Saturday, July 20, 2013

Wedding Script

[For those unable to make it.]

Entrance

There shall be silence upon the ending of the pre-music, until His Excellency, future ruler of the Earth, Thomas, stands with his vizier and best man, Gregory Ricks shall enter and stand next to the Chaplin Imperial. This shall be done in silence. After this, to the tune of the Handle's Water Music doth the Maid of Honor to her highness enter first (Kelly) followed by the radiant, perfect and majestic bride accompanied by her father. The father shall present the bride to the Imperial Chaplain, and then stand next to the mother of the Radiant and Perfect One in the congregation. His Imperial Highness (future) shall be on the left of the minister with his vizier, and on the left shall be her Radiance and her maid of honor. The Imperial Chaplin shall stand betwixt their royal highnesses.

Once the Imperial Bride and Groom and all family and attendees are in place, we move to...

Greeting

Good afternoon and welcome.

We are gathered here today to witness and celebrate the marriage of Thomas Craig Ricks and Julia Marie Carlson.

Thank you all for coming. Please be seated. We shall now begin.

Invocation/Expression of Intent

Without accent.

Marriage. Marriage is what brings us together today. True love is a thing that cannot be broken with a thousand swords. That honorable bond twixt these two lovers, consenting of their own free will to bind their souls together in this life, or any other future life they so choose is a thing of honor, glory and and freedom. Equal as partners and spouses witnessed before honorable law and state as recognized by the locality and jurisdiction of the present representational power.

By Grand and Universal Providence we invoke the invisible powers, unknown but hoped for:

The effulgent truth as shone borne by the light of the Sun;
The romantic whispers in the silver Moon;
The fortuitous journey again and again in the Radiant Stars;
The passion of Fire burning in its purest element;
The howl of the wolf in the natural Air, for Wolves mate for life;
The timeless rise and fall of the glorious Sea, that matron of a thousand hopes and dreams upon every shore;
And the bounteous plenty provide by mankind's sacred trust by and for the Earth itself.

By these things whispered and witnessed do we begin this ceremonial joining of two joyous souls.

Witnesses

Are there other witnesses here who choose to validate this binding with their testimony?

Imperial Groom's Witness (Likely Wayne or Randy) with a lit lantern

By the light of love, reason and truth do I bear witness to their love.

Comes forward and stands at the the far left holding the lantern.

Imperial Bride's Witness (likely Ariel or Rachel) with a lit lantern

By the light of love, reason and truth do I bear witness to their love.

Comes forward and stands at the the far left holding the lantern.

Consecration

Chosen by Berny. I'll have something for you soon.

May the promises you are about to make to one another be lived out to the end of your lives in an atmosphere of profoundest joy and excellent understanding.

Vows

Please exchange your vows in front of the convocation of this ,your families, friends, neighbors and witnesses.

"I, Thomas, take you Julia, for my wedded wife from this day forward, to have and to hold as equal partner in my life, to whom I give my deepest love and devotion. I humbly open my heart to you as a sanctuary of warmth and peace, where you may come and find a refuge of love and strength. I will love you enough to risk being hurt, trust you when I don't understand, weep with you in heartache, and celebrate life with you in joy. I will receive you as my equal throughout all of our days."

"I, Julia, take you Thomas, for my wedded husband from this day forward, to have and to hold as equal partner in my life, to whom I give my deepest love and devotion. I humbly open my heart to you as a sanctuary of warmth and peace, where you may come and find a refuge of love and strength. I will love you enough to risk being hurt, trust you when I don't understand, weep with you in heartache, and celebrate life with you in joy. I will receive you as my equal throughout all of our days."

Ring Vows

What pledge do you offer in symbol of these vows?
Answer: "These rings"

Imperial Chaplin takes the rings and gives them to the Imperial Groom and Bride, then minister places hand over the rings, the hands of Imperial Bride and Groom and gives a blessing:

Please face one another. May these rings remind you well of your vows to each other.

Julia, I give you this ring to wear upon your hand as a symbol of our unity, love, respect and trust.

Thomas, I give you this ring to wear upon your hand as a symbol of our unity, love, respect and trust.

Pronouncement

By the power vested in me through the wishes of Julia and Thomas, as well as the blessing of Providence Universal, Glorious and Effulgent, I now pronounce you Husband and Wife. Tom, you may now kiss the bride.

The Kiss to leave them all behind. Use the short form of the honorific to avoid giving away future tactical imperatives.

Ladies and Gentlemen, I now present Lord Thomas Ricks and Lady Julia Ricks.

Cue any Music. Imperial Bride and Groom exeunt.

Go in Joy and celebrate the union of your beloved friends.


General hubbub and hoopla. People make their way to the booze and food.

I, Fenris


by Emmit Other.  A first person perspective from the other side of the Norse pantheon.


Check out this episode!

