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sd gross
04-07-2008, 07:10 PM
Warning: I sent this to film director John Waters and although he said he loved it, even he agreed it's REALLY disgusting!

Disgusting!
by Stephen D. Gross

"Mangled baby flamingoes will give your pudding color", they had told him at the culinary academy. Last time he broke into the zoo the authorities had threatened to shut his restaurant down. But now he was driving through the desert and he couldn't help but notice that the recent rash of drunk tourists, most of them here for the National Dwarf-Tossing Finals, had left the highway bloody and littered with road kills!
His little eatery catered to an exclusive clientele which loved exotic dishes, so he pulled off the roadway grabbing his box of large Zip-Locs and his spatula. His rectal itch was driving him nuts and it was time for a good, penetrating scratching anyway. His trusty custom-made spatula was cleverly hinged and not only served as a possum-scraper, but doubled as a perfect 'roid excavator as well.
He hurled a clotted booger at a nearby turkey vulture, attempting to drive it off the decomposing possum it had its head buried in, but the big bird stood its ground. Heaving up a thick, stringy glob of phlegm, he spat at it, but the wily buzzard just snatched it in mid-air and sucked the ripe clam into its already-bulging crop.
This was no good. He was expecting a big lunch crowd and except for a mummified manx, his larder was almost empty. From the corner of one runny eye he saw the rat with paralyzed hindquarters crawl out of a sewer pipe holding a round and glassy object in its mouth. He was about to cave its skull in with his crusty tool when a mangy tom cat leaped from its hiding place in a leaky hazardous waste container and landed, claws spread wide, upon the crippled rat's back.
The startled vulture lifted its body from its fetid feast, rising too slowly on its heavy wings. It seemed to explode as the rear-view mirror of a passing Airstream slammed into it. Veering too late to miss the hapless bird, the trailer instead snapped the tomcat's spine like a dry pretzel, making a hollow 'pop' that echoed through the skeleton-strewn arroyo.
Running back to his Edsel for his shovel and a bigger baggie, he slipped in the car's oilslick, catching his ear on a rusty shard of metal and tearing it in two. As the shredded ear flapped against his cheek he wondered where the rat had found the glass eye that had rolled from its mouth when the Airstream struck it. Off in the distance he saw that the silver trailer had swung a "U" on the desert highway and was now heading back toward him.
As it screeched to a dusty halt, a little girl with sores all over her legs jumped out of the passenger side quickly followed by a grizzled hunchback. With drool oozing down his chin, and one bloodshot eye, the frothing gibbous hitched up and buckled his pants. Pulling a slab of well-chewed Blackjack gum from between his rotted teeth, he stuffed it into his empty eye socket.
"I like to have sex with the little bastards before I eat them", he gurgled to no one in particular. "It cures them", he punned nastily. Clutching a dirty spoon in a hand that was missing three fingers, the little girl leaned over the scarlet pool spreading in a circle about the crushed cat and its intended prey. She looked hungry enough to eat the hashmarks off a wino's underwear.
"There was a nightclub in Paris during the war, the "Ball 'n Broil" the hunchback rasped, "where you could have sex and supper all with the same beast." You had to wear rubber boots, he explained, because the puddles of bodily fluids made the floor slippery. "They led us down a stone stairway littered with bones and rotting flesh, into a dank, dark cellar. Oily, black stuff oozed down the greasy walls and dripped from the ceiling." The girl with two fingers proffered a spoonful of ratjuice to her hunchbacked father. He kicked at it and grunting, fell heavily over onto his side. He lay there for a moment, waving his spidery arms and legs and opening and closing his mouth like an injured beetle. His daughter squatted over his head and relieved herself. The hot, acidic fluid flowed into the open, runny sores that covered his face. The two chuckled warmly as they shared their tender moment. The father continued his story:
"As you were led down the steps, the squeals and screams of the pigs and geese welcomed you; the pained yowling of the cats and the shrill keening of the frightened rabbits were enough to arouse the Dead! " "You mean rouse the Dead, don't you?" the other asked. "You've never seen a corpse with an erection?", answered the Hunchback. "They were penned individually in tight little cages so they couldn't move, but there were circular openings in the wire to accomodate the client's needs." His breath came in short gasps as the electric heat of his memory sent convulsions through his body. "The cages were on low tables so we had easy access to them, and when we were done, we rang for the butcher." He told us about an Albino Manx that had cost him 100 Francs. Broiled in frog tongues, leeks and garlic, the cat was so delicate and fresh, he could taste his own jism in it, he said. His daughter's eyes rolled back in their sockets as she lifted the crushed rat between her two fingers and rubbed it sensually all over her body. Her father watched her eagerly for a moment or two and then tore it from her grasp and began sucking its head as if it were a lollipop. Like a furry, crimson pacifier, it seemed to calm him and his wiry legs and arms ceased their twitching.
A car appeared like a dot on the distant horizon churning up dust devils as it flew along the highway. In no time it was on the scene, slowing to a stop opposite the afternoon carnage. An old man slowly peeled himself out of the passenger side and as he approached them, they could see his eyes widening in growing disbelief.
The three stared at him, neatly dressed despite the heat, in a Glen Plaid sport coat and a tie with grey and red regimental stripes. As he got closer the trio's eye grew wide with horror - "O God! O God, No!" they croaked - "Look at that. I've - I've never seen anything like it!". Backing away in revulsion, an agonized scream welled up in the trio's throats.
Gagging as they choked back their vomit, they pointed at the stranger with shaking fingers and gasped in unison, "Plaids with stripes...? PLAIDS WITH STRIPES??? Why that's...that's... Really DISGUSTING"!!:eek::eek:

Melodymama
04-08-2008, 08:36 PM
yes and why do you need to inflict it on us? Barry, step in here, please. What a way to end the digest.

Barry
04-09-2008, 09:50 AM
yes and why do you need to inflict it on us? Barry, step in here, please. What a way to end the digest.

>> Warning: I sent this to film director John Waters and although he said he loved it, even he agreed it's REALLY disgusting!

Seems like appropriate warning to me! I chose not to read it! Stephen has posted many good items, so I'll give him the benefit off the doubt it has some redeeming quality, ad least in a John Waters sense.

sd gross
04-10-2008, 06:35 PM
I would like to humbly apologize if my maniacal diatribe (sic Satire) rattled anyone's sensibilities or (God Forbid!) offended anyone. Tim Leary used to say blowing someone's mind was akin to affording them a religious experience, and although that was not my intention, I'm thrilled if I've made anyone more pious.
I know my piece was, to a few, offensive, unplausible, shocking, appalling, distasteful (fill in your own term here), but this is the face Satire often chooses to present. For the past 500 years, from Swift, to John Waters, to the Fugs, Zappa, and Ralph Ginzburg, people and media have been enjoying our right to express ourselves freely, to assault (verbally) institutions, cultural icons, politicos and whatever and whomever they consider absurd, ridiculous, bizarre, pompous and pretentious. And so it is - I'm carrying out a long-honored tradition by exercising that most cherished freedom. To me it's a kind of litmus test, a measure of how seriously people take themselves and the world around them. If we lose our ability to be tolerant, our power to exercise discretion, and our ability to Teach our Children Well, we're compromising ourselves and the free will we have to follow our convictons and pursue our Muse.
I tried to warn those whom my piece might offend, and those willing to take a chance and read it have most likely survived the experience. I appreciate all input, any and all comments positive or negative, and, especially, Barry's courage in providing a forum for, and allowing this very precious freedom! Thanks to all of you for your patience and tolerance, and please accept that this is Western Sonoma County (America's Left Bank), it's 2008, and, Thank folks like Barry, almost anything can happen!
with love & appreciation
stephen

Reportanddeport
04-14-2008, 02:47 AM
I didn't see it, but I wish I had.


I would like to humbly apologize if my maniacal diatribe (sic Satire) rattled anyone's sensibilities or (God Forbid!) offended anyone. Tim Leary used to say blowing someone's mind was akin to affording them a religious experience, and although that was not my intention, I'm thrilled if I've made anyone more pious.
I know my piece was, to a few, offensive, unplausible, shocking, appalling, distasteful (fill in your own term here), but this is the face Satire often chooses to present. For the past 500 years, from Swift, to John Waters, to the Fugs, Zappa, and Ralph Ginzburg, people and media have been enjoying our right to express ourselves freely, to assault (verbally) institutions, cultural icons, politicos and whatever and whomever they consider absurd, ridiculous, bizarre, pompous and pretentious. And so it is - I'm carrying out a long-honored tradition by exercising that most cherished freedom. To me it's a kind of litmus test, a measure of how seriously people take themselves and the world around them. If we lose our ability to be tolerant, our power to exercise discretion, and our ability to Teach our Children Well, we're compromising ourselves and the free will we have to follow our convictons and pursue our Muse.
I tried to warn those whom my piece might offend, and those willing to take a chance and read it have most likely survived the experience. I appreciate all input, any and all comments positive or negative, and, especially, Barry's courage in providing a forum for, and allowing this very precious freedom! Thanks to all of you for your patience and tolerance, and please accept that this is Western Sonoma County (America's Left Bank), it's 2008, and, Thank folks like Barry, almost anything can happen!
with love & appreciation
stephen