Revolutions - The Flight of Emperor Palpatine
Episode Date: November 25, 2014Would really like to get my hands on the salacious limericks the good Emperor composed while whacked on spice. ...
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Last night, I accidentally loaded up a garbled version of episode 3.17 rather than 3.18.
It was a few hours before I noticed the pile of emails alerting me that something had gone wrong.
In the meantime, a group of dismayed listeners decided to take control of the comment thread on the episode
and make up their own version of a story to pass the time.
So here now is that story by listeners Jeremy, David, B. Minich, Steve SC, and Jim Silk.
please to enjoy.
Hello and welcome to revolutions.
Temporary replacement to episode 3.18,
the flight of Emperor Palpatine.
In June of 1791, Emperor Palpatine I fled the capital of Corrassant, family in tow.
With the Jedi Council and the Senate firmly aligned in their opposition, Palpatine was friendless
and forced to disguise his family as bilge droids to escape the planet.
They hitched a ride of a ride.
aboard a Vogon destroyer, but as Vogons are notoriously unsympathetic to hitchhikers,
when the Stoaways were inevitably discovered, they found themselves promptly returned to
Corrassant, and Palpatine had a lot of awkward questions to answer, like, did I forget
my towel again? At this point, Palpatine discovered that his options were very limited.
He wasn't very well liked, and had completely vacillated on the question of whether or not
to allow clones into the very broken army. This, in turn, had turned the volleysed.
Vorlons against him because they had a stake in who the clones claimed they were, which they
could not prove if they were, you know, left on the sidelines. General Kenobi was looking
like he was in a great position. As head of the army and leader of the revolutionary ideals,
his party was ascendant, while Anakin Skywalker was on the outside looking in. Little did anyone
know that in a year's time, their relative positions would be completely different. By the time
Palpatine got to Iraqis, the Spicing Guild was ready to go to the line with Rehn's.
Rico's roughnecks against the Sardukar.
General Jack D. Ripper barked,
take off and nuke the entire site from orbit.
It's the only way to be sure.
Of course, now we run into a common problem
that plagued the empire in later years.
Namely, some general would get a full head of steam
and his troops would declare him Augustus.
When both Kenobi and Ripper were thus declared,
it appeared for a moment as if Palpatine
would simply be forgotten in the shuffle.
But those pesky Vorlons,
not content to simply let Palpatine
off the hook, they leaked the whole story, along with incriminating documents and a few salacious
limericks the good emperor had composed while whacked out on spice to the Daily Bugle,
where Mara was editor-in-chief. The revolution, you'll recall, had let the media off its leash.
Meanwhile, Lieutenant Bonaparte nudges Private Duncan asking, and the dialogue here is in French,
so I just use Google to translate it verbatim. Bonaparte asked Private Duncan,
you sleep on the job? This is baby, is it not?
Duncan replies, yes, but the apple eye melody, not B.
Once the Marquis de Lafayette leaked the Pentagon papers to Brenda Starr, the jig was up.
The colonial defense forces showed up and kicked ass.
Everyone got life in crematoria, or Sepaku, their choice.
The end.
