Gary Osmosis believes that Egyptian Pyramids are the
fossilised remains of interstellar starships that once carried aliens to Earth,
many years before the dawn of human civilisation. Where Mr Osmosis differs from other lunatics
is that he has the cash to put his ridiculous theories to the test, and after
experimenting with a scale model of the Great Pyramid in a wind tunnel he
concluded that it was 68% more aerodynamic than a bungalow. Proof, so he believes, that a pyramid could
easily cross vast intergalactic distances and drop safely through a planetary
atmosphere. His results also explain, so
he says, why bungalows are hardly ever observed to do that kind of thing. In fact, Mr Osmosis is so confident that his
theory is correct that he now plans to build a full-sized fusion-driven pyramid
to take him to Jupiter, where he will descend to the surface in a nuclear Taj
Mahal and roam around the surface using a solar-powered stealth-enabled
Stonehenge.
Wednesday, 12 June 2013
Tuesday, 11 June 2013
The History of Rock
Part 6: Pink Floyd
Since their formation in 1967 as the result of a chemical spillage at the London School of Economics, Pink Floyd has always been known as a highly experimental group...
More: http://www.bleeding-obvious.co.uk/rock/articles/floyd.php
Since their formation in 1967 as the result of a chemical spillage at the London School of Economics, Pink Floyd has always been known as a highly experimental group...
More: http://www.bleeding-obvious.co.uk/rock/articles/floyd.php
Friday, 7 June 2013
Thursday, 6 June 2013
Dog Wigs
Anger has erupted at the news that a laboratory in Essex has
been testing wigs on dogs. The testing
of clothing on animals was banned in Europe in 2004 following a number of high
profile cases involving kittens in puffer jackets, hamsters wearing wellington
boots and 'trout trousers'. In this
latest incident the laboratory, owned and operated by rug manufacturer
Wriggley's Wigs, have got around the ban by claiming that the wigs are medical
appliances rather than items of clothing.
Campaigner Paddy Barker of the charity Pets Against
Pullovers, wants this loophole closed.
"There's nothing more shameful than seeing a Basset Hound wearing a
beehive or a Great Dane in dreadlocks,"
she said. "It's a horrifying
reminder of mankind's cruelty to his fellow creatures."
A spokesman for Wriggley's Wigs, however, remained
unrepentant. "The work we are doing
here is vital to so many vain and insecure middle-aged men who are going
prematurely bald. No more will they have
to suffer the horror of a strangely immobile, oddly-coloured toupee. Or, heaven forbid, the shame of the
comically windswept comb-over. And if it
means that an Alsatian has to spend an uncomfortable few minutes in an Afro, or
a Doberman is spotted grinning stupidly whilst wearing pigtails or a blonde
mullet, then I for one think it's worth the sacrifice."
Wednesday, 5 June 2013
Tracey's Mobile Hair Salon
Troubled by
unruly flyaway hair? Do you struggle
with those difficult-to-tame locks? If
your wayward curls are a little more mobile than you'd like, then call Tracey
Domestos of Tracey's Mobile Hair Salon.
Tracey has been hunting rogue hair ever since she shot her first mullet
in Kenya at the tender age of 6. Here's what some of her recent clients had to
say:
"Tracey
is a real wonder. She tracked my
ponytail halfway across town before cornering it an alley and rendering it
temporarily insensible with a brick."
-Marcus
Plank, Salisbury-
"I
thought my pixie crop was lost forever, until Tracey eventually discovered it
living in a cave in the Peak District, where it had survived the winter on a
diet of pickled onion Monster Munch and bits of old twig."
-Denise Von
Sydow, also Salisbury-
"When
my beard went missing I thought my life was over. But then Tracey correctly deduced that it had
fallen down the back of the sink during a DIY misadventure. She coaxed it out with a piece of cheese, and
now we're getting married in the spring."
-Clifton S
Bridge, Andover (nr Salisbury)-
-Tracey's
Mobile Hair Salon-
We're
buggered if we can think of a strapline.
Tuesday, 4 June 2013
The History of Rock
Part 5: David Bowie
David Bowie fell to Earth in 1969 and promptly set about laying waste to human civilisation with his powerful heat ray. Oh, the humanity. However, when it was explained to him that this sort of thing was terribly bad form, he realised his faux pas and turned the whole thing in...
More: http://www.bleeding-obvious.co.uk/rock/articles/bowie.php
David Bowie fell to Earth in 1969 and promptly set about laying waste to human civilisation with his powerful heat ray. Oh, the humanity. However, when it was explained to him that this sort of thing was terribly bad form, he realised his faux pas and turned the whole thing in...
More: http://www.bleeding-obvious.co.uk/rock/articles/bowie.php
Monday, 3 June 2013
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