaid and sometimes under-the-influence employees; equally intoxicated and underprepared visitors — and the poor safety record that followed from this perfect storm of circumstances. At least six people are known to have died as a result of mishaps on rides at the park, and it was nicknamed "Traction Park", "Accident Park", "Class Action Park", "Danger Park" and "Death Park" by doctors at nearby hospitals due to the number of severely injured parkgoers they treated. While little action was taken by state regulators despite a history of repeat violations, in its later years personal-injury lawsuits forced the closure of more and more rides and finally the park itself.

Action Park's most successful years were the mid-1980s. Most rides were still open, and the park's later reputation for danger had not yet developed. In 1982, the deaths of two visitors within a week of each other and ensuing permanent closure of one ride took place, but that hardly dampened the flow of crowds.

The park's fortunes began to turn with two deaths in summer 1984 and the legal and financial problems that stemmed from the lawsuits. A state investigation of improprieties in the leasing of state land to the resort led to a 110-count grand jury indictment against the nine related companies that ran the resort and their executives for operating an unauthorized insurance company. Many took pretrial intervention to avoid prosecution; head Eugene Mulvihill pled guilty that November to five insurance fraud-related charges. Still, attendance remained high and the park remained profitable at least on paper. The park entertained over a million visitors a year, with as many as 12,000 coming on some of the busiest weekends.

Park officials said this made the injury and death rate statistically insignificant. Nevertheless, the director of the emergency room at a nearby hospital said they treated from five to ten victims of park accidents on some of the busiest days, and the park eventually bought the township of Vernon extra ambulances to keep up with the volume.

Many of Action Park's attractions were unique. They gave patrons more control over their experience than they would have at most other amusement parks' rides, but for the same reason were considerably riskier.

The one ride that has come to symbolize Action Park and its extreme thrill-seeking was, paradoxically, almost never used.

In the mid-1980s GAR built an enclosed water slide, not unusual for that time, and indeed the park already had several. But for this one they decided to build, at the end, a complete vertical loop of the kind more commonly associated with roller coasters. Employees have reported they were offered hundred-dollar bills to test it. "It didn't buy enough booze to drown out the memory", said Fergus.

It was opened for one month in summer 1985 before it was closed at the order of the state's Advisory Board on Carnival Amusement Ride Safety, a highly unusual move at the time. One worker told a local newspaper that "there were too many bloody noses and back injuries" from riders, and it was widely rumored, and reported in Weird NJ, that some of the test dummies sent down before it was opened had been dismembered. A rider also reportedly got stuck at the top of the loop due to insufficient water pressure, and a hatch had to be built at the bottom of the slope to allow for future extrications.

The Tidal Wave Pool: The first patron death occurred here in 1982; another visitor would drown in this common water-park attraction five years later. It was, however, the number of people the lifeguards saved from a similar fate that made this the only Waterworld attraction to gain its own nickname, "The Grave Pool." Twelve lifeguards were on duty at all times, and on high-traffic weekends they were known to rescue as many as 30 people, compared to the one or two the average lifeguard might make in a typical season at a pool or lake.

The Tarzan Swing: This was a steel arch hanging from a 20-foot (6.1 m)-long (6 m) cable over a spring-fed pool. Patrons waited in long lines for the chance to hang from it, swing out over the water, then jump off as the beam reached its height. Some patrons hung on too long and scraped their toes on the concrete at the far side. Others used the ride properly, but then were surprised to find out the water underneath was very cold. It was cold enough, in fact, that the lifeguards sometimes had to rescue people who were so surprised by the sudden chill they couldn't swim out. In 1984, one man died from a heart attack after experiencing the swing.

Surf Hill: This ride, common to other water parks at the time, allowed patrons to slide down a water-slick sloped surface on mats into small puddles, until they reached a foam barrier after an upslope at the end. Barriers between lanes were minimal, and people frequently collided with each other on the way down, or at the end. The seventh lane was known as the "back breaker," due to its special kicker two-thirds of the way down intended to allow jumps and splashdowns into a larger puddle.[13] Employees at the park used to like eating at a nearby snack bar with a good view of the attraction, since it was almost guaranteed that they could see some serious injuries, lost bikini tops, or both.

