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The East Could Be this Summer's Sleeper Hit

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The East Could Be this Summer's Sleeper Hit

The nefarious corporations in the politically charged cult thriller The East are named McCabe-Grey, Hawkstone, and Hiller Brood, respectively. These monikers, laden with symbolism, are heavy-handed and so overtly dubious they give off an almost James Bond villain appeal. With such unambiguously diabolical enemies, there is a sense that The East might be a winking action thriller. But it's not. It's a character-driven thinker. The East doesn't wink at these names. The East takes itself seriously.

This earnestness ultimately suits The East, because it highlights its strengths. But in order to get to the virtues of the film—the subtle characterizations, the commentary on the power of communal living, and the portrait of culture shock—the film's overly obvious plot and impassioned themes must be partially ignored. This is a difficult requirement, but it's ultimately worth it.

The East Could Be this Summer's Sleeper Hit

Zal Batmanglij's second film, co-written with star Brit Marling, follows a dedicated spy, who is reporting on a violent anarchist collective called the East, which is set on destroying evil corporations. In The East, the evil corporations are Very Evil. Search the film and you will find no ambiguity regarding their depravity. Hawkstone is poisoning a lovely watershed with straight-up arsenic. The Very Evil Corporation's actions are directly responsible for terrible outcomes—like disabling a talented doctor doing aid work in Africa or killing a four-year-old boy, who is adorably named Johnny Perkins. To punish the evil billionaires for their villainous ways, the cultist eco-terrorism group the East rises to enact metaphor-laden revenge on these deserving conglomerates.

Batmanglij and Marling's breakout collaboration, 2011's special and weird thriller Sound of My Voice, balanced similar themes regarding the power of cults, the intricacies of communal living, and the consequences of persuasion. But as Sound of My Voice dealt with elements of time travel and remained intriguingly ambiguous with its plot, its themes were allowed to elliptically float around, rather than begging to be compared to current events. As it is, the zealous and cerebral qualities of The East comes across as immature. This is unfortunate because now that the apparent flaws are addressed and out of the way, what remains of the film is remarkable.

Most strikingly, The East's portrait of the eponymous cult is fantastic. The East is a fictional, anarchist, ecological terrorist group, based in the politics of freeganism. They live off the unnecessary waste of a fatted culture. There is dumpster diving, dilapidated mansion squatting, river bathing, banjo playing, and unusual eating rituals involving wooden spoons and straightjackets. Many of these details are based in reality; Marling and Batmanglij lived with alternative communities for some time before writing the script, and have spoken about their fascination with their principles and minutia of their day-to-day habits. The cult in The East is gorgeously offset with incredible production details. Shot in Louisiana, the production designer behind Beasts of the Souther Wild, Alex DiGerlando, masterfully created another portrait of ramshackle, organic living outside of society. It's a world that prizes the autonomy of living outside of society, as well as the vulnerability needed to give oneself completely over to a community. In addition to a detail-rich setting, The East manages to subtly paint a convincing portrait of this uncomfortable liberation.

The East Could Be this Summer's Sleeper Hit

These themes are put into relief by gorgeously understated acting all around, with an observational, instinctively-written script that plays to the actors' strengths. Marling's Sarah Moss is young spy immersed in a world in order to remain outside of it and ultimately destroy it. In shades of Zero Dark Thirty, she is a woman obsessed, filled with internal struggles and outward strength. Sarah's boss, the head of Hiller Brood, is played with compellingly icy competence by Patricia Clarkson. Ellen Page brings her signature stocky, defiant gait to her portrayl of a stalwart member of the East, her rebellious attitude contrasting Alexander Skarsgard's powerfully reticent cult leader. The stand out is Tony Kebbel, who plays a young, disabled doctor with guarded anguish.

What's more, while The East is smart and character-driven, it's also an exciting thriller, well-paced and entrancing—perhaps the influence of producer Ridley Scott. It's a film worth putting the politics aside for, in order to pay attention to amazing characterizations of a cult, the gentle acting, strong dialoge, and intellectual themes—all surprisingly and stubbornly subtle in the face of this unsubtle plot.

To contact the author of this post, email maggie@gawker.com.


Pop-Tart Gun Tyke Gets Lifetime NRA Membership, Refuses to Be a Pawn

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Pop-Tart Gun Tyke Gets Lifetime NRA Membership, Refuses to Be a Pawn

A young Baltimore boy who was suspended from school earlier this year for eating a Pop-Tart into the shape of a gun received a lifetime membership to the National Rifle Association at a Republican fundraiser last night.

8-year-old Josh Welch has become something of a poster boy for the hypersensitivity of zero tolerance policies after Park Elementary School went so far as to make the school counselor available to students who were traumatized by their classmate playing with his food.

Pop-Tart Gun Tyke Gets Lifetime NRA Membership, Refuses to Be a Pawn

Taking advantage of Josh's minor celebrity status, the Anne Arundel County Republicans invited the boy to receive a lifetime membership to the NRA, personally presented to him by Maryland House of Delegates Minority Leader Nic Kipke.

Despite the shameless attempt to use Josh to make some sort of point (next time bring a real gun to school?), the second grader was clearly bright enough to know he was being exploited.

"Everyone keeps asking me why I did it," Josh told attendees. "I don't know why I did it. ... I wish people would stop asking me about it. It'll probably go on for 45 years or something."

The Baltimore Sun notes that Josh, who said he didn't know what the NRA was, handed the $550 certificate to his parents "and returned to playing games on a cellphone."

[photo via Nic Kipke, screengrab via WAVY]

Regular People Are Only Halfway Recovered From the Recession

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Regular People Are Only Halfway Recovered From the Recession

"The typical household has regained less than half [the wealth lost in the recession]," according to a new analysis by the St. Louis Fed. "That's far below the estimate in a Federal Reserve report in March that calculated that Americans as a whole had regained 91 percent of their losses." Uhhh... yeah.

I mean I understand there's a margin of error in these things and all, but going from "the average American household has regained 91% of its wealth" to "the average American household has regained less than half of its wealth" is a margin of error approaching 100%, for a report that was just issued two months ago, by the same agency. Let's all try a little harder.