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Tossing Grenades At Windmills (The Poem)


Frank Noble becomes Grenademan becomes a Super Hero.


Check out this episode!

Saturday, July 6, 2013

The Bell of The Witch Queen


Read by Josie Burgin Lawson by Emmit Other - A queen of a magical realm schemes to get out of a tower into which she was wrongfully imprisoned.


Check out this episode!

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Bard's Choice


Poem by Emmit Other.  Read by Kalina McCreery.  A man taking care of starving children must make a choice between their well being and their affection.


Check out this episode!

Saturday, June 22, 2013

The Warrior and the Monk


A warrior and a monk discuss philosphy,  by Emmit Other, as read by Tom Drake at Naked City Atlanta.


Check out this episode!

Saturday, June 15, 2013

[Titans] What I would have read...

You Can't Kill An Idea.

  by T. C. Ricks

Farforth, the Gerbil Knight, stood looking forth upon the lost town of Candoria, who were neither lost, nor a town, nor Candorian.  Farforth had a simple choice; toss a rock and destroy them, or not.  Farforth tossed the rock.  Easy choice.

The rock rolled down the hill, tiny clumps of earth crumbling off the cliff face, one rock leading to another until an avalanche of stone began to descend upon the fields of crystal jello, not yet harvested by the Ruby Sheep of a different color.  The Candorans waved their outrage and catapulted back bubbles of frothing hot Java Lava, stopping the stone, but not ending it.

Taking out a ram’s horn, Farforth unleashed his reservations against the Candorians in alphabetical order.  “You are neither Candorian, for in fact you merely call yourselves that to avoid my wrath (futilely I should add); Nor are you Lost, for I have found you, though you were never really lost since I have had my Freagles watching you from the tip tops of the Vermillion Peaks of Ashtorath (the only redeeming feature of your otherwise disgusting domicile); nor are you a Town at all but are simply the Inn of Lost Hope, shelterer of Evil and All Things Despicable (and has the temerity to charge Gerbil knights an extra farthing for using the Jambalaya shower).  Prepare to be destroyed!”

The inn, plopping out the Java Lava as fast as their battery of Dinarian Goat Anuses could generate them, denied a wordly reply but replied the only way they knew how with a defiant chorus of beer class clinking via toasting and an odiferous wave of flatulence which flew against the brigade of knights against all sense of propriety and honor.  Great was the howling and wailing from their Gerbils, resplendent in their silver, gold and gingerbread armor.  The magic of their fangs and Shriek Lances cavorted to maximum penalous rage.

“CHARGE!” Farforth shouted.  His entropic sense had assured him that the stone was enough, and had he had the patience, the earthen avalanche would have eventually destroyed the inn.  But let no one ever say that he had the patience of a saint, a beggar or even a dormouse.  Farthforth Farman the Fifth was out for blood, and by Freya, he would have it!

The slaughter on the folk of the inn was as total as it was meager.  All six of the inn’s patrons were quickly dispatched, along with the barkeep, the innkeep, three maids, the owner, the accountant, the masseuse, the stable boy, the stable master, the chef, the librarian, the janitor, the handyman, the limner, the blacksmith, the alchemist, the brewmaster, the employee of the month selector, the personal trainer, and all of the goat anuses that had been previously assaulting.  The structure burned, and the earth upon which it sat was salted, burned, shifted and then salted again.

None of this helped the knights who were then subsequently killed to a man except Farforth from the initial rock slide that was originally slated to slay the inn, only to be ironically the method of their own destruction.  Farforth could have lived with these odds, all things told, but rumor leaked out that the inn Newspaper man had produced one final issue before being skewered on the lance of Farforth’s brother knight.  People now believed Farforth to smell.

Farforth was incensed.  “By the moons of Neptune’s Manhood, what does it take to get this done?” 

And so he began to ride, ride like the wind to a small scrabbled hut with a small scrabbled man hunched by his smaller scrabbled dog.  They were playing Scrabble.  The old man looked up and said, “What do you want Farforth of the Far Reaches, Knight of the Gerbil Garter?”

“I want to kill an idea.”

“Can’t be done,” said the old man who presumably knew old and wise things since he knew Farforth’s name and was sought after by a mighty if slightly incensed knight.

“Father,” the knight said, proving this theory to be incorrect, “Surely there must be a way.”

“There is a legend...” the old man said, tapering off.

“Yes?”

“Of an old man...”

“Yes.” Farforth leaned forward.

“Who lived in a small scrabbled hut hunched by his small scrabbled dog.”

Farforth was so angry he knocked his father’s Scrabble game off the table. “ Father.  This is serious.  What do I do? They said I smell! I don’t smell.”

“Ignore them?”

“Not an option.”

“Kill them?”

“Already tried that.  The idea is still there?”

“Then perhaps you should try the Sword that Can Kill Anything?”

Farforth’s face lit up with rapturous joy.  OF COURSE! Why hadn’t he thought of it before!  Kissing his father on the cheek, he raced outside and leapt on his Gerbil. “Come Knights! To me!”  And so they rode.  And rode.  And rode.  And rode.  And rode.

North they rode, to the Keep of the Bear Who Guards The Sword That Can Kill Anything.  Then they killed the bear, because a bear is not much of a match against a hoard of angry Gerbil knights.  That, and who makes just a plain bear the guarding of a magical sword that powerful?

Sword in hand, Farforth rode back with his men and attempted to kill the idea.  It did not work.

“It is a lie!” Farforth shrieked in outrage.

“It is not a lie.  Otherwise, such a powerful bear would never have been guarding me,” the sword said, quite indignantly.

“It speaks!” said Farforth in shock.

“Likewise.”  Said the Sword.

“Why have you not slain this idea?”

“An idea, by itself, is a living thing that requires hosts to live.  But it is only here in the way you perceive it.  As far as the world in which I am is concerned, the idea does not exist in the inn, but in the minds of everyone who has it.”

“Aha! So I must kill all those who have the idea.”

“Yes.  And I know where they are.”

“Fantastic!”  Farforth’s teeth gleamed in the sun, “Tell me where to find them.”

A mystic arrow came forth pointing the way.  Then another.  Then a third.  Soon the area bristled with arrows.  “Too many to find that way.  You could spend the rest of your life chasing down those who hold this idea.”

Farforth shrieked with rage and nearly tossed the sword away.  But he kept it but raced back to the tower of the Scrabbled Man.

His father, still picking up the game, looked up at his son, “Happy?”

“No.”

“Oh?”

“I must kill many who have an idea but they are too widely scattered for me to find them in one lifetime.”

“Then,” his father straightened his back and scrubbed his scrabbled face with pumice soap, “You must find the Boots of Ludicrous Speed.”

“The Boots of Ludicrous Speed?” Farforth asked.

“That is what I said.”

“What are those?”

“Boots.”

“Yes, I gathered that but-”

“Boots that let one travel at a speed of Ludicrocity.”  His father sighed and shook his head sadly and then rinsed his hands.

Farforth boggled, “How fast is the speed of Ludicrocity?”

“It is a speed at which one moves with ludicrous powers.”

“What makes it ludicrous?”

The scrabbled man stopped a moment and looked up.  He then looked down at the ground and then straight into the eyes of his son.  “I...must admit I do not know.  I only know it is called that.”

“Very well.” Farthforth wasn’t in the mood to argue.  South they rode, traveling day and night, and night and day until they arrived at the Mountains of Convenience, which were easy to go through.  Then they slandered the City of McClintock, setting it ablaze with their sarcasm and none was spared from shame.  Therein, they used the Bell of Location to discern the location of the Boots of Ludicrous Speed.   To the east they rode, to the Tomb of the Known Soldier, who greeted them, gave them a spot of tea and handed them the boots on the promise that they would leave him in peace.

They agreed.

Farforth put on the boots.  In short order, Farforth ran from place to place, asking people if they had heard of the inn or been there.  He had a good eye for lying, and people who knew about the inn died.  People who didn’t, didn’t.  He was fair after all.

A few thousand, maybe a few million died.  But Farforth’s honor was restored.  He smugly returned to the inn, just to be sure.

It was still there. 

Farforth smashed a mountain in the rage of his indignity.

The inn didn’t care.  It was still there.

Farforth rode back to the Scrabbled Man.  He practically whined, “The inn still isn’t gone! I’ve killed anyone I could find who was thinking of the inn, and it is still there!”

The scrabbled man considered, “Have you considered the Mirror of Knowing Shit?”

“What?”

“The mirror-”

“Let me guess.  It tells you whatever you want to know.”

“Yes.”  The scrabbled man laughed.

“Alright.”  Farforth sighed and was ready to race off.

“Are you sure you need to do that?”

Farforth stopped.  “What?”

“I have the mirror right here.”

“Wha-Why didn’t you say you had it before?”  Farforth was indignant.  He nearly startled his gerbil into running away outside.

“You didn’t ask.”

Farforth politely asked, barely able to restrain himself.  “Please show me the Mirror of Knowing Shit.”

And with that the Scrabbled man brought out the Mirror of Knowing Shit.

Farforth stood in front of the mirror, “Mirror.  Tell me who knows-”

And the Scrabbled Man broke the mirror over’s his son’s head, killing him.   He looked sadly over his dead son, picking shards of glass from his head.  “So I asked the mirror, what will be the manner of my death...and it said rather specifically that my son would obsess over some stupid inn, and kill lots of people, and if he found out, like a fool, that the last person who knew about the inn was he; then he would become enraged and use the mirror to slay the messenger.  So I decided that I didn’t like this idea...and changed my fate.”

Farforth was buried with honors befitting his station.  In the inn that mattered so much to him.  They even brought flowers.