Chambers of the Occult - Old News Nonsense Vol. 4
Episode Date: August 2, 2024Old News Nonsense! Get ready for another round of quirky and bizarre historical headlines! We dive into the colorful story of Mr. Rainbow, explore the wild world of gay rodeos, and uncover the tale of... a headless chicken that defied all odds. That's not all! Meet the daredevil known as the Human Fly, laugh at the antics of kids armed with paintball guns, and visit a parrot ranch filled with feathered fun. And, of course, no episode would be complete without a spotlight on the whimsical world of clowns. Tune in for a delightful journey through these offbeat and entertaining stories from yesteryear. Don't miss out on this episode of Old News Nonsense!Send us a Text Message.
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Chambers of the occult may contain content that might not be suitable for all listeners.
Listener discretion is advised. All this nonsense. Hold these nonsense. Volume 4. I'm Alexis.
I'm Jay.
Alexis, that's Jay.
And I'm Kai.
Hi.
Did you say you were holding a row in number 04?
Yeah, no, I was holding up like four fingers to be like, you know, volume 4 for volume
4.
I'm Kai.
I'm Jay.
I'm Alexis.
I'm Jay.
I'm Jay.
I'm Jay.
I'm Jay.
I'm Jay.
I'm Jay. I'm Jay. I'm Jay. I'm Jay. I'm Kai. Hi. Did you say you were holding a Roman numeral four?
Yeah, no, I was holding up like four fingers to be like, you know, volume four for all those numbers.
Oh, I was like, cool.
I was like, how do you hold Roman numerals?
Um...
One through four? Or one through three?
Technically like...
Oh, how would...
You could... I mean, wouldn't technically...
You make a V and then put a one behind it and that's four. Oh, yeah, that's yeah
Cool
So no, they're not my fingers are not Roman
So welcome back everyone to all these nonsense We have more nonsense for you from the past.
Widowy.
Widowy.
Yeah.
Guys, okay, okay, like listeners, like in your free time, if you just want, if you just need
in your free time if you just want if you just need something to do go on newspapers.com and go to the clipping section and just type in random shit. There'll be some really fun
newspapers in there and if you really like any of them send them in to us and we will read them also.
I was on board with you for like 80% of the trip because I just said like, yeah, look them up,
read them. But you went ahead and beyond and you were like, if you think they're funny, send them
to us. Yeah, I'm always trying to, you know, find an arrangement. He was one step ahead.
All right. He was. Okay. Yeah. Nevermind. That's where we get most of our newspaper clippings.
Yeah, I remind you that's where we get most of our newspaper clippings
Yeah, where do we help us help us feed the algorithm to get us exposure?
Our YouTube is actually doing really well, yeah, which is yeah. Yeah, so we're you
Hey time for a face reveal, Alexis. I'm okay.
Oh my gosh, guys.
Oh my gosh.
There are people who don't know what we look like.
Yeah.
And I'm happy with that.
Bruh.
Bruh.
Why do they need to know?
It's nobody's business. I mean, I mean, I
don't need to know but like, they still love us. Do you ever
see those old pictures that were painted by kings? You know?
They want to see your face so they can paint you like that.
I'm okay. I'm built like that already. They'll paint you in like cubism and then
they'll send it your way. Okay, I don't I don't know if this is like a hot take or like
or something like that. Um, you didn't hear me? What? Nevermind. You said no. I said no,
I said something afterwards, but I don't think the mic picked it up.
So like, say it again?
I don't think it's like a, I did the, the, when you, when you, when you put a cigarette
butt out, that it was a hot.
How is that relevant?
Hot.
Hot, hot tea. that news that how is that relevant hot hot hot i'm really thinking that there are two
different stories happening in front of me yeah um old news nonsense no uh um no like i don't know
if it's a hot take but i think that like if if you are like have an online presence, and you want to be like a social media influencer
or somebody with a public platform, like a podcast, you should be showing your face.
I don't know.
Fair.
I don't know. Fair. I don't know.
Like I'm thinking of like, especially like Twitch streamers,
like really big Twitch streamers
or like just people playing video games.
Like I wanna know what you look like.
I don't know, maybe I'm just weird, but.
No, no, that's fair.
Anyway, anything else you guys wanna add before we hop right into it no I had something and I lost it and I
probably will just say between newspaper clippings if it comes back to me nice
cool so you're starting us off right yeah go ahead I don't remember who
served us off last time but you get to do the honest.
Yeah no it wasn't it isn't it Jay's turn? No I think Jay started last time. Or is it? You start with A.
Wait didn't I already start recently? It doesn't matter. Oh wait that was for the yes it does it does to me
because I have anxiety. Our listeners don't know. Would you like to share with them?
Share what?
What the A stands for?
The A stands for? Yeah, yeah.
It stands for amazing.
Okay, buddy.
We're going to let you get started. Go ahead.
You know what else a stands for?
A?
Yeah, it stands for all.
Stands for all.
Okay.
You know what I'm going to talk about today?
Why do I feel like you're gonna say some pledge from somewhere?
I'm gonna talk about all these gay cowboys out here. Why do I feel like you're going to start some pledge from somewhere?
I'm going to talk about all these gay cowboys out here.
You feel me?
You know, brokeback mountain?
What? Okay.
So I have a newspaper clipping posted or published by the Messenger Inquirire in Owensboro Kentucky.
It was posted August 8th, Wednesday 1979.
And the headliner is all the gay cowboys rodeo attempting to show that homosexuals aren't all limp wrists.
So it shows this.
I'm going to send it to you guys just because I love the cowboy that's in it.
He looks so happy.
He looks so gay, might I say.
OK, that's perfect.
Let's see this cowboy.