But just to make sure everyone is all on the same page now, Americans are only halfway recovered from the recession. And furthermore, "The very families most exposed to the economic fallout of a deep recession—fallout that came in the form of job loss or reduced income—possessed the weakest and riskiest balance sheets."

Anyhow, this new report is surely correct, because it's way more depressing than the last one.

[St. Louis Fed/ AP. Photo: Wayne Wilkinson/ Flickr]

New York Magazine Put Up For Sale

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"New York Magazine Put Up For Sale." That is true, of course. But it is also confusing, sort of like this "Rob Ford Resigns" headline, just tweeted by New York Magazine.

David Lynch Is Sharing Mysteries on Vine

Mally Bieber Back in Jail, Asks God "Can I Have a Family?"

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Mally Bieber Back in Jail, Asks God "Can I Have a Family?"

OG Mally Bieber, the baby monkey who has been in jail so long he thinks "freedom" is a story made up by grown-ups to scare baby monkeys, will soon have a family of his own, the AP reports.

Betcha he reads, hums Mally, tucked out of sight in the corner of his cage, huddled over his "treasures" (a tiny bit of green sweater fluff that blew into his water bowl once and a misshaped kibble he named "Lusitania"). Betcha she sews. Maybe she's made me a closet of clothes.

What Mally doesn't know—can't know; can barely even allow himself to dream—is that his months-long prison sentence for the crime of being a thing Justin Bieber wanted is at last at an end. His new family, a mom and dad and even a little sister confusingly named Molly are all waiting for him in his new home: the capuchin monkey exhibit at SERENGETI PARK in Hodenhagen.

He's at the park now, in fact, but a mandatory 25-day quarantine will keep him locked away from his new family for three more weeks. The park's director says he is confident that Mally will integrate with his new friends (and lovers?) without a hitch, when the time comes.

Last week, Mally was formally accepted as a fur-citizen of der Bundesrepublik Deutschland.

And now, a poll. Do you believe (#BELIEVE) Justin Bieber remembers that, two months ago, he had a pet monkey?

On Friday, Justin Bieber expressed "Happy."

[Image via AP]

To contact the author of this post, email caity@gawker.com.

'My Name Is City': An Excerpt from the Novel Long Division

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'My Name Is City': An Excerpt from the Novel Long DivisionContributing editor Kiese Laymon is the author of the novel Long Division, of which this is an excerpt, and the essay collection How To Slowly Kill Yourself and Others in America. He is an Associate Professor of English and Africana Studies at Vassar College.

I thought to myself that if ever there was a time to bring my Serena Williams sentence game to the nation, this was it. With all that still water in his eyes, LaVander Peeler was in no shape to win, or even compete. I figured he’d miss his first sentence, or maybe he wouldn’t even try, and then he’d have to sit on that stage for two long hours, with drowning red eyeballs, watching me give those fools that work.

“We’d like to welcome you to the fifth annual Can You Use That Word in a Sentence National Competition,” the voice behind the light said. “We’re so proud to be coming to you from historic Jackson, Mississippi. The state of Mississippi has loomed large in the history of civil rights and the English language. Maybe our next John Grisham, Richard Wright, Margaret Walker Alexander, William Faulkner, or Oprah Winfrey is in this contest. The rules of the contest are simple. I will give the contestant a word and he or she will have two minutes to use that word in a dynamic sentence. All three judges must agree upon the correct usage, appropriateness, and dynamism of the sentence. We guarantee you that this year’s contest will be must-see TV.

'My Name Is City': An Excerpt from the Novel Long Division

“Before we begin, we’d like our prayers to go out to the family of Baize Shephard. As you all know, Baize is a young honor-roll student who disappeared a few weeks ago in the woods of Melahatchie, Mississippi. We will be flashing pictures of Baize periodically throughout the night for those of you watching live in your homes. If you have any information that might help in the investigation, please alert your local authorities. Let us take a moment of silence for Baize Shephard.”

“LaVander Peeler,” the announcer resumed, “is our first contestant. I’m sure most of you know that LaVander tied for first place in the state of Mississippi competition with our second contestant, Citoyen Coldson.” Seemed weird that we were going to be first and second. “LaVander Peeler, your first word is ‘lascivious.’”

LaVander Peeler stood up with his balled fists at his side. He stepped to the microphone and looked down at his feet.

If lascivious photographs of Amber Rose were found on Mr. White’s office computer,” LaVander began, “then the odds are higher than the poverty rate in the Mississippi Delta that Mr. Jay White would still keep his job at the college his great-great-grandfather founded.

LaVander Peeler walked right back to his seat, fists still clenched. No etymology. No pronunciation. The crowd and the contestants started clap- ping in spurts, not understanding what had just happened. I was clapping the skin off my hands when they called my name. I stepped to the microphone, pumping my fist and looking at LaVander Peeler, who still had his head tucked in his chest.

“Citoyen, we’d like to welcome you, too.” “Thanks. My name is City.”

“Your first word, Citoyen, is...‘niggardly.’”

Without uttering a syllable, I ran back to our dressing room and got my brush. “I just think better with this in my hand,” I told the voice when I got back.

“No problem. ‘Niggardly,’ Citoyen.”

“For real? It’s no problem?” I looked out into the white lights hoping somebody would demand they give me another word—not because I didn’t know how to use it, but because it just didn’t seem right that any kid like me should have to use a word like that, not in front of all those white folks.

“Etymology, please?” I asked him.

“From Old Norse nigla.”

Nigla? That’s funny. Am I pronouncing the word right? ‘Nigga’dly.’ Pronunciation, please.”

“Nig-gard-ly,” he said. “Citoyen, you have 30 more seconds.”

'My Name Is City': An Excerpt from the Novel Long Division

I kept squinting, trying to see out beyond the lights, beyond the stage. “Okay. Y’all have time limits at nationals, huh? I know the word, but it’s just that my insides hurt when you say that word,” I whispered into the mic. “And I wish it didn’t but it does.”

