Rhodesian
insanity – Simply the Pest at his Best!
Spoiler Alert
I was
supposed to go to the Oktoberfest today and meet up with eldest son. Rhodie
glad rags all prepared on the bed, showered and shaved, taxi booked to take me
to the train station – and then. Boom! David informs me it is lashing down ,
all tents have reached over capacity and more chance of getting a seat in an
electric chair in Texas for murder; than a
spot on a bench for a mass krug in Munich.
Talk about
‘pissed off!' (Get it?)
A tad
annoyed, I decided to check out my back up discs for photos of when I climbed
the sand dunes of the Sossusvlei. That’s the place in Namibia where
the locals have nothing in there vocabulary that describes ‘rain’. Even trying
to explain that water in other places on this planet falls from the sky in such
quantities they drown in the stuff just wandering down to the local McDonalds;
sends them into psychotic shock.
And then I
came across some Open University stuff. I discovered a radio play I once wrote.
Now, when I did 18 months of Creative Writing and Advanced Creative Writing
(nearly getting kicked off both courses for being an obnoxious pest), I was
taught loads of stuff. For example – how to place your name at the top of an
exam paper…tra-la-la.
Well, I used
the course to systematically take examples from The Gokwe Kid and Simply the
Pest, get feedback, and learn to create the books that many people have
read – all six of them!
So I had a
bit of problem (still have), but in this case I had to adapt one story into
some kind of stage play or radio play. Ah – there was trouble ahead. Please
bear, bare, beer with me because what I did nearly caused a riot. (As usual.)
This is a bit
of a long posting but worth the laugh if you are also suffering from a grey
Saturday afternoon when should be at ‘Beers are Us’ in Munich. Now, after being a clever-clever and
sent in an adapted version of ‘Going down in blaze of glorious vomit’ (Chapter
Ten in StP), I suddenly realised I was going to have one heck of a problem
adapting it.
The solution
was not simple. I decided on a radio adaption. First big mistake is that I used
BBC formatting and lost points because I should have used OU style and ‘Why do you not obey the rules and
regulations?’, comment from tutor. Dumb question - it is like asking a Rhodie
‘Why did you fight to the bitter end?’
Ignore and
glide over the technical stuff of a written radio play. The only thing you need
to know is if you read this outside of the United Kingdom (that’s an
oxymoron), is the personality called Jonathon Ross. I wrote this just as he was
in total disgrace with the BBC. He was BBC/is ITV, a chat show presenter.
Totally full of himself, obnoxious as hell - and the only difference between us
is our bank account statements. His insane looking wife made the film ‘Kick
Ass’, which I personally thought was brilliant. But – forget all that.
Here it is.
Perhaps a spoiler alert, but those
that have read that chapter will delight in this adaption, and those that have
not; may decide – no thanks…you are clinically insane…
(PS - Ignore
some obvious formatting errors - the Google and word.doc are not exactly
'chinas', no matter how you mess with it...)
BE PREPARED: GET A TV and RADIO LICENCE
By Karl Greenberg
CAST
NR BBC
Newsreader
JR Jonathon
Ross -
Risqué
British television and radio presenter
KG Karl
Greenberg –
Author
of Last of the Rhodesians
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BROADCAST: 25th
December 2008
STUDIO: BBC
Radio Theater, Broadcasting House, London
PRODUCER: Jonathon Ross
NR: And that is the end of the BBC
News. Now on Radio 7, it is our monthly date with the classic BBC comedy
series, ‘I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again’. (PAUSE) I'm sorry; I will read that again. It
appears someone has leaked the tape to the press, so instead; we will now
switch over to Radio 4’s Bookclub, presented
by Jonathan Ross.
Those listeners well practiced in
complaining, know whom to contact, (SARCASTIC) the rest shouldn’t bother.
GRAMS "ODE TO JOY"
BEETHOVEN'S Symphony No. 9. EST. AND FADE. (FX
AND MUSIC CD TK1)
JR: Hallo, I am Jonathon Ross and
welcome to Bookclub and a memoir, ‘Last of the Rhodesians; Chronicles of a
Colonial Anarchist’, that is sure to overtake mine in the bestseller list. As
most listeners will know, the only reason I am presenting this today is because
my lawyers threatened to bankrupt the BBC, unless I was allowed to return to
the air and offer you first class entertainment. (SARCASTIC) This, as we know,
has been severely lacking since I was suspended.