Yeah, this gay cowboy.
There you go.
It is in the group chat.
And it starts off by saying horse trainer Dave Wilson of Portland, Oregon flashes a
broad smile after successfully competing in the cow riding event in the Reno gay rodeo.
Oh hell no. They were riding the cows? the cow riding event in the Reno gay rodeo.
Oh hell no, they were riding the cows?
The rodeo's organizer said the past weekend's event
is the only gay rodeo in the world.
Quote, there's not many cowboys that are gay,
end quote, Wilson noted.
There's not many cowboys that are gay." end quote Wilson noted.
Um this was this starts off with it's another kind of part of the article.
Reno, Nevada. The big animal lurches bolts from the rodeo shoe and hauls Dave Wilson on a bone jolting lurch across the dirt. He rides it to the fence, the crowd roars,
Wilson grins, tosses his white cowboy hat to the sky,
and runs back to the handshakes and hugs of his friends.
He's 31 years old, by the way.
And he has not competed in rodeo in 18 years.
Been a long while. Wow. Yep. And he has not competed in rodeo in 18 years.
Been a long while.
Wow.
Yep.
But a lot of his competitors
had also never been inside the ring.
It says, quote,
there's not many cowboys that are gay, end quote,
Wilson said.
The Reno Gay Rodeo, which ended Sunday, quote, is the only gay rodeo in the world so far.
And quote said organizer Phil Ragsdale is his name.
Oh, do you think it's still there?
I don't know.
Reno. Let me look it up.
Reno Gay Rodeo.
Yeah. Reno, gay, rodeo.
Nope.
The last thing.
It says.
Oh, there's a lot of different dates. It says it goes up until the 70s, 80s, 90s.
It really ranges.
The last. Yeah, it was around for a bit yeah.
The game companies were doing that thing for a bit. Yeah the this this article was published like
four years or after having the gay rodeo around so it's been open for four years now.
gay rodeo around. So it's been open for four years now.
And I'm not sure if you guys want to read me, want me to read the whole thing, because you can see how long it is.
Go for it, because we see it, but our listeners don't.
Yeah. OK. Yes, very true.
Unless you follow our Instagram page, then you might.
We can follow along.
Yeah.
And it was, it was strictly elderly people would be in the audience
too, which makes sense.
It's like I feel like elderly people would get a kick out of that.
Just watching a bunch of gay cowboys having a really age group wouldn't.
Get Cowboys having a really age group wouldn't.
Probably like 80.
Lush.
What do you consider as a stopping ageist?
Yeah, I'm never answering a question from you guys ever again. And then it says, quote, I just thought it would be a good way to show that the gays aren't strictly stereotyped as limp wrists, end quote.
It's kind of cute.
That was said by Ragsdale. I did mention his name before he was the organizer of this event.
And with it's then the article continues to say with their withered faces and dirty Levi's,
the Cowboys and much of the audience would blend easily into any Nevada ranch scene.
But there were signs this rodeo was different.
Wilson rode a cow.
There was bull riding, but most of the amateur riders in that event were dumped to the dirt
as soon as they left the chute.
Vincent Allen of San Francisco, who settled on to the back of a black three quarter
ton bowl as the animal bellow people hanging over the bull quote, let
him cool down a bit. End quote. And the bowl rolled its eyes. Alan licked his lips. The
shoe opened in a second Alan flipped over over, um, head over heels,
thudded onto the ground and scampered away from the bull's hooves. There was a first time as a
bull rider, he said he would do it again. Uh, first time ropers had trouble snaring calves,
which were chased back to the pens, not by traditional rodeo clowns, but by
comic drag queens, one in a silver glitter bra and a wig which kept slipping off.
During frequent breaks in the rodeo action, the stands shook as a Texas-based country band playing rollicking Hank Williams
music. Men danced with men, women danced with women. Outside the gate, one of the buses which
brought spectators from California was labeled quote gay line tours, end quote. Jerry Garlock of Los Angeles said, I expected a little more of the radio itself.
But what I'm enjoying most is the audience, the camaraderie.
End quote. Some San Francisco gay groups urged a boycott of the radio rodeo to protest Nevada's laws against homosexuality and state failure to ratify the Equal Rights
Amendment. But Ragsdale said he hadn't run into much resistance to the event from the
Nevadans. He said the biggest problems came when he first started. Local ranchers wouldn't rent livestock to the gay rodeo. He wanted to remain relatively anonymous, but only a few of the 70 to 80 competitors
chose the red. No photo numbers. Wilson wins slightly when he was asked about
rejecting the red tag. Quote, this may cost me my job. End quote. He said, quote,
I'm dealing with very straight people every day, straight judges at tour shows. I'm just
going to have to see. End quote. Okay. And that's how the article ends. Still a lot of that.
Definitely. I think we need to bring back gay rodeos.
That's what I've been thinking.
I like to imagine that they just got relocated or shut down and opened somewhere else.
What if we had just the place?
What if we had gay rodeos?
Like just the three of us? No work. Oh, I was like, I don't think three people can
have like and call it a rodeo. Yeah, no, no, no, no, we got to get the whole gang together.
They would like to, I like to imagine they're all not opposed to it. Yeah, I think instead of our movie night, we should do a
roadie.
We should have a good one.
I would be so down for a rodeo night with with Beetlejuice in
the background, a Beetlejuice gay rodeo night.
Okay, like this, you might want to try a rodeo first.
Yeah, I think let's like choose one or no. No. Why
can't we choose both? You got to build up to it. You can't just
jump to the top. Yes, I can. No, no. It's like the same when
you're climbing the mountain. No, it's too much. No, no, I'll
do it. No. Anybody else would support me. If Isabelle's
listening to this. I know Isabelle would support me. If Isabelle is listening to this, I know Isabelle would support me.