“Is that your sentence, Citoyen?” the voice asked.

I sucked my teeth and sped up my brushing. “You know that ain’t my sentence.”

“Citoyen. You have ten seconds.”

I slowed my brushing down and angled myself toward LaVander Peeler. “Um, okay, I hate LaBander Veeler,” I said.

“Is this your sentence, Citoyen?”

“No. Um, I truly hate LaBander Veeler sometimes more than most white folks in Mississippi hate President Obama and I wonder if LaBander Veeler should behave like the exceptional African-American boy he was groomed to be in public by his UPS-working father, or the, um, weird, brilliant, niggardly joker he really is when we’re the only ones watching.”

I brought the brush to my waist.

The judges looked at me for about ten seconds without moving before they turned toward each other. The head judge covered the microphone and started whispering to the other judges.

“Noooo, Citoyen,” he finally said. “We are so, so sorry. That is not the correct, appropriate, or dynamic usage of ‘niggardly’ in a sentence. An example of correct, dynamic usage would be, Perspiration covered the children who stared incessantly at the woman in the head wrap since she insisted on being so niggardly with the succulent plums and melons. Please have a seat.”

I started brushing the skin on my forearm, then pointed my brush toward the light.

That’s all I could see.

I walked toward my seat, then turned around and headed back to the microphone. “I mean, even if I used the word right, I still would’ve lost. You see that, don’t you?” The buzzer went off again. I threw my brush toward the light and the buzzer kept going off. “That’s messed up, man,” I told them. “What was I supposed to do?” I saw Cindy offstage to the right, motioning for me to sit down.

“Forget you, Cindy! Look at LaVander Peeler over there crying. I hate that dude. Naw, I mean really hate. I be sitting at home sometimes praying that someone will sew his butt hole tight so he could almost die from being so backed up. I’m serious, but look at him over there with tears in his eyes, looking crazy as hell on TV. It don’t make no sense.

“Now look at them Mexicans.” The buzzer went off again. I turned around and looked at the Mexican girl on my row. “You think it’s hard for y’all in Arizona? Look at us. Look at us. They do us like this in our own state. Ain’t nothing these white folks can do to make you feel like me and LaVander Peeler feel right now. They scared of y’all taking their jobs. They scared of us becoming Obama. I mean, do y’all even call yourself Mexican? Ain’t this a competition for Americans? Peep how they made slots for Mexi- cans but you don’t see no slots for no Africans or no Indians. Where the Indian and African players at? Shit.”

Stephanie stood up, stretched her back, walked right up to my face, kicked me in my kneecap, and said, “Please sit your fat ass down.” She whispered in my ear, “I’m trying to help you out. Seriously. You have no clue how you’re playing yourself right now.”

The buzzer went off again.

I put one hand on top of my belly blubber and started going over the top of my head with the palm of my other hand.

Short, fluid strokes.

“I ain’t playing myself. Shoot. What was I supposed to do?” I said to everyone one more time. “Bet you know my name next time. And I bet you won’t do this to another black boy from Mississippi. Shout out to my Jackson confidants: Toni, Jannay, Octavia, Jerome, and all my country nig- gas: Shay, Gunn, and even MyMy down in Melahatchie just trying to stay above water. I got y’all. President Obama, you see how they do us down here? You see?”

With that, I walked off, right past my chair, past the Mexican girl who kicked me, directly into the backstage area. Then I turned back around and walked back to the middle of that stage.

And fuck white folks!” I yelled at the light and, for the first time all night, thought about whether my grandma was watching. “My name is City. And if you don’t know, now you know, nigga!”

***

During the first mile of the walk home, I flipped-flopped looking at the cover of Long Division and watching my feet miss most of the huge cracks in the asphalt on Capital Street. Every time I stepped on a crack, I thought of all the folks in Mississippi and the Southern Region who saw the contest live on TV and all the people around the globe who might see it later. The second mile I walked on the sidewalk down North State Street, and every time I missed a crack, I thought of the folks who would hear about what I did on the internet. I figured that everything I did would be sent in Facebook links with messages like, “Jade, clink that link girl. I just can’t.”

Everyone I knew would see what I did. Worst of all, Grandma would see it and be completely embarrassed when she went to church next Sunday. Everyone would look at her and say stuff like, “It’s okay, Sister Coldson. Your grandbaby ain’t know no better.”

I walked in the apartment and sat down on the edge of Mama’s bed. I wondered if Mama made it to the contest or if someone called her cell and told her what happened. Either way, Mama was probably on her way home to give me a legendary back beating. She would cry while doing it, too, I figured, and think she failed. But maybe for a second, I thought, Mama would understand that I was completely stuck on that stage.

One way to curb the back beating I was going to get was to write down my version of what happened. If I wrote about it, Mama would think I learned something from it. The only problem was that Mama took our used laptop to work with her, so I wrote on a blank page in Long Division.

After writing for about 30 minutes, I went back in the garage and glanced at the clock. It was 8:50. The competition was supposed to be over at 9:00. I didn’t want to but couldn’t help turning on the TV.

One of the Katrina twins was on his way back to his seat and the crowd was doing that under-excited clapping which meant he couldn’t appropriately use the word he was given in a sentence.

“Great try, Patrick,” the voice said. “You’ve represented New Orleans, city of refugees, exquisitely tonight, and you can place no worse than third if our final two contestants get their words right.”

With that, the Mexican girl walked onstage.

“Stephanie,” the voice said, “if you can use this next word correctly in a dynamic sentence and our last finalist misses, you’ll be our new champion. Thank you for blessing our stage with your presence.”

The camera panned the rest of the competitors sitting in the back- ground who were looking either sad and salty or just happy to be there. And sure as shit, there was LaVander Peeler to Stephanie’s right, head still down, fists still balled up.

“Stephanie, your word is ‘cacodoxy.’” Lord have mercy. I’d never heard that word before. And when the spelling popped up on screen, I felt terrible for her. Stephanie went through etymology and pronunciation.

She held her hands behind her back. Then she started tugging on her ponytail and tapping her left foot on the front of her right foot. She stood still with her hands right on her hips and started looking up at the ceiling.