FX
AUDIENCE LAUGHTER (FX
CD tk2)
JR: Anyway, enough about me. The
memoir is situated in Southern Africa, Rhodesia
to be exact, in the ’60s and 70s and is about some white kid having a ball,
before the government was replaced by black men wearing Savile Row suits, in
what is now Zimbabwe.
JR: Now I would like to welcome the
author of this forthcoming memoir, Karl Greenberg.
KG: Thank you Jonathan for inviting me
here today. I must say, that was an interesting choice of opening music score,
Beethoven’s 9th, the ‘Ode to Joy’.
JR: I thought you might appreciate
that. Listeners will be amazed to know that the Rhodesian white supremacist
government of the time used it as their national anthem. Looking at the state
of Zimbabwe
these days, I wouldn’t be surprised if their anthem was a couple of numbers
less.
KG: I presume you mean Beethoven’s 7th, second movement, ‘The
Death March’?
JR; (TRIUMPHANT) That would be
perfect, considering the state the place is in now.
FX AUDIENCE LAUGHTER (FX CD tk2)
KG: (ANNOYED) May I ask you what that
terrible noise is?
JR: You mean this one?
FX AUDIENCE LAUGHTER (FX CD tk2)
JR: That is the audience laughing at
our witty banter. It’s called canned laughter.
KG: (AMAZED) Canned laughter? The only
laughter I know of that comes in cans, is called beer. Too much of that also
gets tedious after a while as well.
JR: I agree, I can’t be arsed with it
either. It’s not as if I exactly get paid more for making cans laugh. (LAUGHS)
Now, talking about drinking, it seems to be quite prominent in the only chapter
of your memoir I have read, so let’s discuss that.
KG: That will be the chapter called,
‘Be Prepared’
JR: That’s the one, what exactly is
it about?
KG: Well Jonathan, it is a sort of
riot of passion –
JR: ‘Right of passage’ is what I
think you mean.
KG: Same thing really. It is about the
night I turned from being a wimpy 16 year old Boy Scout, learning to tie knots,
into a real ‘Rhodie’ macho man.
JR: (sarcastic)
At 16 you were still learning to tie knots?
KG: That is true Jonathan. I was too
old. By the time of the evening for the Scouts annual general meeting in 1974,
I had had enough of the whole thing.
JR: You write that the Scout Troop you
were a member of was only for white
kids. Was this due to the apartheid practiced by the Rhodesian government?
KG: That is a very good question. I
didn’t have a clue why we were segregated. I simply took it for granted.
However, there were all black Boy Scout troops, as well. In fact, I had a run
in with them a couple of times.
JR: Listeners may find this
interesting, as here in Britain
we had no official segregation, just poor bastards and rich people; like me.
(LAUGHS) So what happened when you had a run in with the black Boy Scouts ?
KG: Well, at a Scout Rally in ‘72, I
reprimanded a large black Boy Scout for using the obstacle course after dusk -
JR: (SNEER) And you being white, you
obviously thought you used your authority wisely. How did the young man
respond?
KG: (PAINED) He punched me in my right
eye and I fell down. He then ran off into the surrounding bush and -
JR: (SARCASTIC) Perhaps this was the
start of the bush war that was to end Rhodesian rule?
KG: Without a doubt. It still pains
me. Then a year later, at a Scout cooking competition, I had reported to the
organisers that a group of black contestants were being illegally coached by
their Scoutmaster.
JR:
And were they disqualified?
KG: (DISGUST) On the contrary, the
cheating bastards went on to win first prize in their group. The stupid white
organisers had brushed off my complaints with, ‘They don’t stand a chance, so
don’t worry’. (SERIOUS) At that point, I instinctively knew that we whites
would lose the war.
JR: (SURPRISED) That is definitely a
new approach as to the reasons of the decline of Rhodesia. We will continue with
this saga after a short break.
FX TV/RADIO LICENCE SKETCH 01
JINGLE
BELLS MUSIC. EST. AND FADE. (FX AND MUSIC CD
TK 3)
CHILD: (PITYINGLY)
I hope Santa has left me lots of presents Mummy. I wish Daddy was here instead
of that stupid Pakistan.
WOMAN: (UPBEAT)
It’s Afghanistan
my dear, and you know Daddy is fighting bad people to make our home safe. Come
– let’s see what Santa has left for you.
CHILD: (HORRIFIED)
Mummy, Mummy, there is nothing under the tree (CRYING) and Santa has stolen
our television (SOBS) and the DVD
player.
WOMAN: (DISTRESSED)
Oh my God!
CHILD: (HOPEFUL) Look Mummy, Santa left us a
card.
