Schadenfreude
I don't have any friends like this. I don't think I do . . .
I don't have any friends like this. I don't think I do . . .
The reclusive artist behind the Doonesbury comic strip is interviewed for the Washington Post Magazine (here) in October 2006, and I only found it today. I figure that this fits neatly in with the recent theme of media issues.
The following is a drawing from a Christmas card I co-authored 16 years ago with a buddy, Mike Harty (Mike is the artist; I threw ideas and food at him). In case you can't make out the words on the image below, here is a larger image to download. The set-up, from the…
I can’t reveal how I obtained a copy of the dramatic memo re-printed below. It is important reading for anyone who might someday die. It is a rare candid glimpse into the mind of the Creator of the Universe.
To: Heaven Admission Screeners
From: God
Date: December 23, 2006
Re: Criteria for Admittance to Heaven
As you all learned in your basic training, our screening program is simple. After a person dies, he or she is brought to one of the numerous screening stations at the Pearly Gates (it’s a lot like airport customs down on Earth). Each applicant is asked to succinctly describe what he or she has accomplished on earth that would justify admission into heaven. We’ve heard lots of flimsy excuses over the eons, many of them falling into predicable categories. I wrote this “refresher memo” to point out many of these commonly heard (deficient) accomplishments and to give you a few other pointers to assist you in your screening duties.
First of all, keep the focus on the bottom line: exclude from heaven all of those people who haven’t shown any significant accomplishments while they lived on earth. Remember, our task is to give fair, expedient and professional resolutions of whether the applicant deserves admission to heaven. Your job is not to chit-chat with the applicants, much less counsel those who you’ve just turned down. Tell them that the rules are the rules, then loudly and resolutely state, “Next!”
Many applicants base their application primarily on …
Here is a short video of two of the actors doing about ten of the voices (on the Conan O'Brien Show). I hadn't before seen their faces. Some good laughs to be had here. [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UCxmuuc4JIk[/youtube]