“Fifteen seconds, Stephanie.”

“You people really do think you’re slick,” she said loud enough so we could hear it, and started her sentence. “The man behind the desk is not only annoying, he also suffers from keen halitosis and severe cacodoxy, causing him to make my brother and me put our names in some quotations.”

The buzzer sounded. “No, Stephanie, I’m sorry. ‘Cacodoxy,’ a noun, is an erroneous doctrine, like ‘Up with hope and down with dope.’”

“Are you serious?” she asked without leaving immediately. “You won’t even use it in a sentence?” She sat down with her arms folded tight against her tummy, and you could see her mouth the words “That was so fucked up” before tucking her head into her chest.

Work, I thought. She gave them that work!

“Our last competitor is, surprise, surprise, LaVander Peeler,” the voice said.

LaVander Peeler walked up to the microphone the same way he had before his first word, “lascivious.” “You can do it,” I said to the screen. “I’m sorry I left you.”

“Seems like a lifelong dream might actually come true for this special young man,” the voice said. “LaVander Peeler, if you use the next word cor- rectly, Mississippi will be proud to call you our National Can You Use That Word in a Sentence champion. LaVander Peeler, your final word is...”

LaVander Peeler raised his head and looked right into the light.

“...‘chitterlings.’”

In the background, Stephanie shot her head up, too. LaVander Peeler didn’t blink at all. Again, he asked for no etymology. He balled his fists tighter and watched the light. I could not believe what was happening. “Don’t do it,” I said to the screen. But I wasn’t sure what it was I didn’t want him to do. And neither was LaVander Peeler.

He opened his lips slightly and stood there in front of the light. Watching his parted lips shaking made me think I understood what LaVander Peeler was feeling and doing on that stage. Since the first day I met LaVander Peeler in eighth grade, he made it clear that he would always consider all things—including ways of being an exceptional African American, ways of winning all contests, and ways of using language to shield him from being just another black boy. Considering all things prepared him to win the regional contests, but it didn’t prepare him for what it would feel like to not be given a chance to really lose. I didn’t get it until that second. It wasn’t at all that we were there just for decoration, like LaVander Peeler Sr. said. LaVander Peeler and I, or LaVander Peeler or I, were there to win the contest. They’d already decided before the contest even began that one of us needed to win. The only way they could feel good about themselves was if they let us win against the Mexican kids, because they didn’t believe any of us could really compete. Yeah, we were all decoration in a way. But it was like LaVander Peeler, specifically, was being thrown a surprise birthday party by a group of white people who didn’t know his real name or when his birthday actually was.

Maybe LaVander Peeler thought I understood we were all being given an unearned birthday party, and that I did what I did on stage to show other chubby black Mississippi boys with contentious demeanors that dignity and pride and keeping it one hundred were more important than being decoration.

But it wasn’t.

That’s what I realized, looking at LaVander Peeler shaking on that stage. In order to be the first Mississippi black boy with a head full of waves to win a national contest in anything, you had to actually win—not make a speech about why the contest wasn’t fair after you lost.

“‘Chitterlings,’” he began. LaVander Peeler paused again and looked behind him, then hard to his right, then turned hard to his left. He looked back into the light, tears finally streaming down his face, and said, “Citoyen’s grandmother couldn’t understand why the young sibling from up north refused to eat the wonderful chitterlings upon finding out they came from the bowels of a big-eyed hog named Charles.

No bell went off for a good eight seconds. Then, out of nowhere, bal- loons fell from the top of the stage. Popguns went off! That “Harlem Shake” song played. Blizzards of confetti fell in front of the eye of the camera as Cindy and two of the judges walked onstage with their hands over their heads.

'My Name Is City': An Excerpt from the Novel Long Division

The voice behind the light screamed, “LaVander Peeler, you have done the unbelievable! Times are a-changing and you, you exceptional young Mississippian, are a symbol of the American Progress. The past is the past and today can be tomorrow. LaVander Peeler, do you have anything to say? Would you like to thank your state, your governor, Jesus Christ, or your family for this blessing?” QUOTE

...who entered the kitchen like a monster and asked,” LaVander Peeler said, “‘Why are y’all eating all my children?’

The music completely faded out and the balloons and confetti stopped coming down. Cindy held the trophy right next to LaVander Peeler and he said it all again: “Citoyen’s grandmother couldn’t understand why the young sibling from up north refused to eat the wonderful chitterlings upon finding out they came from the bowels of a big-eyed hog named Charles who entered the kitchen like a monster and asked, ‘Why are y’all eating all my children?’” he said. “I’m saying that ‘chitterlings’ are the children of hogs. All things considered, I’m saying it literally, too, not metaphorically. Chitterlings are the children of hogs.”

“But you already used it correctly, LaVander Peeler,” the voice said. “And you did it quite dynamically, I might add.”

“All things considered, I’m saying that chitterlings are the children of hogs.” With that, he closed his teary eyes and tucked his head into his chest. The crowd gasped. And I did, too.

But now what was going to happen? Would there be a three-way tie? Would the three finalists have to spell again? Cindy slyly did the glide off-stage with the trophy. LaVander Peeler went and sat back in his seat. The camera stopped focusing on LaVander Peeler and instead just panned all the competitors.

Then out of the left side of my screen, LaVander Sr. marched out and yanked his son by the crease of the elbow off that stage. A few seconds later, a woman I assumed was Stephanie’s grandma came up onstage and started pointing at Stephanie and telling her to get up and go. Eventually, Stephanie got up on her own, with her arms still folded, her head still tucked in her chest, looking at the ground. She walked off the stage, but not before she threw a finger sign right at the camera.

A few seconds later, the voice behind the light walked right across the front of the camera and onto the stage. The voice bent and whispered something in the ear of the twin from New Orleans who was also in the finals. A few seconds later, one of the twins was holding LaVander Peeler’s trophy over his head with one hand, and the other twin joined him with both of their backs to the crowd. The twins let everyone know that as crazy as the night had been, the trophy was definitely in the hands of its rightful owners, Katrina’s Finest.