Isabelle would say yes, let's do it, but let's build up to it.
Isabelle would tell you to take your jacket from the lounge.
So.
Alright.
Let's move on.
It was next.
Okay, keep going with the article or is that it?
That was it.
Okay.
Yeah, it ends kind of abruptly.
I mean just like how old gay rodeos end.
Yeah, weirdo.
It's only fitting.
You know, they get boycotted and then shut down.
Yeah.
Yeah. I mean this was also down. So yeah. Yeah.
I mean, this was also like 50 years ago.
Yeah.
So yeah, I don't know how to do that.
Different from now.
Who do you?
Okay.
Actually, though, like circling back to who do you think the target audience would be?
Like, obviously, the intended audience is like other like queer people.
Yeah.
But like, do you think there would be lots of like straight men that like
would watch for entertainment? I think straight. No, no, like, like in the way you watch like,
like a chicken fight, you know, for energy or like people just reading the newspaper
for like, you know, some gossip. Yeah. Or like watching like, like a, like a dog fight,
like a pit bull fight. I think that would be what would be happening. They're trying to get like, you know, like keep finding the issue
Like we don't actually care
But it's just like dumb entertainment. It's like ah gay men
and like
In the 70s, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, because there was nothing else to do. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah, they had gay rodeos and newspaper. That was it. All right. I guess I'm one next.
Yeah. Oh, I was gonna say, okay, cool. Oh, okay. If you want to go, you can.
Let me see if I have anything to follow up rodeo. Okay. Rodeo.
Oh goodness gracious.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
I guess I will have a story for y'all.
I mean, I do anyway, but I was like, this is, best time is about Susan.
Oh, Susan Ho. Susan Hale. Oh. Susan Ho.
Susan Hale.
Okay.
That is kind of cool.
I did not expect that reaction from either one of you.
So this is from the Statesman's Journal in Salem, Oregon.
Saturday, September 8th of 1888. So this is from the Statesman's Journal in Salem, Oregon,
Saturday, September 8th of 1888.
Damn.
Damn.
That was a long ago.
Two years after...
Two years, 1888?
After Sarah started building.
Blood House.
Oh, I wasn't sure where you were going with this.
I wasn't sure either for a second there. Because you just said two years and I'm
like up or down.
So this, like I said, is in Oregon and it's
Susan Hale's Parrot Ranch. Wait, what? Carrot Ranch?
Parrot.
Parrot.
Susan Hale's Parrot Ranch.
Okay.
I love it.
And it starts with,
I am sorry to be compelled to record
the failure of a remarkable enterprise
divided by a Boston woman, Ms. Susan Hale, who two
years ago undertook to establish a parrot ranch in the state of Michoacan.
This parrot's worth to be kept within the walls of an old convent garden and carefully taught elementary English so as to be able to
interpret for winter tourists, entertain winter tourists from the
States. It was a design to have the... go ahead. So she had a parrot ranch just to entertain people.
Taurus, yeah. That's fun. Yeah, why?
It says it was a designed to have the parrots brought up under
I think that's a type of tree.
Anesthesia? No, no, I said I think that's a type of
tree. I'm kidding. Oh, I was like, what do you mean? Anesthesia? No, no, I said I think that's a type of tree. Oh, I was like, what do you mean?
Anesthesia? Wait, what's going on? Oh, it was a design to have the parents
brought up under... Unitarian. Thank you. I was like, because it's yeah, it just says, it was designed to have the parrots brought up under Unitarian.
I think the under Unitarian fucked me up.
So that their moral nature could in no way be contaminated.
And then it continues to say.
And then it continues to say, keepers were selected with a card and a board of trustees to appoint.
But I'm sorry to say that a week ago, a visitor to the ranch discovered that, out into the
low moral tone of the keepers, the parrots were all swearing like pirates.
And therefore, ruin the purpose of which this ingenious enterprise started.
Although it's possible that a swearing parrot may be useful
in hurrying up waiters in restaurants
and reproach hotel mozos who let the hot water cool
in the corner, it is indeed lamentable
that Ms. Hale witnessed the most enterprising
of New England's women should have been so deceived
by her agents in Mexico.
So I'm thinking about it in my head, like I'm piecing together like, like a timeline of what's happening.
Yeah, yeah.
So we're happening. Yeah, yeah.
Alexis knows this. I need to establish a timeline to understand anything.
No fair.
Also, for a fact... Oh wait, sorry, continue.
No, go ahead.
Unitarianism is pretty popular in Romania.
Did you just just know that?
Off the dome or?
Or?
How do you know that?
Because it's involved with Romania.
I know everything when it comes to Romania.
They're...
What's their animal?
It's a...
Oh, I actually don't know that.
It's a, it's a, it's like a Christianity, I guess.
Their animal?
No, Unitarianism.
Oh yeah, but I was asking you what was their animal.
I didn't know if you knew that.
Oh, let's Google that. Oh, so you don't know it. I thought that's if you knew that. Oh let's google that. Oh so you
don't know it? I thought that's what you were responding to. I told you that. No I said I don't
know that actually. What is, let's google that. Continue while you, while I'm googling. Google it.
Well yeah, timeline Kai was that this lady purchased a ranch to raise parents that would entertain
tourists. And at some point the people that she raised, she hired, ended up teaching the parents
how to swear like that. How to swear and it just destroyed the entire operation. Yeah. Yeah. But what was the animal? Eagle. Eagle. Yeah. Why are we
on the moon? I don't know, brother. Because she was talking about, what did you talk about?
