Stage Walking

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George M. Cohan wrote “Alexander’s Ragtime Band” and “Give My Regards To Broadway” He was a bed wetter.

He woke up in the middle of a musical, on stage, in a serious stupor, and believe me, he was far from happy. Truth be told, his unhappiness was nothing compared to the members of the cast. As they danced past him, they glared daggers. If they didn’t have to sing “You’re A Grand Old Flag”, you can bet your sweet bananas that they’d be muttering words like dickhead and why are you ruining this? The actor wearing a derby with the old-timey barbershop quartet mustache dropped the ‘l’ in flag.

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Dreaming The Life

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There is nothing better than down time. Place that down time in Amsterdam, and you’re in some serious pig heaven. Today, Darryl Jones proudly played the role of carefree pig on furlough. He deserved this. 94 shows in 90 days takes a serious toll on the body. He will be the first to tell you, he is no longer a spring chicken.

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Aftermath

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She wore her sadness comfortably, like a well-worn pair of jeans on the verge of bursting and tattering. Everyone around her could sense the danger of embarrassing exposure with a precise mishap of unstitching, but not her, not Sheila Donoghue. In the last month alone, she had been heard saying to at least a hundred different people, “I’m bulletproof, bitches.”

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The Man and The Cure

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When Randall Cunningham learned the definition of panacea at the tender age of eight, his life changed. He was a boy on a mission. He would discover the cure for every known disease.

In his tenth year of existence, he claimed, “My cure will be a three and a half minute perfectly crafted song. Something so catchy, infectious, and easy to sing that anyone would be able to cure any disease.”

Of course, everyone thought Randall was completely off his rocker. These words, out of context, were those of a mad man. Randall’s parents were as supportive as they could muster. Keep in mind, if you spawn a child this obsessed with the word panacea, you may want to take a good look at yourself. There is help.

Randall was 38 years old. He was on his way to the patent office. All that hard work had finally paid off. He was strutting and strolling down the street. His mind was racing. Finally, respect from my peers. Everything will be different. I will need to open a savings account. So much money. Need to call Uncle Alan for that investor’s number.

Such a terrible last thought, as a speeding bus sideswiped him. So lost in thought, he forgot to engage and look around. If he had more time, he would definitely pound his forehead with his fists three times. This was his trademark move.

As he convulsed and screamed with severe pain, which oddly sounded like pure joy but with different facial expressions, he sang out loudly the three and a half minute paean of panacea. You could hear a lifetime of work as his barely melodic shrill song stopped traffic around him. All those within earshot of the dying Cunningham III were cured of their ailments. One woman with ADHD never realized she was cured, she figured her new sense of wellbeing was because of her new high-fiber diet. One color-blind man freaked out hard and ended up in an asylum. A deaf woman had a nervous breakdown trying to understand how she could hear the cure.

MORAL: Don’t count your chickens before they hatch.

Panacea