I turned the television off and sat on the floor of the garage with one of Mama’s old brushes. I wanted to get nice with myself at the thought of something I knew. But there was too much I didn’t know, like when Mama was coming home, how hard I’d get my back beat, if LaVander Peeler would be my best friend now, how folks would talk to us all around Jackson, what made me say those things to the Mexican brother and sister, and how La- Vander Peeler collected the courage to go from Fade Don’t Fade to that adolescent black superhero on stage.

I knew I could never ever hate LaVander Peeler again after that night. And crazy as it sounds, that was enough to make me feel good about throwing the brush under the bed, getting nice with myself like a true champ, and writing my story until Mama came home to tell me why what I did was wrong for me, wrong for black people yet to be born, and wrong for the globe. Mama would tell me this, I figured, while crying and giving me the legendary back beating of my life.

And after the back beating, I’d tell her not to cry. I’d tell her that I understood why I deserved the welts on my arms and back. And when she was quiet and gently rubbing the welts up and down, I’d turn around and say, “Mama, all things considered, I feel like I love LaVander Peeler.”

But when Mama finally came home, none of what I thought would happen really happened. I didn’t get beaten. Mama didn’t even tell me what I did wrong. Quiet as it’s kept, she barely said a word to me. She just folded up in her bed and kept crying on the phone to my grandma, saying, “I’m so sorry, Mama. I’m so, so sorry.” And since Mama didn’t whup my back, I didn’t tell her I felt like I loved LaVander Peeler, not just because it might make her remember that she didn’t whup my back, but because I didn’t actually know what I meant. I didn’t think my body wanted to kiss or even grind up on LaVander Peeler. But I also knew that no one on earth could make me happier or sadder than that boy either.

That felt like love to me.

The phone kept ringing the next morning and Mama told me not to answer it. I wanted to ask her why it was ringing so much and why I couldn’t answer it but I’d made it this far without a back beating and I didn’t want to chance it.

Forty minutes later, we were headed to the bus station. Mama didn’t say a word to me the whole trip. She bought my ticket when we got to the bus station and waited in her car until I got on the bus.

Then, just like that, Mama left.

No “I love you.” No “See you later.” No “Behave yourself.” I was headed to Melahatchie, Mississippi, for four days to stay with Grandma.

I walked all the way to the back of the bus and person after person, no matter whether they were old, young, black, brown, clean, or dusty, was messing with their cell phones and bootleg iPods. Some folks were talking. Some folks were listening. But most were texting. I walked to the back of the bus hating all the sentences I imagined those folks writing, hearing, and reading, and I pulled out Long Division.

Five minutes after the bus took off, I got a tap on my right shoulder. I turned around and one of the girls who had been two seats in front of me was now sitting right next to me, and her friend was sitting in the seat in front of me. Both were looking me dead in my face. They were cute up close, but cute in two different ways.

The cuter one was slightly sleepy-eyed. I liked that. She looked at the cover of Long Division and said, “Who wrote that book?”

“I’m not sure,” I told her. “We going to Waveland,” she said. “Where you going?” “Melahatchie, to stay with my grandma.” “You heard of that girl they call Baize Shephard?” she asked me. “That’s her real name,” I told her. “They don’t just ‘call’ her that. She lives next to my grandma.” “You the boy from the game last night, right? The one with the brush who was cutting up on them white folks?” “Yeah, I guess.”

Sleepy Eyes looked at her friend in front of us. “Told you that he was the one with the brush,” she said. “The one from that private school.”

I almost forgot the new brush was in my hand. I started brushing to help me with my nerves. “Fannie Lou Hamer ain’t no private school,” I told her.

“This girl right here,” she pointed to her friend, whose eyes weren’t sleepy at all. Truth be told, her eyeballs were so large and round that when you looked at her you wondered how she could ever sleep. She was wearing this muscle shirt that would’ve fit just right except her pregnant-looking belly made it cut off too soon. The girl had plenty of stretch marks on her stomach, too. As someone who had plenty of stretch marks himself on his biceps and waist, I always liked stretch marks on girls, even if it was on the front of their bellies.

“She told me that she wants you to holler at her,” Sleepy Eyes said. “She tweeted on her phone this morning that she think you was smart and fine, even if you heavy.”

“No, I don’t,” Stretch Marks said laughing. “I’ont think you fine. I don’t even know him. Stop lying, V!”

Sleepy Eyes just looked at Stretch Marks for a full eight seconds without saying a word. Then she looked back at me. “She told me that she wishes she could take a video with you for her Facebook with you saying one of your sentences.”

“Okay,” I told her and got next to Stretch Marks while Sleepy Eyes taped us. “My name is City,” I said into the camera phone, “and meeting these two cute girls right here on the way to Melahatchie made a day that started off sour as warm buttermilk into a day destined to taste something like a banana Slurpee.” I looked at Stretch Marks’s face and she was giggling her ass off.

“Can we touch your brush?” Sleepy Eyes said to me and put her phone in her pocket.

I handed it to her. “That’s a different brush than the one I threw at the contest.” She smelled the brush and she handed it right back.

“I get why you said what you said to that Mexican girl,” she told me. “It was funny. I just don’t think she had nothing to do with it, though. I don’t mean to drop no shade. I’m just wondering how come you didn’t go off on her brother like you went off on her.”

“I don’t even know,” I said. “That’s a good question. I said what I said because she was there, in my row, and I wanted her to feel worse than us. But...” “But you don’t know what that girl was feeling. You just didn’t even care.”

“That’s true,” I told her. “And after I left, she put in that work.”

“I would never be in one of those games but if they did me like they did you, I would have done the same thing you did,” she told me. “I would have gone off on the brother though. That would be wrong, too, but that’s what I would do. I woulda called him a li’l Mexican bitch.”

“I don’t know about all that,” I told her.

“Why you don’t know. That’s pretty much what you did. You just snapped. I saw it. Would you do anything different if you could do the game over?”

That was one of the best questions anyone ever asked me. “I guess I would have been more prepared for what they were gonna throw at me. And no matter what, I shouldn’t have never left my boy, LaVander Peeler, up there by himself.”