No, yeah, the Unitarianism. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, we really got sidetracked. Hi, take us away.
Yeah, right now.
Right now? Right now? 321.
Okay, this is from right now. Right now. This is from the
Associated Press, the Clarion Ledger from Jackson, Mississippi. It was published on Wednesday, February 28th, 2000.
Are you sure?
Why was I talking like this for a second?
I don't know.
You started like that?
When were we posted?
When were we posted in Jackson, Mississippi?
When were you?
Canada changed me.
Canada changed me. So this is titled, Catching Paintball Shooters' Priority Highway Patrol says...
No.
That's stupid.
94.
The Mississippi Highway Safety Patrol says it intends to crack down on individuals who
are using traffic on busy I-10 as paintball gun targets.
Troopers said several vehicles traveling the interstate near the Harrison Jackson County
line have been hit with paintballs in recent weeks.
I think it's so funny. I'm not supporting it, but I think it's
so funny that there's kids just with paintball guns, just shooting cars. It's something kids
would do. Seriously. But then, okay, what makes it even funnier is keep in mind these are kids
who are just messing around with paintball guns, right? You're like four years old.
Yeah.
Well, I'm probably a little older.
Yeah, you don't want to give a four-year-old a paint gun machine.
Why not?
Go play.
Let's move on.
Start them with the crossbow.
Yeah, that's better actually.
Get them prepared for the zombie apocalypse.
Hunger Games with Josh Hutcherson.
No.
But yeah, thinking of how it's probably just kids messing around makes it super stupid
to me.
Yeah. Makes it super stupid to me. The article continues to say, Sergeant Joe Garzo of the patrol's coast office said officers
are taking measures to round up the shooters.
Quote, we're getting ready to set up an undercover operation and they will be prosecuted to the
fullest degree.
End quote, Kazuo said. Gosh.
At this point, I'm curious if like,
what color do those vehicles look now?
Painted.
Yeah.
I don't know.
So they're getting ready to set up
their undercover operation, they'll be prosecuted.
Article says, he said in recent years,
there had been incidents in the same area of rocks
being thrown at vehicles and someone directing fireworks
and bottle rockets towards the interstate.
Juveniles who live in or near an area subdivision
are suspected, he said.
Gazzo said authorities are concerned
that the paintball attacks could trigger a wreck.
Quote, if it wrecks, they and their parents will be responsible, Gazzo said.
Of course.
Yeah.
Which is like completely valid.
If they cause a wreck, yes.
So they do need to be stopped.
It's not safe for them to shoot cars with paintballs.
But come on, setting
up an undercover operation to catch these kids is crazy.
Like I'm thinking how do they go undercover? Do they have their child be part of the group?
How do you go undercover for a group of children? No clue.
Like they're the cops are sitting in the cars like at the interstate maybe like waiting
to get shot and wants to do they like shoot the kids back.
But like,
Oh, is that what they would call undercover?
Did you say shoot the kids back?
Oh, God, it took me a minute to process that.
Okay, maybe not that extreme.
But, um...
With their own paintball guns?
I mean, yeah.
Yeah.
I'm okay in that scenario.
The cops get into a paintball war with, like, teenagers.
I feel like that would be fun.
And then afterwards, the cops are like,
okay, kids kids stop doing that
Well, that's uh, that's um
the Mississippi Highway Patrol
Trying to catch some paintballers
That was fun wait, oh, that was fun for the kids
Yeah, yeah, I
Wonder if they were like proud or scared when they like saw it on the
newspaper. Proud. They would be very proud. They'd be like, they'd be laughing. They'd be like,
the cops are after us. Got you. There. Okay. Alexis. Yeah.
What do you have for us now?
I have a do you guys have any posters in your room?
I know.
Well, I have a couple.
Do you have any?
Yeah.
Like what kind of posters?
Like video gamer?
No, no.
Oh, never mind
work posters
work posters oh okay okay okay girl you scared me
no no work posters um well i have a really nice poster
it was one of the first posters I ever got. And it's
a poster of the It movie from 2017. And...
Oh, I thought you were going to talk about your corpse husband poster.
Stop it. You didn't have to expose me. Oh, Okay Anyways, I'm talking about clowns today
That's what this article is talking about it is it was published by the Odessa American in Odessa
Texas on
Sunday, November 22nd
1998 and for the listeners, they literally just chose a clown and on Sunday, November 22nd, 1998.
And for the listeners, they literally just chose a clown. And the clown is like wearing this like polka dot,
white and black kind of blouse with a black tie
and a vest with a design on it
that kind of looks like flames to me, but sideways.
I don't know. Okay. with a design on it that kind of looks like flames to me, but sideways.
And then like a flower stir with some like black stocking, some clown shoes.
And the headline for it is basically just clowning around.
So Kay Henry of Odessa,
also known as Clinky the Clown, recently brought home the gold
medal for costume and makeup competition in the senior division at the Texas Clown Association
Convention in Wichita Falls.
Go Clinky! Yeah! Henry and other members of the Oops! Clown Alley
of the Permian Basin attended classes at the convention
and competed in the art of children's entertainment.
Nice.
And that is this article.
Nice! Really short. Really short, but I love the picture of Clinky the Clown. Nice and that is this article nice
Really sure, but I love the picture of clinky the clown he actually looks so cute and I love him
Anyways we think he nice I
like it thinking theinky the Clown.
Clinky the Clown.
But.
Now, yes, what happened?
That's it for me.
Okay. Are you sure?
Yeah.
Cool. I think honestly, I don't know why but I think in the clown seems like a girl to me like
I thought Clinky was yeah, but yeah, dude. Well, his name is Henry. I mean, a girl could
be named Henry. Yeah, I was gonna say. Oh my god, I love Dylan as a girl name.