WOMAN: (OPENS
ENVELOPE) It’s not from Santa darling, it is from the television and radio
licensing office. It says, ‘We took your Tele because you have not renewed your
license and the presents will be auctioned off to cover the costs. Have a Merry
Christmas.’
JINGLE BELLS EST.
CHILD CRYING.
MAN: (MERRILY)
Ho Ho Ho, remember, we know where you live. (SINISTERLY) No one is exempt from
buying a license.
JINGLE BELLS AND FADE
KG: (DISGUST)
That’s not very nice, is it?
JR: (LAUGHS) Serves them bloody well
right, the BBC has my wages to pay, at least a thousand journalists worth.
Anyway, so Karl, on that very special night, you said that you couldn’t be
bothered attending the ceremonies, but instead took refuge in the quartermaster
store with a Chinaman.
KG: I wouldn’t put it quite like that.
Chinamen were also banned from our Scout troop… Come to think of it, I can’t
recall ever seeing any Chinese outside of the Mandarin Restaurant in downtown Salisbury either. No, ‘China’ was a
term we used for a friend; it still is. I had been telling my china my recent
sexual experimentation with the opposite sex.
JR: (SNIGGERS) Well, we won’t beat
around the bush, and move on. So after the ceremonies ended, you went in to
help serve cheese and wine for all the adults and visiting dignitaries. I
gather your own parents were not there.
KG: Thankfully not. They had never been
fans of my scouting. Besides, Mother was still occupied mourning the fact that
a few months previously Father had seen his last morning.
JR: (JOKINGLY) Was the Prime Minister
Ian Smith there?
KG: (SARCASTIC) Hardly, at that point
he was too busy with other problems; like stopping hordes of black people with
assault rifles taking over the entire land; never mind 8th Mount
Pleasant Scout troop. (LAUGHS) Well, I knew the parents of several ‘chinas’ and
the Chief Scout of Mashonaland Province was quite recognisable, since he was
dressed up like a Christmas tree; less the lights. That was due to sanctions of
course, imposed by Great
Britain.
JR: Ahh sanctions, the supposed curse
of Zimbabwe
now. In your memoir you say that because of sanctions the adults were forced to
drink locally manufactured, er, grown, wine. According to your own writings, it
tasted like piss and vinegar.
KG: That is true. Bloody awful stuff.
(MYSTERIOUS) I really think it was refined brake fluid. (CHEERFUL) Still, after
a few sneaky glasses for my-self, I didn’t care what the shit tasted like.
(TRIUMPHANT) I just knew it was the best thing that could happen to me since
when I fondled some bird’s breasts at a party. It was amazing. The more wine I
drank, the more I thought of breasts.
JR: So you could say you were well
pissed by now. (SMUTLY) Nothing like binge-drinking and lustful thinking. A
very popular pastime here.
KG: After I had dropped the third wine
glass and poured almost a pint of the stuff over someone’s outstretched arm,
reaching for a cheese biscuit, I was sacked as head waiter. (LAUGHS) So, now
filled with the alcohol fueled thoughts that I was the next Casanova, I
wandered around the packed hall making myself acquainted with several of the
mothers. I had never realised how attractive older women could be, till then.
JR: (LAUGHS) This is getting good. We
will be right back after this
break.
FX TV/RADIO
LICENCE SKETCH 02.
JINGLE BELLS MUSIC. EST. AND FADE.
DOOR BELL
CHIMES (FX AND MUSIC. CD TK 3)
CHILD: (HOPEFUL)
Oh Mummy, who could that be? Is it maybe Santa because he is too fat to come
down the chimney?
WOMAN: (DISTRESSED)
God help us! It is the bailiffs with a repossession order on the house. We have not paid the TV license. We will be
sleeping on the streets tonight.
CHILD: (WEEPING. HYSTERICAL) But Mummy, you
said Daddy is fighting in Afghanistan
to keep our home safe.
WOMAN: Yes, but from the Taliban, darling, not the
BBC.
JINGLE BELLS
EST.
MAN: (MERRILY)
Remember, not paying your TV license will mean we will take your house and
throw you on the street. Merry Christmas. Ho Ho Ho.
JINGLE BELLS FADE.
JR: (LAUGHS)
I just love these jingles. Put the fear of God in the public… So did you enjoy being
intoxicated?
KG: Well, I had never been drunk
before, so I just presumed I was
quite fine. In fact, more than
just fine. I was feeling a little
excited for some strange reason,
almost
superhuman, except
for problems with my balance and most definitely my eyes were suffering. Everything
seemed to be out of phase and
I desperately needed to empty my bowls, but couldn’t remember where the
toilet was.