“Shoot. At least you internet famous now,” she said. “Is he internet famous, too? LaVander Peeler, I’m talking about.” “I don’t think so,” she said. “He was too serious to be internet famous.”

I tried to look smooth and real-life famous as Stretch Marks and Sleepy Eyes walked back to their seats. They kept looking back at me and smiling every few minutes. Sleepy Eyes’s smile made me embarrassed for her, but it also made me want to go in that stanky bus bathroom and get nice with myself.

I picked up Long Division and was reading when three white boys who looked like they were in college came from the front to the back of the bus with their camera phones ready.

One of the boys put his phone in his pocket and sat next to me. “Sorry if we’re bothering you, big guy,” he said. “It’s just that was some funny shit you did last night, man. Could I record you saying, ‘The Ron, I hate you more than LaVander Peeler?’”

“I guess I could say that,” I told the boy, and looked up at Sleepy Eyes and Stretch Marks, who were still watching me.

“Cool,” the white boy said. “And if you wouldn’t mind, could you say your name after you tell me you hate me?”

It felt like a weird thing to do, especially given what I had said about white folks at the contest, but as soon as he got his phone ready, I put my internet-famous arm around his neck, looked right into the phone held by his friend, and said, “The Ron, I hate you more than LaVander Peeler. My name is City.”

I kept looking up from Long Division on the way to Melahatchie, but Sleepy Eyes and Stretch Marks didn’t turn around and smile at me for the rest of the trip.

Not even once.

Brawl At Cleveland Kindergarten Graduation Blamed on Spilled Punch

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Brawl At Cleveland Kindergarten Graduation Blamed on Spilled Punch

Police in Cleveland were called earlier today to break up a brawl that broke out during a kindergarten graduation ceremony at a local elementary school.

The fight started inside Michael R. White Elementary School between two teenage girls, allegedly over a spilled cup of punch, and moved outside to the parking lot after several parents got involved.

None of the kindergartners were reportedly involved.

Initial reports of shots fired proved false, though law enforcement officials say a hammer and a pipe were recovered from the scene of the crime.

Eight people were arrested, including the two juveniles. All face charges of aggravated rioting.

The ceremony, which was nearing its end at the time, was not impacted by the brawl.

[screengrab via News Channel 5]


Fox News Host Smacks Down Misogynist Right-Wing Blogger

Did the New York Times Magazine Publish a Fake Air Scare Story?

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Did the New York Times Magazine Publish a Fake Air Scare Story?

When writer Noah Gallagher Shannon's piece about being on a commercial plane that was "about to crash" due to a landing-gear failure came out in the New York Times Magazine two weeks ago, readers were riveted by a story of every traveler's worst fear come to life.

"You can actually feel the air holding you up when a plane’s engines power down," wrote Shannon. "Like when you’re riding a bike downhill and you stop pedaling, there’s noiselessness in its speed. Out the window, the tight geometry of row houses rose up beneath me. I could see the swirl of red-blue-red. You’ve never been to Philadelphia, I thought."

Thankfully, Shannon's plane didn't end up crashing—he landed safely in Philadelphia, at last—but his article quickly did.

The Washington Post's Gene Weingarten was one of the first to question the veracity of Shannon's essay, writing, "We are not told which airline this was, or when this incident occurred. We are presented with a scene of almost unimaginable terror, with a satisfying cast of characters ... ending with an amusingly ironic anticlimax." He added, "I am not saying this story is made up; it may well be literally true. ... But everything about how this story is presented raises red flags in my mind. I don’t know whether this is a failure of writing and editing, or something worse, but I do know it should not have been in print in this fashion, and that’s what makes me angry."

Later, the Atlantic's James Fallows aligned himself with the skeptics. "Here's the problem: why would the pilots have discovered mid-flight that the landing gear had failed?," asked Fallows. "Normally pilots would be paying attention to their landing gear exactly twice. One would be a few seconds after takeoff, when the flight crew would retract the gear into the plane's body so as to reduce drag as they climbed. ... The other time is not long before landing, when the crew would put the wheels back down. ... The rest of the time, the wheels just sit there. They don't fail mid-flight."

Others eventually joined in the chorus of criticism, and yesterday Times Magazine editor Hugo Lindgren finally felt compelled to respond with further information about Shannon's essay, including details about the flight's verified malfunctions. In a statement sent to Fallows, Lindgren essentially acknowledged that the story could contain errors while also stating that his fact checkers scrutinized the piece as best they could.

Naturally, not every detail matches everybody else's experience. Surely even people on that plane would remember it differently. The story was about the personal experience of a fearful moment. The author did not present himself as an authority in airline technology or emergency procedures. The airline, in fact, refused his request for more information about what happened after the fact. He only reported what he heard and felt, which is consistent with the magazine's Lives page, where the account was published.

In light of Lindgren's response, Fallows, the original article's most vocal critic, wrote today that the matter of Shannon's story is now "closed" to him, though he qualifies that statement with two caveats:

- I do believe that the author was aboard a flight two years ago that had an unexpected diversion to Philadelphia, and that this frightened him.

- I do not believe most of the detail, color, and sequence-of-events in the story. And it strikes me that Hugo Lindgren is not trying to convince me that I should.

The ultimate takeaway here seems to be that the great plane crash essay is still yet to be penned. Considering how the writing market is going, don't be surprised to see a million kids in Brooklyn rushing to board the next rickety puddle jumper they see.

[Image via Flickr user pranav]

Here's Some Extremely Rare Color Footage of New York City in 1939

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Thanks to the attention of Romano Archives, some incredibly well-preserved 70-year-old footage of New York City has emerged. Filmed in 16mm Kodachrome by Jean Vivier, a French tourist, it captures street scenes and city views from New York in the summer of 1939.

This three minute gem documents fun in fountains, perusing Chinatown, luxuriously large looking taxis, and a bevy of hats. Yes—these are the days when everyone was in a hat and in this little film there are: porkpie hats, newsy caps, straw hats, bowler hats, fancy lady hats, a safari looking hat, wide-brim hats, conductors caps, and other stylish headdresses. Everyone looks pretty dignified.