For most simple names, I usually honestly
love switching them.
Like, I don't know, I love Alex as a girl's name.
Or like.
Oh, I know what you mean thank you you're welcome
um but like like names that are traditionally like would go to like a guy or something like
yeah I don't know I think yeah exactly I get that Bobby
Bobby. Sasha.
Sasha.
What?
Sasha can be a guy's name as well.
Really?
Yeah.
Oh.
Leslie then.
Yeah, I know Leslie.
I also knew Leslie.
But Leslie just seemed like a girl's name to me though.
Yeah. Yeah. I also knew Leslie. But Leslie just seemed like a girl's name to me though.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Valid.
I knew a man.
I know a man named Leslie.
That's what I meant to say.
Oh.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Me too.
I thought I was saying that too.
Yeah.
Anyway. I thought I was saying that too. Yeah.
Anyway, can I give you guys a story to have you think about education and people being
not educated, edumacated.
Oh, edumacated.
I love talking about edumacation.
Please edumacate me. You want to get edumacated? I want to get edumacation. Please edumacate me.
You want to get edumacated?
I want to get edumacated.
Okay, so this is from the Detroit Free Press of Detroit, Michigan, Sunday, October 20th,
1991.
And the title of this says, Family Doesn't Fancy Visit with with feline aids in house.
Oh my gosh.
feline aids? What? Yeah. What does that mean?
Colonel had means the cat has a yeah, Colonel had aids. feline aids.
Really? Yeah. Yeah.
That way he died.
I mean, I guess he contributed to it, but I think it was mostly old age.
Yeah.
He was like 17.
That poor cat.
So it starts with, so this is from like an advice column or something similar like that that's called Anne Landers.
So I think people would like write their things like their issues in and they would put them on the newspaper and they would have a conversation with it kind of like last time remember.
Like I'm not sure if I'm making sense. I'll just read it.
Okay. It says, Dear Ann Landers, there's going to be a wedding in our family this December,
and we're all very excited. But there's something that has come up that's causing a big problem.
The bride's to be the bride to be is my sister's daughter. In the past.
sister's daughter. In the past, the brides-to-be is my sister's daughter. Yeah, I heard it. Okay, yeah. So she's the aunt. Yeah. Okay. In the past, when our families
have visited one another, one another's homes, They lived in another city. We've always had
a wonderful time. Our children enjoyed playing with the children who lived next door. They're
exactly the same age. Yesterday, I received a letter from my sister. She casually mentioned
that their cat Screwball. Yo, that's a very funny name.
Such a sick name.
An adorable striped creature of uncertain parentage has feline aids.
She wrote, the vet says that there's no chance that anyone can catch this disease from a
cat, but he did caution us against letting him get around other cats.
I immediately telephoned my sister and asked her if she would please,
if she would please board screwball. When we come, when we come with the children for the wedding,
she replied, absolutely not. It's not necessary. We have not.
We have been assured that this feline virus is not transmittable to humans.
No one here is the least bit concerned.
Well, and my mother-in-law says we could be insane to take such a chance.
Please check with an expert and tell us what you can find out.
Feeling upset and troubled.
And then they replied in the same newspaper and it said, I spoke with Fred W. Scott, veterinarian and director of the Cornell Feline Health Center in Ithaca and New York.
And he says, your sister is right.
There is no evidence whatsoever to support the notion that feline immunology
immunology, immune, immune, I can say that I've said this before, the immune deficiency
virus can be transmitted to humans. Dr. Scott said detailed studies of individuals who have
tested prolo who have had prolonged contact with FDI-positive cats
have failed to substantiate a single case of human infection.
Although the clinical disease in cats
is strikingly similar to AIDS in humans,
the virus are distinctly different.
You now have the word of an
You don't have to expose her cat out like that in the newspaper to everyone. Widowing.
Isn't that like against Animal HIPAA or something?
Yeah, my cat has AIDS.
You can't just share that on the newspaper, Bridget.
There's flaws.
Bridget.
I don't know where I got Bridget from. Mendler. Bridget Mendler? Yeah. What is that
girl doing? I love, she is, oh my god, she's killing it is what she's doing. She's working
with NAFSA, I believe. Oh yeah, she got like two degrees or something, right?
Yeah.
And she's like a doctor now or something?
I don't know.
And a lawyer, I believe.
Wait, I don't know.
Oh my god.
Yeah, she's badass, brother.
Bridget Menler.
There we go.
Yeah, we love her.
Let us know if you like Bridget Menler, guys.
Yeah. Yeah, let us know. Let us know.
Cool. Oh, is that? Is that it?
Yeah, that's it. That's it. Yeah, there was like the letter from the sister and the response from
the professional.
The cat's fate is all in the hands of, I guess, the entire internet now. So, um.
What?
Hippo violations.
Oh, the animal's HIPAA violation.
Imagine like, let's like, obviously, yeah, like you don't need like HIPAA, whatever, but like that's so crazy to think about that like that medical info can just be like posted
like that.
That's kind of sick.
Okay, moving on.
I don't know how much of green eggs in hand that is, but I'll take it.
All right.
It's me now, right?
Who's next?
Yeah.
Tell us what you have for us. Cool. So, this one is, human fly to climb and fly.
What I first- It sounds like a children's book that wasn't very successful.
Yeah, just like green eggs and-
The first time I read this title, I literally had to read it like five times to actually
understand it.
Can you read it one more time?
Human fly to climb and fly.
Yeah.
I was like, what?
