Department of Obscure Jokes

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Probably no one much under fifty is going to get this one but I think it's funny and that's what's important, isn't it? :)

\- Erin



John Cash
by J.E. Melton

 

Sentient toilets had a vogue for a while in the capital city of the
Bergenalter Empire. Actually, they were a sessile flupe of the warrior
caste of the dominant species from Emkaron 6.

Cameron Nguyen Fishbeck hated the things. It creeped him out to think
of sitting and doing his business on what amounted to the oral orifice
of an alien organism. And the sound it made as an equivalent of
flushing was just gross.

But what really annoyed him was payday. His job as the bookkeeper for
the Municipal Nujjball Arena meant he had personal contact with the
flupes since their religion forbade them taking checks. They had to be
paid in cash.

"What do they do with it?" he wondered not for the first time as he
made his rounds dropping Impervine-wrapped bundles of coins and the
specially notched antique pool cue handles used as money in the
Bergenalter capital. "They're stuck to the floor, they'll live out the
rest of their lives sitting there, eating, well, I don't like to think
about what they usually eat. But every payday they get bundles of
money. Is it like an after-dinner mint?" He didn't know and didn't
care to find out that the flupes were essentially their race's
incubators and the money they got paid would ensure that no Emkaronian
warrior was born without a coin in its pustules and a pool cue on its
carapace.

He made his way through all the toilet facilities of the complex,
dropping his little bundles and cringing at the lip-smacking sounds
the flupes made. He did his job quickly and tried not to think about
it at all. "It's exactly like throwing money down the toilet," he
complained silently.

Since nujjball is played with seven to twenty-three teams, each with
as many as 1942 members, the city found it more profitable to charge
the players and hire the spectators whose jobs consisted of rooting,
jeering and doing the wave at the appropriate times. Usually there
were more people on the field than in the bleachers and accordingly
the toilet facilities in the stands were smaller and generally cleaner
and better maintained. In fact, only one of the Emkaronians was
employed as living porcelain in the rooting section.

Not that this made much difference to Cameron Fishbeck who just wanted
to get the unpleasant task over. Finishing up quickly he hurried back
to his office just before the belching started. Luckily, there were no
games on so the arena had a minimum of workmen's compensation claims
to pay since the only one injured was the flupe who merely had a bad
case of indigestion. If some of the cheering employees had been there,
well, it's always nasty when the excrement hits the enthusiast.

But when the near disaster was over, and blue hockey-puck-size
antacids had been given to the gassy flupe the real source of the
problem was discovered. Too much wood for the Emkaronian diet.
Fishbeck had figured the paycheck wrong and delivered more than twice
the correct number of pool cue handles to the lonely flupe.

His boss called him into the main office and told him the bad news.
"Cam, you paid the fans' loo wrong."


Copyright 2000 by J.E. Melton. This work, complete and unaltered, may
be freely distributed on the Internet.


Now, can anyone tell me the TG connection with this joke? :)

\- Erin

Comments

Lion Logic - some fun from another source

chrisl's picture

A hungry lion was roaming through the jungle looking for something to eat.

The lion came across two people: One was sitting under a tree reading a book;
the other was typing away on a typewriter.

The lion quickly pounced on the one reading the book and devoured hir.

Even the King of the Jungle knows readers digest and writers cramp.

Initial report of the investigating committee

I started with the title, which led me to "A boy named Sue" but that was not TG - quite the reverse.

My best shot to date is Harry Klinefelter, whom I can link with 1942 and with 23. I'm still working on the "seven to twenty-three", and I'm still looking for the references to 46 and 47 that might be there if I'm on track. I've a feeling that I'm going to find "Emkaronian" connects somewhere (karotype?).

BTW if the joke is - as would be usual - in the last line, then it missed me completely, although I'm well into the age range (I learnt to read the year Erin was born - some sort of Murphic Resonance there, perhaps?). But I did like the line "when the excrement hits the enthusiast."

However, this being Erin, I guess there is more than one layer of joke here, so I'm coming back to this.

Xi

Joke is in the last line

erin's picture

Hint: It's from a song and the TG connection is who sang it. :)

- Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Guess I'm more than old enough

to recognize "Sam you made the pants too long" and of course it's most famous singer, Barbra Streisand. So I guess the TG element is it's about wearing a man's suit.

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Right you are :)

erin's picture

Barbra wore a man's suit when singing it on stage and she also did that movie Yenta in which she played a woman pretending to be a boy to get an education.

Plus, Joe E Brown, who made a hit with the song in the forties played Daphne's boyfriend, Osgood Fielding III, in Some Like It Hot.

And! The lyrics were co-written by Milton Berle who made a hit with it in the thirties. :) Everyone knows of Milton's penchant for drag comedy.

Lots of other artists have recorded it including Allen Sherman, Groucho Marx, Vaughn Monroe, Red Buttons, and I think, Mel Blanc (his is the voice I hear singing it in my head, probably from some old cartoon).

It used to be pretty much expected that someone would sing it in any revue based on Lower Manhattan. It's an up-tempo satire on the old blues standard, "Lord, You Made the Night Too Long."

Joe E. Brown's version is funnier than Barbra's because he left Milton's slightly risque lyrics alone. :) ("I get the damndest breeze through my BVD's, the fly is where my tie belongs. Sam, oh, Sam, you made the pa-ants too long!")

- Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.