[via Kottke]

To contact the author of this post, email maggie@gawker.com.

Samuel L. Jackson Quits Acting to Become a Crime-Fighting Vigilante

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It all started two days ago when actor, philantropist, and all-around badass muthafukka Samuel L. Jackson posted a promise on Reddit to read the most upvoted 300-word monologue if the users in turn agree to donate to his Alzheimer's Association fund.

Taking Mr. Jackson up on his offer, users started flooding the thread with prospective monologues while simultaneously flooding the charity's donation page with cash.

Over the course of the next couple of days, the Reddit thread came very close to unraveling as 4chan users invaded en masse and began upvoting a familiar "Internet tough guy" monologue known as the "Navy Seal copypasta."

The 4chan raid had the effect of pushing down the highest voted monologue among Reddit users, the "alarm clock monologue" (essentially, an expletive-laden motivational speech urging the listener to "get the fuck out of bed and get something done").

As Jackson's self-imposed deadline for the winning monologue passed, concern began to spread that the entire thread will be scrapped.

But just then, when all seemed lost, OP delivered.

Saying he was "breaking the rules" to "speak from the heart," Jackson went on to inform his fans that he was quitting acting "and pursuing a life of vigilantism."

Spoiler alert: He's not.

But much like the superhero he claimed he was becoming, Jackson managed to solve the monologue dilemma by doing the right thing and picking the best monologue of all.

Better still: Another monologue reading from Jackson is expected over the weekend.

Heath Ledger's Diary from the The Dark Knight Is Sad and Scary

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In this clip for a documentary series, Heath Ledger's father flips through the pages of the diary that his late son used to prepare for the role of the Joker in The Dark Night. The diary, which says the Joker on it, has a collage of photos: images from Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange, clippings of comics, long hand-written entries, including one about the hospital room scene in which Ledger dressed up as a nurse.

This video is dubbed over in French; there is a rough translation in the description. Ledger's father describes how his son immersed himself in the character, going so far as to locking himself in his hotel for weeks to prepare for the role. The final pages show Ledger in a make-up test for the part of the Joker—and over the test on the final page he's scrawled in huge letters "BYE BYE." His father says simply and heartbreakingly: "It was hard to see this."

[Via the A.V. Club]

Introducing "Tom Tips Back"

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Introducing "Tom Tips Back"

We get tips. Lots of them. Sometimes Gawker deputy editor Tom Scocca responds to them. These conversations will be memorialized here in an occasional feature we call Tom Tips Back.

Charles Ray Cochran Jr. <xxxxxxxxxx@gmail.com>

To: tips@gawker.com

Subject: The Canadian Politician

I was sitting with a group of friends and you want to know what we were discussing? Why the media cares so much about a politician caught on camera smoking crack.

No one who is not in the media cares.

Sent from my iPad

Tom Scocca <scocca@gawker.com>

To: xxxxxxxxx@gmail.com

Cc: tips@gawker.com

Re: The Canadian Politician

So you all were talking about the question of who cares about the subject that you don't care about? And you wrote in to us on the assumption that we should care about you caring about how people don't care about it?

This has been Tom Tips Back.

Courtney Love Wants You To Think She's Going To Judge American Idol

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The bundle of paranoia and sporadic searing insight that is Courtney Love was on Opie and Anthony's Sirius show Thursday. During her appearance, she mentioned that she was going to appear on a network reality show soon. This is a "big thing," she said, and her described wariness of "doing TV" made it sound like this is more than a one-episode guest gig.

She wouldn't say what the show is, but she would say what it isn't:

  • "Some E! channel Courtney’s life thing"
  • The Voice
  • So You Think You Can Dance

When asked repeatedly if it was American Idol, she also wouldn't say, which is a curious question to refuse to answer, don't you think? She said the show is looking for "disaffected females and homosexuals." That doesn't sound much like Idol, though, as that show tends to portray its contestants as BFFs who all want each other to win. It sounds more like a dating show. Can you imagine if Courtney Love was the next Bachelorette? Or better yet, the center of a Rock of Love reboot? They could call it Love of Love.

With her tendency for babbling and coarseness, Courtney seems like way too much of a liability to put on live-ish TV multiple times a week. But of course, that would be total incentive to watch and the genius of casting her. Fingers crossed.


Smartphone App Claims It Can 'Cure' Homosexuality in 60 Days or Less

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Smartphone App Claims It Can 'Cure' Homosexuality in 60 Days or Less

Setting Captives Free, a "non-denominational" Christian ministry named after a verse from the Old Testament, peddles in self-help courses it claims can cure you of all that ails you: Drinking, smoking, pornography. Even homosexuality.

The interactive 60-day course called "Door of Hope" purports to teach users how "to enjoy a newfound relationship with the Lord and how to find freedom from homosexuality."

A mobile version of Door of Hope was recently made available for iPhone through the iTunes App Store and for Android phones through the Google Play Store.

"[D]espite what you may have heard elsewhere, you do not have a ‘homosexual gene,’ nor were you born this way with no hope of freedom," reads the app's description, penned by Setting Captives Free founder and president Mike Cleveland.

A Queerty reader who was exposed to the Door of Hope conversion course as a teen had this to say about the "lessons" contained therein:

They might have changed the structure of the class since I was enrolled (I am now 23 and in college) but at the time I took it there were lessons that said homosexuality was caused by demons, that there was a subculture that exists in the gay community that is a cult that worships male genitalia (I really wish I was making this up. I’m not.), and had graphic descriptions of how anal sex allegedly causes men to lose the ability to hold in feces.

The gist of it is that the course was very traumatic for me and I actually attempted suicide while taking it. The class was interactive and I was assigned a mentor that I communicated with on the phone so it had the effect of being more than something I was just passively reading. He made me report to him every time I masturbated, and if I did masturbate then that was used as blame for my lack of “recovery” and I was encouraged to punish myself by cutting off television, video games, etc. and also wearing a rubber band around my wrist to snap when I had a "homosexual thought."