So Jack Williams, the quote human fly, will climb to the Hotel Jefferson tomorrow afternoon at 1 30 and again
at 7 p.m. He will fly through the air in an airplane at 2 30 at the U.S. aviation field
and will drop copies of the press citizen from cloud land. Okay. At night he will introduce a student. Can you, you just want to give me some guesses
as to what this student's name is? Um, Otis. Otis. Okay. Billy Otis. Good guesses. Well,
good guesses. Well, you're wrong, of course,
because this student's name is Eastman Westman.
Love that. Yes, they could not make up their mind. They're like, let's do both.
I feel like these are characters. Like, anyway, at night he will introduce a student, Eastman
Westman, in his first building climbing stunt. In the aviation stunts, Jack will thrill all
observers by hanging by his feet from the landing of a ship, standing on his head on
top of the wing, walking about on the wing, etc. It will be a wonderful exhibition doubtless.
Jack made a great hit here a couple of years
ago when he climbed the Jefferson and the JCS Bank under the auspices of the press citizen.
And that's it.
That's it, okay.
The human fly, Jack Williams. He climbs stuff.
Winning win. I would hope he climbs stuff. Winning win.
I would hope he climbs things.
Yeah. So I don't know. Jack. Sounds pretty cool. 1921. I wonder what ever happened to
this guy. Let me look it up actually. Jack Williams, the human fly.
Is there?
I don't know.
I just found like a couple articles.
Jack Williams, a famous stuntman known as the human fly climbed two buildings in downtown
Henderson 100 years ago.
Wow.
Easy. Jack Williams, a famous stuntman known as the human fly, climbed two buildings in downtown Henderson 100 years ago.
Wow.
Easy.
The North Dakota adventures of Jack Williams, the human fly.
It's actually a lot about this guy.
It's kind of funny.
The human fly.
Cool.
I like it.
And that's it.
Alexis.
Yeah?
What are you doing?
Tying a rope. And that's it. Alexis. Yeah? What are you doing?
Tying a rope.
Let's go.
Let's go.
I was so hoping you were going to make like a reference like that or something.
She's learning.
She is.
What is it called?
Osmosis?
Yeah.
We're like, slowly absorbing it from us.
Yeah, wait are we?
Alright, what do you got for us?
Now, what's there to have for us?
Oh, it's me.
Okay, that's what I have.
Okay.
So, let me tell you guys a story. West Philadelphia born and raised.
Honestly guys where I spent most of my days but one day I was chilling out
maximum knocks and all cool and this is when I was living in Florida.
Since like before I was eight, I always had this stuffed monkey with me.
And that monkey's name was Rainbow.
I had Rainbow with me everywhere.
I took him literally everywhere with me.
I loved him so much.
He was my favorite stuffed animal ever.
Unfortunately, I have not seen him since I was about eight.
What happened?
I accidentally left him in Florida and I told my family to ship it back to me and they never did. I'm
pretty sure they sold it or gave it away or something. What the hell? Oh, you never got
that back. But his name was published.
By the Rayleigh register.
In Becly, West Virginia on Tuesday, October 9th, 1973.
And his name is Mr. Rainbow. Let me send you the link to take a looksy tootsy at this guy.
For my listeners, he's about like six feet, six foot one, maybe older gentleman with a
beard kind of like a he's got a snout on him.
I was kind of a stick actually.
Yeah.
Some striped pants with some looks like
bowling shoes to me. He's rocking it. Yeah, he's got a black kind of
shoulder padded long sleeve kind of thing tucked in. And he has some sunglasses on with a nice little hat.
He got, oh my God, he kind of looks like he's like a, like a chief or a soldier or something.
He does.
Yeah.
Or like Colonel Sanders.
Or like Colonel Sanders.
Yup.
Just imagine Colonel Sanders.
That's what I was thinking of.
Cause I was like, it's, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. What do we so Carl Sanders, a.k.a. Mr. Rainbow.
Mr. Rainbow, a self-proclaimed ambassador of goodwill,
John Borkin or Borchon,
something like that of a Connellsville, Pennsylvania,
who calls himself Mr. Rainbow, made Maine his 24th state on a coast-to-coast goodwill mission.
Borkin is shown here in Augusta.
Mr. Rainbow, a 65-year-old retired barber, is making the tour in a converted bus equipped with an electric chair, a coffin, a former
pet dog now stuffed and a live monkey called Freddy.
And that is everything.
But it is kind of dope.
It is dope.
It is dope.
Mr. Rainbow looks sick.
He literally when I saw Mr. Rainbow, I thought Renaissance or Reservoir Dogs movie.
I don't know if you guys have seen it.
I have not, no.
It's like Clue kind of.
They have the Mr. Blue, Mr. Blonde, Mr. Purple. Oh okay.
Yeah but it's not clue. Can you go over again what like he went around like the stuff that was in
his bus because I think we kind of skipped over that a little bit. Yeah yeah I was waiting for
one of you guys to say something about that. He had an electric chair.
Thank you, because you were going through it so fast that I couldn't stop you.
Oh, OK, an electric chair.
Crazy, wild, a coffin.
I mean, a guy's got to sleep.
A former pet dog now stuffed is what it says in freaking parentheses and then it says
and a live monkey called Freddy with a y no i.e.
Nice. Yep. So we need to find Mr. Rainbow, because I want to meet Freddy.
I don't think you guys heard it, Dan.
Heard what?
What?
I played the like, the Vine Boom sound effect.
No, I didn't hear it.
No, I wouldn't hear it too.
We'll have to test it. An electric chair.
Boom.
A coffin.
Dude, that's so fun!
I wish the mic could pick it up.
That's tragic.
I don't have the noise suppression on but
Mr. Rainbow everyone, I hope you liked it. Did you say rest? I said mr. Rainbow everyone I
Hope you liked it. I
Very much enjoyed it. Okay
I very much enjoyed it. Okay. Thank you. Like dead silent. Okay. Cool. All right.
