scottobear: (Thingie! You big dumb freak!)
[personal profile] scottobear

The only accessory you need for Talk Like A Pirate Day, September 19. The site's creator, Grant Henninger, says: "Let me present t' you t' iPatch! It really has no purpose, but it was a fun site t' build. Hope people get a good harty-har-har out o' it."



Well, Re: Ghost in the Shell... I liked the Basset. both styles of animation were good, but the CGI and cel-stuff didn't mesh well.. rather distracting, actually. Sammy really dug it, so I imagine it's just a question of personal tastes. Site Meter

Danny and I had a nice time at riverwalk, had lunch at einsteins, a beer at the ugly toona saloona, and talked about this that and the other as we walked around... they're relaying the brickwork on Tavern row. I wonder if doing that on a Saturday is the worst possible time for business?



With all the hurricanes and tropical storms lately, I'm surprised more people aren't trying to find that dang butterfly.



Camanche road sprouts Ronald McDonald dolls

When Eric Dau and his wife, Sherrise, drove into their mobile home court in Camanche in the darkness of early Wednesday morning, he says they were startled and frightened to see what was in the roads ahead of them. There were neat rows — as if in painted yellow lines — hundreds of Ronald McDonald dolls.

“It was eerie, frightening,” says Dau, who is corrections officer for the Clinton County sheriff’s office. Why all those 14-inch stuffed dolls, with ceramic faces, had been so carefully placed in the middle of a half-dozen roads in Cedar Heights, is a mystery from “Twilight Zone.”

Dau, who is also a volunteer reserve officer for the city of Camanche, was coming off duty at 12:30 a.m. His wife was in the car with him.

He estimates there were 500 of those Ronald McDonald dolls, in perfect formations, spaced about two or three feet apart in the center of six roads in the court that houses about 150 mobile homes.

“It was like we were seeing things not to be believed,” he says. Dau’s wife feared it was a bizarre trap to entice women out of their cars.

“It could have been a scheme. Some criminal would expect that a woman might stop to pick up a doll and assault her,” he says.

All this, remember, was about 12:30 a.m. Dan Vosatka, who is a volunteer firefighter along with Dau, told him that he had driven the same roads about 10 p.m. and saw no Ronald McDonald dolls.

“It was so scary, all those Ronald McDonalds staring at us in our headlights. It gave us a very, very funny feeling. If you hadn’t seen them with your own eyes, you wouldn’t believe it,” Dau says. The Daus stopped when a gray mini-van circled in front of them. The occupants were picking up the Ronald McDonald dolls. Dau rushed up.

“What’s this all about?” he demanded. Being in uniform, he reasoned that if these were the culprits who set out the dolls, they would take off, or at least would be apprehensive.

“No, they were friendly, a man and woman. They said they lived ‘over there’ – pointing in the direction of a section of the mobile home park. The woman said that they, too, had spotted all those dolls in the road and were picking them up before something happened to them.” Rain was expected during the night.

“I did not suspect them of anything. I didn’t even get their names. They asked if we had any children; I told them I had two nieces and they handed me two of the dolls and said I should give them to them. They did not say what they were going to do with all the rest of the dolls. It looked like they were putting them in their van.”

No apparent crime had been committed. Mr. and Mrs. Dau went to bed, disturbed by what he says was not an apparition, but the real thing. Next morning, Dau hurried outside to look at the roads. Not a Ronald McDonald doll was in sight.

Sherrise Dau had worked for McDonald’s, remembering that the stores once sold these dolls for $10 or $12. They were not the stuff of Happy Meals, but large, stuffed Ronald McDonalds, with big, leather-like feet.

A McDonald’s source says they haven’t sold the dolls for four years.

Date: 2004-09-19 01:48 pm (UTC)
rejectomorph: (laszlo moholy-nagy_chx)
From: [personal profile] rejectomorph
People panic over the sight of dolls aligned in the road, and imagine that some nefarious conspiracy is afoot? Good heavens! I'd have probably burst out laughing had I seen such a thing. Congratulations to whoever came up with so delightful and splendid a notion, but I wish they'd carried it out in a place that would have produced a more appreciative audience. If one spends five or six thousand dollars on materials for an installation, they owe it to themselves to at least take it to a neighborhood that has a gallery or two. "Eerie" and "frightening", indeed! Humph!

Date: 2004-09-19 04:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottobear.livejournal.com
I agree... I'd love to see "crop circles" of yellow dolls all over the place.

Clowns can be scary to some, as can corporate culture... but this just smacks of nifty-weird.

Date: 2004-09-19 04:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kscare.livejournal.com
Another person who knows about talk like a Pirate day. I must have been out of the loop. I've only just found out!!

har.. har... AVAST ye matties!

Date: 2004-09-20 02:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottobear.livejournal.com
Yarrr-harr!

Batten down your poop-deck!

Profile

scottobear: (Default)
scott von berg

April 2017

S M T W T F S
       1
2 345678
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 1718 19 20 21 22
23 2425 26 2728 29
30      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Feb. 7th, 2026 07:07 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios