Thursday, 17 May 2012

Happy Carlos May Day, everybody:

   Funsville is shut down today, as it is on this day every year, to honour the workers of the world whose jobs require them to wear name tags. This observance takes its own name from Carlos May, the only Major League baseball player (so far) to have his birthdate displayed on the back of his uniform. Before I slap a blank “Hi, my name is” sticker on my lapel and join the rest of the throng at the Ceremonial Procession of Garage Mechanics With Embroidered Overalls at Historic Funtown Square, I’ll get you caught up on the story I’ve been telling you...

   When last we left the VHF-exiled Sparky, he had just set up shop in the comfortably cartoony and surreal world of British TV’s The Avengers:


   However, a jealous Moose soon put paid to that becoming a permanent arrangement:



   Booted into the hostile, paranoid realm of The Prisoner, Sparky landed on his feet, as the heir apparent to Number 2:


   Once Sparky took full charge of the penal colony known as the Village, his interest in getting information from Number 6 seemed scant at best:


   He soon wrote off the interrogation as a dead loss:


   This freed him up to implement a grand geopolitical design, using futuristic brainwashing techniques and good old-fashioned divide-and-conquer tactics:

   None of this significantly altered the fate of the Nixon administration. However, that wasn’t Sparky’s plan. Instead, he concentrated on Henry Kissinger’s later exploits—specifically, his part-ownership of the North American Soccer League’s New York Cosmos.


   With Dr. Kissinger in his thrall, Sparky turned the Cosmos into a force to be reckoned with, both on and off the field of play. Not only did they import international soccer stars such as Pelé and Franz Beckenbauer…




   …but they also effected several changes to the rules of soccer, through Kissinger’s diplomatic skills and finesse. One of these permitted the use of poison-tipped umbrellas during stoppage time, and made a hitherto-unknown Bulgarian midfielder known only as Igor the most feared man on three continents.

   It soon became apparent that Sparky’s Cosmos were out to do more than just kick a ball around for 90 minutes while running themselves into chronic shin splints. During one memorable exhibition tour, no less than seventeen instances of full-scale regime change coincided with the Cosmos’ matches against well-known soccer clubs.

   The ensuing global chaos soon gave the ideal pretext for Kissinger (or rather, Sparky) to propose that a single world government be instituted to restore order. When this came about, the leader of the newly unified Planet Earth was a likeable but harmless figurehead…


   No—it was Wilford Brimley, the beloved character actor who specialized in curmudgeonly yet cuddly grandfather-figures, most notably in commercials for processed oatmeal. His words of avuncular wisdom helped to soften the hammer blows of the totalitarianism that followed:


   Those of you who think that no good can possibly come of this situation are probably right…but you’ll definitely have to wait until the next chapter to find out how.  

Uncle Fun

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