I kind of want to be Mr. Rainbow. So.
It could be doable.
Yeah. Halloween. I actually just bought the whole outfit on Amazon right now.
It is coming up.
You have enough time for costumes?
You bought the Colonel Sanders face?
Yeah.
I'm going to be Colonel Sanders for Halloween.
Sick.
I'm going to be finger licking good.
Stop.
Please, please stop.
I'm just going to get started.
Yeah.
So my story is about a chicken.
OK.
Yeah, let's change subjects to chickens.
Yes, I'm so down.
And this is from the desert news in Salt Lake City,
Utah from Wednesday, September 19th, 1945.
And it says, Mike loses his head, but goes right on living.
He
Huh? For how long?
You don't have to wait for long because it says that 11 day wonder.
The 11 day wonder.
And all poultry dumb Mike,
the headless rooster held his first press conference today and post for photographers.
Where do you find these articles, brother?
Same place as you do.
And it says, um, how does it go to go on living with your head chopped
off, Mike? He asked. Mike had no comment to make, make nothing to say. He did print his feathers,
however. Yes, people have been snickering when poultrymen H.B. Wade and Al Al A Olsen of Fruticolo said that they have decapitated
that they had a decapitated living rooster so they brought Mike into Salt Lake City to
prove to skeptics that they haven't been that they haven't seen everything.
I think that like,
I think once I see a headless chicken survive for 11 days, then I can like officially say I've seen everything.
Yeah, kind of like why they took it to Salt Lake City.
They're like, here you go.
It's been 11 days.
That's insane. Yeah.
That is crazy.
And then it continues to say, University of Utah scientists
have been invited to look Mike over.
Mike, only another rooster two weeks ago and worth $1.50,
sprung into prominence by his refusal to quit this earth.
And even though his head has been severed with an axe,
it began like this.
Mr. Olsen decided 11 days ago
that he wanted chicken for dinner.
A four months old rooster was chosen
and also acts its head off.
The Poultry Man's astonishment,
the rooster reacted as if he had only received
a slight blow.
He walked around practically as if nothing had happened.
Oh, and he was a little sticky, but I'm a son of a gun.
And he, oh, he was a little sticky,
but I'm a son of a gun if he didn't try to crow.
Does that make sense?
I feel like it makes, I feel like it's not you.
I feel like just the way they talk back then is so like...
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, it's so funny. So funny.
Yeah. And it just says, Olsen said, if it was...
That does not make sense either.
Okay, but like I know that like chickens can like stay alive for like a little bit after they get
their heads caught up like But 11 days?
But 11 days is crazy
So he says mate you've met a rooster. What am I? What am I a rooster? See it does not make sense in my mind
But it says we thought we thought would die, but he didn't.
We started feeding him grain with a dropper.
We got out every morning expecting to find him a dead chicken.
But there he was, as healthy as he could be, peering himself, trying to grow.
Some of the Humane Society people think that it's misery, but
to look at him. Mike is in no pain, Mr. Olsen partners, and Mike thinks. What else?
Perhaps Mike doesn't even know his head was chopped off. Anyway, he's worth more
than $1.50 now. The rooster did not bleed after the decapitation, Mr. Olsen said. It was just like he was painted
with a red brush. That was all. I must have cut exactly right. Evidently, I didn't get
his base brain, Mr. Olsen said. We're anxious to hear what the scientists say. Is it something though, don't you think?
I do think.
I love the description of,
like he was painted with like red.
I was like, well, yeah, he, you know,
got his head chopped off.
So. Yeah, what do we.
It's a lot of blood.
That's gonna happen.
I'm sending you on the group chat the little newspaper clipping so you can see him.
He is a headless chicken.
Rooster.
Oh my God.
It's just gone.
Yeah.
Oh wow.
How's this thing still alive?
That's what we're like all curious about.
That's an OG if I've ever seen one.
If there's a follow-up like newspaper clipping out there
like I need to find that listeners if you know of it.
If you've heard of this headless chicken help us out.
Please. I know I want to look up like the the science behind it. Like
did they yeah they cut just up like high enough where it didn't like fully sever the
nerves for like the brain or something or like I don't know. Yeah it's one of those things that I'm just like I'm fat Jesse
Hey, you study the brain is about
Next week next week we can ask him yeah
But yeah, that's my story story, yeah
And I
Guess to end us off. Hmm Let me let me bring us back to clowns for a second.
Ah, okay.
So um, yeah, wait a minute.
Okay.
This I just closed the tab.
That's crazy, brother.
It happens.
Maybe just don't do that.
Okay, okay, buddy.
You say it like it's so easy. So this was posted on the Santa Cruz Sentinel from Santa Cruz, California on Saturday, April
20th, 1996.
It was posted on 420, guys.
But I think it's like the Santa Cruz Sentinel, it takes articles from a bunch of different
newspapers because this one originally comes from the
Pasadena Star News.
Yeah, I realized that a lot of newspapers will grab stories from other locations and
put them in their own.
Right next to this Pasadena article, there's a San Francisco article from the Associated
Press, so I don't know. But for this one, it says, Heartthrob, the clown,
yearns for respect.
Pasadena. So Linda Berman, aka Heartthrob, the clown, paid her dues for putting on those
oversized shoes.
She went away to clown camp and learned the finer points of bubble blowing
and pie throwing.
She's perfected her duck and weave reflexes
for when kids reach for her shiny red prosthetic nose.
Driving in costume to her gigs,
she only offers a quick smile and wave to the Gawkers
who honk their horns.
