Friday 15 February 2008

Well, the word "murder" is in the title.

Found guilty of murdering the English language is Melbourne TV Channel 10.

In the promo for their new series "Women's Murder Club", the opening line is "Catching crooks in killer heels has never been a problem for Lindsay."

This statement - small as it is - gives us such a wide scope of "Oh! That is so wrong." Let's examine the evidence.

"Catching crooks in killer heels has never been a problem for Lindsay."

Well, of course it hasn't. How hard would it be to catch a criminal wearing high-heeled shoes? Even a person as unfit as I am wouldn't have any problems catching up with them.

And why is she only focusing on catching criminals who wear them? Doesn't she chase crooks who wear other forms of footwear? Perhaps she has a fetish for Stilettos? Or maybe a thing for blokes in womans' shoes? Maybe they're actually Lindsays' shoes which have been stolen, and she's trying to get them back? Or could it be that she is a member of that elite part of law enforcement known as the fashion police?

I don't know. But I guess, as Lindsay is the lead character in the series and thus needs to be able to catch the bad guys by the end of each episode, the writers were just ensuring that no one lost the plot and there were no slip ups. Or would that be lace-ups or slip-ons?

God help her, though, if one of the criminals decides to improvise and put on a pair of Nikes. She might need two episodes to catch him.

Another possibility is that Lindsay isn't chasing down crooks who are wearing high-heeled shoes, but is in fact trying to apprehend shoes that murder people. I mean, we've all heard the expression, "These shoes are killing me." Maybe one of the shows' writers decided to take that concept and run with it - no pun intended.

This would imply that the person wearing the shoes is also complicit in the crimes being committed. Otherwise they'd simply remove the footwear, wouldn't they? Unless, of course, the shoes have some kind of evil possession over them. I don't know, it all sounds a little far fetched to me. I mean, I've heard of people being slave to fashion, but really?

Then there is the other likelihood; that this is actually what is meant by people when they say their feet are killing them. Though how the feet might actually achieve this is beyond me. And why is it only the heels? You'd think the toes would have to be aware of what was going on, being as they are in such close proximity.

And is it both feet, or just the one? Which isn't as silly as it sounds, if one remembers the famous case involving Madonnas' heels, when her right heel said to her left heel, "Hello! I don't believe we've met before."

I don't know, the whole thing seems a bit corny to me and, in order to maintain the viewers' interest, the show would have to move along at a blistering pace. And, to be honest, I'm getting a little footsore chasing this one around. I might have bit of a rest now.

Saturday 2 February 2008

This doesn't sit right.

Many thanks to the Lone Ranger for bringing this to my attention.

Meet Mr. Pierre Lynch. Doesn't look very happy, does he? I don't blame him, considering he has been arrested for possessing something we all have and, up until now, I wouldn't have thought it was illegal.

But if the headline on the My Fox Website is anything to go by, we're all in big trouble.

"Police: Crack Found In Man's Buttocks."

More accurately, the crack was discovered between his buttocks after an extensive body search by police. And it appears they had a fair idea of what to look for.

So, the crack was found, but who tipped the police off that the crack was there? Was the crack actually Mr. Lynch's, or was he just keeping it safe for someone else?

The latter is a distinct possibility as police stated that they had noticed suspicious activity around the house in which Mr. Lynch was arrested. Could it be the crack didn't fit correctly, causing Mr. Lynch to walk in an odd manner, and thereby giving police reason to believe he was concealing the crack?

Mr. Lynch has also been charged with giving police false information. I can hear it now;

Police: "What's that crack?"

Lynch: "Crack?, What crack?"

Police: "That crack, there. Between your butt cheeks."

Lynch: "Between my ...? Oh wow, man! How the **** did that get there?"

"Police: "Come on, now. You don't expect us to believe you didn't know anything about the crack?"

Lynch: "'God's honest truth, man. I don't know nuthin' 'bout it."

Police: "Wouldn't it be more truthful to say that it's your crack, and you were trying to hide it?"

Lynch: "No way, man! Ain't no way that's my crack. Uh uh. No sir. Must be sombody elses'."

Police: "So, how did it get between your butt cheeks?"

Lynch: "No idea, man. Someone musta put it there when I wasn't lookin'."

Police: "So, what your saying is - and let me get this straight - what you're saying, is someone put that crack in your buttocks without your knowledge. Is that what your saying?"

Lynch: "Yeah! That's it, man!"

Police: "They just snuck up, huh?"

Lynch: "Yeah, dude. Jus' snuck up."

Police: "And put the crack there?"

Lynch: "Sure, man. Like I jus' told you."

Police: "And you didn't notice anything? Didn't feel them putting the crack there?"

Lynch: "Nuthin' man. Hey! They musta had real soft hands, you know?"

Sounds to me like Mr. Lynch was trying to give them a bum steer. However, I'm confident the police will continue to probe the crack angle and eventually get to the bottom of the matter.

Don't look at me like that.