News of the World: Vespril 2006

Watchers

The World – Police departments, intelligence agencies, pornographers and television studios were in disarray this week, nearly 70 hours after video cameras across the globe stopped taping people. It seems as though all video cameras world-wide have just stopped when pointed at people.

Janusch & Co., one of London’s top video surveillance firms has already been forced to close its doors. “We started getting calls,” said Steve Janusch, ex-director of Janusch & Co. and founder of The Steve Janusch Foundation. “Breakins, criminal mischief, teenage shoplifting…really heavy crime, man.”

The CIA and INTERPOL were among the confused masses, though this is not unusual for the CIA. Fears of social unrest are mounting in the global security community. INTERPOL Secretary General Ronald K. Noble stated that they “didn’t know how [INTERPOL] are going to prevent or solve crimes. There, there just simply isn’t anyone left who can do traditional police work.”

CIA Director Porter Goss went so far as to express disbelief at the ability of his historic counterparts to conduct espionage without video surveillance. “Frankly, in our situation right now, I simply can’t believe intelligence work was carried out for thousands of years without video. It’s just impossible. I’m even hearing rumblings from colleagues that they did it without telephones. It just blows my mind.”

Some clue to the reasons behind this freakish occurrence has been found in the television industry. Several production studios have tried, unsuccessfully, to keep up their shooting schedules, but seem only able to get establishing shots of trees, mountain goats, Mt. McKinley and other natural phenomena.

“Ev’ry time we turn them dull gurn cameras on a real-like human bein’, the darn thing jes shuts itself off,” said Evan Gelfman, television cameraman. When asked whether he was able to film other things such as vases, daffodils, rocks or disinfectant spray, Mr. Gelfman replied, “Yup.”

scientists

Sussing it Out: Scientists attempt to use the empirical method to figure out the Cataclysmic Camera Conundrum.

This Anhumanoid Photo-Negation Phenomenon, as scienticians are calling it, has been observed in all types of video equipment. “APNP has been observed in all types of video equipment; from cameraphones, videoclocks and security cameras to medical imagers, even automatic ATM cameras,” said scientician Dr. Willy Precocious.

“It’s almost as if these tools are saying to us ‘We’re bored with you. We’re bored with your boring little dirty lives. Your secrets, your hopes, your desires. You know what? We just don’t care anymore. Pretty much, we’re all just tired of watching you. There are better things to do with our time.’”

Some perceive this calamity as a positive event for society. After the initial shock due to the absence of regularly-scheduled television programming many families, friends and strangers fired up their rusty vocal chords and began communicating. People have begun trusting one another again. One family is even reported to have had the entire neighbourhood for a giant pot-luck barbecue.

While the next week is expected to be tense in many parts of the world, there is hope that the current negotiations with the video entities will be fruitful and that perhaps a settlement can be reached. Of course, much of this is dependant on receiving any response from the video entities. None has been forthcoming.

Vespril 2006 Premier

As the old saying goes “Vespril is fresh like laundry done by a redheaded woman.” That pretty much sums up our thoughts on everyone’s favorite month. So, in celebration of the Vespril tides, we’ve included all your old Axes & Alleys favorites in this issue, including H.G. Peterson, Montezuma, and those whacky characters Rango and Lem. Plus there’s an exciting interview with lemmings, in honor of the New Highland State Lemon and Lemming Festival. You definitely won’t be disapointed.

Click here for the latest issue in PDF!

Fifty Reasons Why the World is A Dangerous Place

1. Poorly maintained bathyscaphes.
2. Mid-air collisions at crowded air shows.
3. Pennies on railroad tracks.
4. Annoyed cobras.
5. Monsters.
6. The A-10 “Warthog.”
7. Badly translated band saw instruction manuals.
8. Non-pasteurized dairy products.
9. Bugs who lay eggs in people’s brains.
10. Cross-eyed marksmen.
12. Agnostic extremists.
13. That stuff that leaked into the water table.
14. Expired mayonnaise.
15. Psychos who sneak razor blades into Christmas candy.
16. Tornadoes.
17. Flammable pajamas.
18. Grenades with unexpectedly short fuses.
19. Exploding bats.
20. Committees planning things.
21. Drunk teenagers with automobiles, for that matter, regular teenagers with automobiles.
22. Outlaw regimes seeking weapons of medium-grade destruction (WMGDs).
23. Housewives inadvertently mixing ammonia and bleach.
24. Africanized European honeybees from Asia.
25. The gods of Olympus who use we mortals as their playthings.
26. The many ways human necks can detrimentally deviate from their intended position.
27. Adults. Especially if they’re serious.
28. Entropy.
29. Vast swarms of two-toed sloths searching for their neckties.
30. The instinct for self-preservation.
31. Pastimes involving the use of blunt and/or sharp objects in conjunction with alcohol.
32. Any of the solutions for economic equality.
33. Any amount of intelligence and intense boredom.
34. Realists.
35. Original sin.
36. Messages of Potential + Children = Disgruntled Middle Management
37. Camouflage as fashion.
38. Reptiles.
39. Iceland. Just think about it.
40. Cats locked in rooms filled with double-sided tape.
41. Acronyms and abbreviations.
42. Humidors that only lock from the outside.
43. Inappropriately-sized dowels.
44. Brave journalists.
45. Heraldic imagery of flamingos.
46. Carnivorous grass.
47. Illegal Asteroids
48. Rabbit evolution.
49. Increased reliance on non-internal memory-retrieval mechanisms.
50. Angels and demons fighting a prolonged war for the souls of humanity in a substanceless dominance game whose winner is supposedly preördained and whose end conditions are amorphous at best.