Then she changes lanes to get away,
who much distraction might
cause an accident. Once there, she always puts on the clown shoes before the kids can
see her, sometimes hiding behind her car. An incomplete costume might cause them to
question whether she's really a clown. Her reward for all of this work? The spotlight glances, grins. She says, quote, I've always wanted to be drop
dead. Gorgeous. I said, I love that. Yeah. Yeah. Who lives in Pasadena. Quote, I would
like to walk into a room and have everybody look at me. Um, where do we heartthrob has that happened to her all the time?
Yeah. Yeah. Like, okay, I, I want to hand them like, yes, like you go, like I
would love, I would also love to be like, everybody look at me when I walk into
room. But also, I feel like I would not like that at all. I don't know. Maybe it would be good at first and you just get
tired of it or get into the situation. I guess like if you're playing like a
character like like a clown like it is cool I don't know. Okay yeah. Yeah so yeah
she says you know heartthrob has happened to her all the time but it goes
on to say too often however she sees sees the world return her painted on smile with rudeness.
Kids put ice on her back, reach into her pockets when she's not looking, or grab a balloon
animal without so much as a please.
Quote, it sort of hurts my heart a little bit that we are in a world of people who are more about getting than giving. End quote. So true, heartthrob, so
true. That's what's wrong with the world these days. Anyway, Berman wants more
than to just stand up. He wants respect. Every week, Berman drives around to the
other side of Los Angeles to paint kids' faces and
make balloon animals at a farmer's market in a well-heeled Agora Hills.
Is an hour getting ready and two hours getting there and back?
The kids spot her, not sure what to make of this purple-haired species.
She turns grimaces to grins as she paints parrots and kitties on sherwick cheeks.
Berman might take in $50 for her afternoon by charging a buck for each face painting
or balloon.
but she's doing it for fun.
and besides, the real financial payoff might come when she lands a birthday party job from
someone she meets.
she charges $100 an hour for those parties.
she's worth it, vermin said, because she can pull off impressive tricks like encircling
kids in a giant blowbuckle.
Oh, I would want that clown. Me too. Widowy, yeah. Like, but for an event. But I'm gonna, I'm gonna send you guys the newspaper article and the picture of her is actually so scary. Oh I was gonna say there has to be like
something that... No like I don't think it's purposely supposed to be scary but just like
the black and white photo makes it look... Yeah I'm sure. I like more um yeah. Yeah and I'm not
usually like scared of clones. I'm like this one's creepy. It's also I think a very bad picture.
Oh it is a horrible picture yeah.
She's kind of cute.
I assume it's not as scary with color in real life but the picture did do them dirty. Yeah.
But that's what's the whole article praising your clowning skills.
Linda Berman, the heartthrob.
And what year was this again?
1996.
Okay.
I wonder if she still does them.
Well, she was 45 in 1996.
So yeah, no.
I mean, she could still be alive. She's in the clown business. I was
gonna say I think it depends. Whoa why are you so age-y today? Are you saying that there's like a retirement age for like clowns?
No, I'm not.
Not at all.
One time I met a clown and I was talking to her and she was like blowing up a balloon
animal for me.
It was a couple years ago and she like, it's so funny.
She was like trying to get me and my friend to like, think of going to like clown
school to become clowns. It's so funny.
Would you be down to take a clown class?
I'd take a clown class, but I wouldn't like want to pursue being a clown. I don't know.
It's a one day thing. San Francisco clown college, Kitty and I are thinking of attending one of their classes. I'll think about it. Yeah. We don't have like a date
set on the calendar yet, but like it's something we want to do. It's something you want to do. Okay,
cool. Yeah. I'll look into that. Thank you. Yeah. And I think that that wraps it up.
And I think that that wraps it up. Um, actually, I found an article about Mike.
Oh, sick.
The chicken.
You did?
He lived for 18 months after he was his head was cut off.
Stop.
18 months?
Yeah.
Not weeks.
18 months.
This is a zombie chicken.
So apparently your brain, your brains, or like chickens brain stems will still be intact
even after decapitation.
Yeah, that's why they run around.
Yeah.
Well, I'm not sure if anybody else knows that.
That's why I'm like clarifying, you know what I'm saying?
Wow. It was 18 months wow i really gave you 11 days and it was 18 months insane what the fuck wow props to that
chicken yeah well thanks for the the update yeah thank you send that you know, I mean, you did. So thank you, though. But wow.
Yeah, wait, wait, wait, didn't he live 18 months?
According to a scientific American.
Okay.
Yeah, that's so weird because there's another one here without the head.
Yeah.
That's a that's a picture.
Wow.
Thank you.
No problemo.
And that's all news for you guys this week.
That's episode four, old news nonsense.
Hope you enjoyed your time with us.
We hope you did.
I know a lot of us are very sleepy.
So, yeah, I don't know. Maybe you guys
are sleepy too. You know, I, I like to imagine that we've truly succeeded as, as hosts of a podcast
when, when like people will listen to it to fall asleep too.
Yeah.
I don't know if that will ever happen because we're a trickram podcast, but...
You never know.
Some people like it.
Okay.
I mean, okay, 100% though, this would be something that I put on at the end of the night and
I'm trying to just have something on and I'd fall asleep with it on in the back. Like your white noise machine type of thing?
Yeah, I kind of yeah. Yeah, I see that. Okay.
Um, but anyway, this was fun. Uh, as always remember to uh, sit up straight, drink some water.
Some more. Everything I haven't been doing. Take care of yourself. Pick a COVID test if you
feel any symptoms. And we'll see you next week. Yeah, we'll see you next week with a with our special guest as well. Well then, bye!
Bye!
Bye!
Thanks for watching!