JR: Is
that when people started to complain about your
conduct? Did you not think that there
could be some consequences
resulting from your rather strange way of setting
an example? (LAUGHS)
KG: Hark, look who is talking. You’re
not exactly a perfect role model
yourself. And you get paid for your anti-social behavior.
For my pains, I was unceremoniously kicked out the hall and left to my own devices. Unfortunately for me, about thirty-odd, juvenile delinquents
were hanging around, bored out their tiny cretin heads, and just waiting to
start trouble.
JR: (INQUIRING)
Those were the Cub Scouts, the Rhodesian version of a pre-teen ‘Hoodie’?
KG: Well
you have to imagine that I was in a rather bad way, both physically and mentally. Those
little devils swarmed all over me
like starving locusts and dragged me to the garden tap where they promptly
hosed me down, whilst laughing like a pack of demented hyenas.
JR: (LAUGHS) I am sure many of our
listeners will think this is a Colonial
version of ‘Happy-Slapping’.
KG: Then,
if that was not enough, they found a nice puddle of red mud and rolled me around in it, complete in my Che
Guevara type
beret, blue and white neckerchief
and khaki shirt adorned with
my badges of proficiency in swimming, stamp collecting,
skin diving -
JR: (INQUISITIVE)
Binge-drinking? (LAUGHS)
KG: (LAUGHS)
Well, I was certainly doing the test for it -
JR: And
well on the way to passing it, or passing out.
KG: Anyway,
in that state the little bastards threw me back inside the scout hall, me now
resembling an intoxicated swamp monster
participating in ‘Strictly Come Staggering’.
JR: (LAUGHS) Aah, the piss-artist’s ‘one step forward and
two back
tango’.
KG: That’s
for sure. I think I had wet myself by then and the hall erupted in turmoil as I
staggered around bouncing off everyone,
splashing mud all over the place. (LAUGHS) I vaguely recall some miserable
adults moaning about the condition I was in, but I didn’t give a
Boy Scout salute about what
they thought. I just wanted another drink, but they wouldn’t let me near the table.
JR: That
was when the night’s entertainment came to an abrupt end?
KG: (SAD)
Sadly, yes. Everyone was leaving, including me. Problem was, even though I had been forced
to do a ‘walkabout’
around the hall and was force-fed cups of vile coffee, I was too legless to ride my bicycle
home.
JR: So
how did you get home?
KG: A
parent drove me home, propped up between two other older, rather
annoyed scouts. They weren’t too friendly about it. Not knowing I had a key, and me not
remembering I had one, they awoke my Mother.
JR: (LAUGHS)
That I gather was not such a good idea.
KG: That’s
for sure. Can you imagine what an apparition I made on the front door
step; suspended between two Boy
Scouts, pissed out my skull, dribbling incoherent words onto my filthy
soaked uniform. I will never forget the comment from my teetotaling, very
conservative school teacher
Mother -
JR: (CROWS)
Thank God his father is not alive to see this! (LAUGHS)
KG: (LAUGHS)
That’s for bloody sure. He would have flayed me alive. The thing was though; I did
receive punishment of sorts.
Mainly by vomiting so profusely, I painted my bedroom walls red and landed up sleeping
in a puddle of stinking diced
carrots.
JR: (SNIGGER)
Always the puzzle where the carrots come from. So when you went to fetch your bicycle the next day,
you were
to receive yet another shock to your system?
KG: (HAPPY)
I was informed that I was a disgrace and until I showed more responsibility I
wouldn’t be allowed to take any more
proficiency awards, even though I had just passed with top marks the last one.
JR: (INNOCENT)
Which was?
KG: (PROUD)
I was now a fully fledged ‘Rhodie’ macho man, at last. I decided there and then, Fuck the
Boy Scouts; no more tying knots
and scrubbing camp pots. It was booze, bird's breasts and the gutter
for me.
FX CHEERING APPLAUSE.
FADE OUT
(FX AND
MUSIC CD TK 4)
JR: And
on that triumphant note we end today’s program and wish Karl well.
KG: Thank
you very much Jonathon, and may I say one last word to your listeners?
JR: As
long as it‘s not rude. (LAUGHS)
KG: (SERIOUS)
Make sure you get a TV and radio licence.
GRAMS “DEATH MARCH"
BEETHOVEN'S SYMPHONY No. 7- 2nd
MOVEMENT. EST. AND FADE. (FX AND MUSIC
CD TK 5)