Getting your player ready...
Chuck Shepherd’s News of the Weird (.966)
WEEK OF AUGUST 13, 2006 LEAD STORYNot only has professional fishing grown so spectacularly that last year’s leading money winner earned $547,000, but popular “fantasy fishing” leagues, resembling fantasy baseball and football, employ elaborate statistical breakdowns of fishing tournaments to help players pick winners, according to a July Wall Street Journal report. “Average weight per fish (caught) over careers,” “margin of victory (in pounds),” and other data points are plotted by players, along with weather reports, depth and temperature of tournament lakes, and intangibles such as “home-lake curse.” The organization FLW Outdoors estimates 40,000 fantasy players, many of whom have never actually fished. [Wall Street Journal, 7-20-06]Cultural Diversity
Latest Religious Messages
Questionable Judgments
Recent Notable Headlines (1) “Eyebrow Wax Herpes Lawsuit to Proceed” (a June Journal News of Westchester County, N.Y., story of a lawsuit against a nail salon). (2) “Port to Get Nuclear Detectors That Won’t Be Set Off by Cat Litter” (a July Press of Atlantic City story about technology to reduce false positives from cargo with slight naturally occurring radiation). (3) “Man Once Convicted for Child Molestation Could Go Free Because Judge Accepted a Doughnut” (a July story on Northwest Cable News, Seattle, about a new trial ordered for a sex offender because the judge was too chummy with one juror). [Journal News (White Plains, N.Y.), 6-6-06] [Press of Atlantic City-AP, 7-14-06] [Northwest Cable News (Seattle), 7-20-06]
Obsessions (1) On July 18 (five days after Israel began its retaliatory assault on Hezbollah), swimmer Hilary Bramwill, 30, was picked up by rescuers a mile off a New York beach, despite her insistence that she needed to get to Israel. (2) A veteran Scotland Yard anti-terror detective was arrested in Trafalgar Square in London in July, where he said he was videoing al-Qaida suspects, but according to police, he was merely shooting “upskirt” video of women. [New York Daily News, 7-19-06] [The Mirror (London), 7-21-06]
Least Competent Criminals People Who Believe Marijuana Is Odorless: Two men were arrested at the drive-thru window at a KFC restaurant in Buffalo, N.Y., in June by narcotics officers who were eating inside; one of the men had what an officer said was “the biggest marijuana cigar you ever saw,” which was making so much smoke that it was wafting into the restaurant. And in Tucson, Ariz., in June, after police were called to one home, they noticed an overpowering marijuana smell coming from a neighbor’s house; Jose Ortega Mendez, 35, was arrested when 220 bales of marijuana, totaling two tons, were found inside. [Washington Post-AP, 7-3-06] [KVOA-TV (Tucson), 6-19-06]
Killer Machines (1) A 17-year-old apprentice was fatally crushed in the bread-drying machine at Karl’s Good Stuff Bakery in Australia’s Queensland state (July). (2) A woman barely survived after being inadvertently pulled into spinning brush machinery at Soapy’s Car Wash in Ocala, Fla. (July). (3) In separate incidents, men drowned when the vehicles they were driving fell into liquid pits and landed on top of them. (A man in Newburgh, N.Y., couldn’t escape the lawnmower that pinned him down in June, and a dairy owner in Fresno County, Calif., was pinned by his tractor in a manure pit in July.) [News Ltd (Sydney), 7-22-06] [WMKG-TV (Orlando), 7-13- 06] [Poughkeepsie Journal, 6-7-06; Los Angeles Times, 7-14-06]
By the Way, What Stories Have Been No-Longer-Weirded? (II) Eighty such themes have occurred so frequently that they have been “retired from circulation” since News of the Weird began publishing in 1988, and for the next few weeks, they’ll be reviewed here. Among the first group were stories of mix-ups between phone-sex hotlines and churches, charities, etc.; suspicious packages that bring an office or a city block to a standstill but turn out not to be bombs (and the more harmless the contents really are, like a buzzing personal vibrator, the better); robbers on getaway who hail the first passing car, which turns out to be an unmarked police car (or, in one case, a marked police car); and the political candidate who wins the election even though he died well before election day. They certainly used to be weird, but no longer. CLARIFICATION: In a column three weeks ago, I noted that a Baptist church in Manchester, England, had staged a fund-raising car wash using water that a church spokesman had called “blessed” (according to a BBC News report, whose headline writer referred to the water as “holy”). However, the church, in its members’ bulletin, and contrary to the BBC News report, had written that the runoff baptismal water was specifically not “blessed.” Had I known of the church bulletin, I would not have regarded the story as worthy of News of the Weird. Thanks This Week to Emory Kimbrough, Stuart Johnson, Mike Mendenhall, Ted Hering, Bruce Leiserowitz, and Jerry Orlemann, and to the News of the Weird Editorial Advisors (Visit Chuck Shepherd daily at or . Send your Weird News to WeirdNewsTips@yahoo.com or P.O. Box 18737, Tampa, FL 33679.) COPYRIGHT 2006 CHUCK SHEPHERD