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- From: chil@fraser.sfu.ca (Keith Lim)
- Subject: Travelling Lawn Ornament on A Current Affair
- Message-ID: <chil.725342578@sfu.ca>
- Keywords: travelling,lawn,ornament,shenanigan
- Sender: news@sfu.ca
- Organization: Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, B.C., Canada
- Date: Sat, 26 Dec 1992 04:02:58 GMT
- Lines: 112
-
- I was one-third-watching "A Current Affair", one-third-eating dinner, and
- one-third wandering through the SFU computer system, checking out newsgroups,
- my email, etc., when to my surprise, a story involving a travelling statue
- came on the TV show.
-
- Now, I don't normally watch "A Current Affair" at all (which is why I could
- only be bothered to have it as one of three things I was doing simultaneously.)
- My TV was only turned to it because it was about the only thing more-or-less
- watchable on Christmas Day. (Star Trek: The Next Generation had been preempted
- for some Christmassy show which I had no intention of watching.)
-
- Well, I wasn't recording it or anything (I don't have a VCR anyway); the
- best I could do was grab a pencil and paper and make notes.
-
- The story is the old shenanigan involving the spiriting away of someone's
- lawn ornament or other highly-visible item that they normally have out on
- display, and then taking it for a trip, snapping photos of it in lots of
- different places (with famous landmarks in the background, or with famous
- people.) The item is returned, unharmed, at the end of all this, making
- the whole thing just a bit of fun, a joke, rather than something more
- serious (and hurtful) such as theft.
-
- Ok, the story as told on the TV show. The item in question was a statue
- (which looked to be about a meter in height) of St. Francis. The owner of
- the statue was interviewed; apparently, she was very fond of the statue,
- almost worshipped it, in fact.
-
- One day, it disappeared. At this point, the show, in its usual melodramatic,
- sensationalist way, made it out to be a real sob story: the lady was
- completely devastated by what appeared at the time to be the theft of her
- statue. Interview had her saying something along the lines of, "I don't
- know what kind of evil persons would do such a thing."
-
- Then a letter came. It was made out of cut-out letters from newspapers and
- magazines pasted onto a sheet of paper (the stereotyped kidnappers' ransom
- note.) This made the woman scared. Were the thieves warning her not to
- have the police investigate? However, all the note said was, Don't worry,
- he's safe, you'll see him again. Promise.
-
- More letters came. They said pretty much the same thing, and they all had
- the phrase "You'll see him again. Promise."
-
- Then the photos started coming. One showed the statue being held by a man
- with a mop head covering his face. Another showed Mopface giving St. Francis
- a bath in a washbasin. The accompanying letter said something about "getting
- him cleaned up because he's going for a long trip."
-
- More photos started coming, all showing the statue against backdrops of
- places all across the US. Letters talked about how the statue was enjoying
- himself, etc.
-
- The woman reported the incident to the police. [This really annoyed me.
- Well, guess that's what happens when you steal a religious icon. Let this
- be a word of caution to anyone who wants to try this: steer clear of
- religious objects; people can get mighty sensitive about them. Stick to
- ceramic flamingoes or things like that.] Anyway, apparently, the police
- had more sense (or maybe just a better sense of humour) and simply weren't
- particularly interested in investigating the case. This annoyed and upset
- the woman intensely. ["Good!" I thought to myself, with satisfaction.]
-
- The letters and photos kept coming, now signed "Chet and Winkie". Same kind
- as before, snapshots of the statue in different places. It all ended forty-
- two [Hey, Forty-Two!] days after the statue first went missing. The woman
- opened the door one morning, to find St. Francis on her doorstep. There was
- a final package of letters, saying things like, "It's been fun" and "We're
- going to miss you."
-
- [Now, here came a bit in the program that rather upset and annoyed me.]
-
- I gathered from the program that although the statue was returned unharmed,
- police investigation is apparently still going on. In one of the photos,
- the statue is by a reflecting surface [looked like a store plate-glass
- window] and there is a reflection of a man in it. The woman thinks it may
- be the statue kidnapper (or one of a group of kidnappers) who photographed
- his own face inadvertently.
-
- The statue is now cemented in place to its base (previously was just standing
- on a stone base, but was not attached to it), so little chance of the same
- thing happening again. On a lighter note, the owner said she planned to
- put an ad. in the paper saying, "No hard feelings". However, no mention was
- made about whether the police investigation started earlier was going to be
- called off.
-
- The story ended on that note. The entire segment was presented in a way
- that I found a little overdramatic. Rather than talking about a lighthearted
- shenanigan (which is pretty much what it was), it was presented with the
- angle of Twisted Prankster With Who Knows What Hidden Motive Takes Off With
- Unfortunate Woman's Treasured Statue. Owner Devestated, then Scared and
- Distraught. You can imagine it, it's the usual sort of junk that is shown
- all to often. Nevertheless that's just my opinion. This would be one for the
- FAQ, I suppose ("Travelling lawn ornament reported in A Current Affair").
-
- The above was reconstructed from my own rough notes and my memory (further
- filtered through my own opinions about the news story), and therefore may
- not be entirely accurate, though I've tried to be faithful to the facts,
- and have indicated parts that are my own comments, rather than part of the
- TV segment.
-
- If anyone wants the original transcript, I guess the place to write to would
- be "A Current Affair" (I have no idea what their address is.) They might
- mail out transcripts of shows. This show is the Christmas Day Show, 25 Dec
- 1992. Someone may have taped it; a tape would be better than a transcript.
-
- Happy Holidays to all.
-
- --
- Keith_Lim@sfu.ca Simon Fraser University, Burnaby B.C., V5A 1S6, Canada
- ** Hon Cog Sci Min Psyc Senate URC FARSIDE LEAD CCCS COCP PSU **
- These opinions are mine. Mine!! ALL MINE!! No one else's! NO ONE ELSE'S!!
-
- "You think you're thinking, therefore you possibly are."
- --Grant Naylor, "Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers"
-