Super Speed Water Slides: These were two water slides, set slightly apart from the rest of the park, that took advantage of nearly vertical slopes to allow riders to attain higher speeds than usually possible. hose who made it to the bottom found their progress arrested by water, which made a large splash, and then a small pool. The speed at which riders met the end resulted in many getting wedgies and enemas from the experience.

Six people are known to have died directly or indirectly from rides at Action Park:

On July 8, 1980, a 19-year-old park employee was riding the alpine slide when his car jumped the track and his head struck a rock, killing him.

On July 24, 1982, a 15-year-old boy drowned in the Tidal Wave Pool.
A week later, on August 1, a 27-year-old man from Long Island got out of his tipped kayak on the Kayak Experience to right it. He was electrocuted when he stepped on a grate that was either in contact with, or came too close to, a section of wiring for the underwater fans that was exposed. Several other members of his family nearby were also injured. He was taken to a hospital in nearby Warwick, New York where he died later of heart failure from the electric shock.

The park at first disputed that the electric current caused his death, saying there were no burns on his body, but the coroner responded that burns generally do not occur in a water-based electrocution.

The ride was drained and closed for the investigation. Accounts differed as to the extent of the exposed wiring: the park said it was "just a nick," while others said it was more like 8 inches (20 cm). The state's Labor Department found that the fan was properly maintained and installed and cleared the park of wrongdoing; however it also said the current had the possibility to cause bodily harm under certain circumstances. While the park said it was vindicated, it never reopened the ride, saying people would be afraid to go on it afterwards.

In 1984, a fatal heart attack suffered by one visitor was unofficially believed to have been triggered by the shock of the cold water in the pool beneath the Tarzan Swing. The water on the Tarzan Swing and in that swimming area was 50-60 °F (10-16 °C) while other water areas were in the 70-80 °F (21-27 °C) range more typical of swimming pools. The Tarzan swing and the cannon ball ride in this area were operated by spring water.

On August 27 of that year, a 20-year-old from Brooklyn drowned in the Tidal Wave Pool.

On July 19, 1987, an 18-year-old drowned in the Tidal Wave Pool.

Read the full, amazing wikipedia entry here.

Dr Who?!

Really Rather Good


I have not looked at the stats, but I suspect the readership of the Last Turkey consists of the half a dozen or so authors, a few friends and the odd lost cyber space traveller. Hardly the basis for world take over sized business plan. Then again, blogging for most people is not about making money, it is just a bit of fun and an outlet for your opinions, funny stories and whatever is on your mind.

Then there is Perez Hilton. For those who don't know, Perez Hilton is probably the most pointless "celebrity" on planet earth. He basically runs a blog that talks about other celebrities like it matters. Like it really, really matters. Well, it seems, celebrities really do matter to a lot of people.

Hilton's blog has just had its busiest month (not least because rap star Will.I.Am" allegedly belted the annoying little pratt and he milked it for all it was worth). Check out the stats - it is enough to make even Rupert Murdoch whince:

Last week, was our busiest week ever on the site!

And, the month of June was our most visited month in the website’s history.

According to Sitemeter.com, we had 268.9 million page views last month.

That’s insane!!!!

Our previous record was 249.9 million in February of this year.

And, just a year ago, in June of 2008, we “only” had 207.3 million page views for the month.

The Inquister has done a little bit of maths on all this, presumably to make us all feel like we have completed wasted out lives pursuing far less frivolous pursuits:

268.9 million page views in 30 days for June 2008. Let’s break that down and do some rough guesstimates:

268,900,000 / 30 days = 8,963,000+ pageviews average per day, or 373,000 pageviews per hour, which is more than most sites on the internet could hope for in a month, but I digress.

Lets look at some possible revenue figures. If Perez is getting on average about $5 gross per 1000 page views, a very conservative estimate, monthly gross revenue for the site would come in at about $1,344,500 per month. Since a site the size of PH would more than likely have special deals with advertisers, plus the fact that the main agency on the site is Blogads, that $5/1000 would more than likely be up near the $10/1000 (possibly more) which would effectively double gross revenue to somewhere in the range of $2.5mil to $2.7mil. per month.

The numbers are rough with a lot of guessing involved, but it’s safe to say the Queen of all media is no slouch financially and is running a $15mil - $20mil + per year business, which is probably more than a lot of the stars he snipes at are making.

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