Thursday, December 22, 2016

Practical Joke Proceeds by Unnoticed Increments



Ken Bloom, Show and Tell: The New Book of Broadway Anecdotes (New York: Oxford University Press, 2016), 226-7.

Here’s a kinder but no less devious prank that took place at Paper Mill [Playhouse in Milburn, New Jersey]. While rehearsing Damn Yankees, director George Abbott was having a hard time staging the courtroom scene in Act Two so that the entire cast could be seen from all angles. It had to be so exact that there were marks on the stage for placement of all the chairs. One of the ladies in the show, we’ll call her Roberta, had been in a lot of shows with Fred, and it was always expected that he would pull some practical joke or another.

Her chair was blocked to be just right of center. Every night, Fred would imperceptibly move her mark a little bit farther to the right. Little by little, quarter inch by quarter inch, her seat was moved closer and closer to the wings. The movement was so slight, Roberta never noticed, even though she was always on the lookout for Fred to pull something. Actors are so agreeable, so used to following the directors’ orders, they think, “If that’s where the mark is, that’s where I’ll sit.” By the end of the run, her seat was halfway offstage until only her knees were visible to the audience. On closing night, Fred moved the mark back to where it had started, many feet toward the center of the stage. Roberta immediately grasped what Fred had done, and all through the scene she was shooting daggers from her eyes at him.

Saturday, December 3, 2016

Pollsters Victims of Organ Theft Rumors (Peru)




Voice of America
2 December 2016


Reuters

LIMA —  One woman has been killed and some 40 people were arrested in a Peruvian shantytown after an angry mob tried to lynch two pollsters whom residents believed were butchering local children to take their organs, authorities said Friday.

False rumors on social media claiming dead children had been found with their organs missing fanned mass hysteria in the shantytown Huaycan on the outskirts of Lima, prompting residents to target two employees of a polling company who had been conducting door-to-door marketing surveys, said Police General Hugo Begazo.

"From one second to the next, people started to surround us," said visibly shaken Luis Nunez with polling firm Quantum in broadcast comments. "They nearly lynched us and set us on fire."

Police managed to pry Nunez and his colleague from the mob, which then attacked the police station in Huaycan where they were being held for their protection, Begazo said. […]

Saturday, November 19, 2016

“If You Want to Get Away with Murder, Go To Clinton, Iowa”




Clinton Herald [Iowa]
19 November 2016


    By Matt Parbs

[Talk show host Johnny Carson supposedly joked that “if you want to get away with murder, go to Clinton, Iowa.”] [...] I know many Clintonians vividly remember watching him say that one late night. Would you believe me if I claimed he never said it about Clinton, and probably never made a joke like that at all?

First, some context. The joke is claimed to have been made between the 1980s and early 1990s. During the decade the joke was born, national homicide rates hit all-time highs. While murder rates rose for seemingly all communities, the national clearance rate for homicides dropped from 90 percent resolved in the 1960s to below 70 percent for most years since 1980. And there was a trend of backlogged cases waiting for trial.

America was facing two disturbing trends, rising homicides and fewer closed cases. In this context, at least 40 towns swear they heard either Johnny Carson or Paul Harvey say their town was the place to escape murder charges. […]