Happily, the app was pulled from the iTunes store today following a successful awareness campaign by AllOut.

Unfortunately, it is still available for download through the Google Play store, through Google says it is "investigating the complaints made about the app."

Sadly, deleting one nefarious app won't do much to put a dent in the anti-gay movement writ large.

[H/T: Planet Ivy, image via AllOut]

Easy Guide to Making Ghettos: a Dispatch From the Nybro Action Team

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Easy Guide to Making Ghettos: a Dispatch From the Nybro Action Team

The Nybro Action Team consists of Hjalmar Sveinbjőrnsson and Alex Bejerstrand, two under-employed roommates living in Nybro, a small industrial town in southern Sweden. Hjalmar is a chef; Alex takes woodworking courses. Today, they write about the riots that swept Stockholm and other Swedish towns last week. We have lightly edited their post for grammar and punctuation.

This article might anger a lot of people, but I don’t really care, because most of the time, the truth sucks.

Last week riots have sparked in Sweden, started by a fatal shooting of a 69-year-old Portuguese immigrant in the suburbs of Stockholm. Police states the man was wielding a machete in the middle of the street. I have no further information about the machete man, but the devastation that has followed speaks in volume, something has gone horrible wrong.

But this didn’t start last week, it started a long time ago, when the Swedish government accepted a large number of immigrants coming from war-torn countries without having a proper infrastructure to deal with a promise they made to give a human being a second chance on a normal life. To take people in need and help them get back on their feet, welcoming them with open arms, teaching them the language and embracing their culture while they take in the local one.

But riots like this is nothing new, it happened in: France, Italy, Germany, USA. And now I am just talking about large-scale—protest and hunger strikes are daily thinks for immigration offices around the world.

There is nothing wrong with helping people, but there is something seriously wrong when the government put a large number of people into the same area, same large group housing, don’t provide jobs or proper education, parents go unemployed, children watch their parents rot from the inside while they themself don't have the help to catch up to the native kids in school, they group together with other immigrant kids.

Group that understands each other, they become adults, raised with out hope, as outcasts, having kids of their own in the mini-country they have formed inside their host country, a ghetto. This is not the truth for everyone, but the people I gotten to know in the last three years, most of them have immigrated or their parents, they all tell the same story—bad schools, secluded, and hard time “fitting in.”

I am a immigrant, but a very lame one, I moved here from Iceland, so I am Nordic, I have white parents, come from a white family and thus I am white. I am used to the Scandic language and share a lot of the same culture. I hate admitting it, but being white is privilege in many countries, just one of those warning lights that should tell us that there is something seriously wrong with humankind, but we don’t care, we don’t really care any further then we can toss our wallets beyond that point our reality ends.

But when I moved here, I got the chance of studying in the immigration system or SFI (Swedish for Immigrants). The courses were free, we were handed photocopied study material for 8-10 year old, and told to discuss it between each other, totally unorganized. We did have a teacher, though she was more of an “assistant” than “teacher." I had to go to the unemployment office to sign up as unemployed, I am sure the ratio was 1/10 Swedish, rest was immigrants, and a lot of them just trying to get jobs in the field they educated themselves in; doctors, computer technicians, engineers, lawyers. Only to end up with minimum paid jobs for the uneducated.

This riots have been boiling up for a long time, not the first one in Sweden and not the last one, if the government is gone help refugees and take in immigrants they need to be able to do so.

I hope I didn’t come off as a nationalist, I don’t consider my self off any nation but of this planet, but I guess I am just fucked in the head, wanting equality and rights for everyone, stupid me.

[Photo via Gettypremium]

A fire that engulfed a Houston hotel today has killed four firefighters and injured others.

Is Animal Planet Real?

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Is Animal Planet Real?

This week's re-airing of the fake documentary Mermaids: The Body Found followed by the premier of yet another fake-documentary Mermaids: The New Evidence, has relaunched an internet conversation about whether or not mermaids are real (they are) and whether or not the documentary is "real" (it's not, Animal Planet is fucking with you). But no one seems to be asking the right question: "Is Animal Planet real?" New programming suggests it's not, and might instead be a figment of our cultural imagination. In fact, it's possible that Animal Planet with its shows about fake monsters, naughty animals, and gross bugs has just been trolling us all along. But let's take a look at the evidence:


Exhibit 1: Lost Tapes

Is Animal Planet Real?

Here we have television show about people at Animal Planet who spent a lot of time and money creating shitty CGI versions of your worst nightmares. This is a fake show about fake tapes of fake fucking monsters.


Exhibit 2: Finding Bigfoot

Is Animal Planet Real?

This is a show about hipsters looking for a fake monster based on fake videos that were probably also made by hipsters. This is a show about hipsters looking for hipster relics. And not at all, I might add, about animals.


Exhibit 3: Monsters Inside Me

Is Animal Planet Real?

THIS SHOW IS 100% COMPLETELY FALSE. THERE ARE NO WORMS INSIDE OF YOUR BRAIN, THAT IS JUST YOUR BRAIN. Don't ever watch this show.


Exhibit 4: Cats 101

Is Animal Planet Real?

This is literally a television show about types of house cats.


Exhibit 5: My Cat From Hell

Is Animal Planet Real?

This is literally a television show about irritating house cats.


Exhibit 5a: My Cat From Hell: Kimba's Follow-Up

Is Animal Planet Real?

"On top of everything, Kimba was actually putting a pretty huge dent into Michael and Liz's relationship." (Note: If a fucking HOUSE CAT is terrorizing your marriage, GET RID OF THE CAT. Give it to your mom. Take it back to the shelter. Put it down. Put it in the back yard and let it learn to catch birds. Put it in the freezer.)


Exhibit 6: Dogs 101

Is Animal Planet Real?

See Exhibit 4.


Exhibit 7: Bad Dog!

Is Animal Planet Real?

This show is the same as My Cat From Hell, but with dogs. (And exclamation points! Because even bad dogs are cute and funny.)


Exhibit 8: Too Cute

Is Animal Planet Real?

This is really just a livecam of someone's living room carpet that happens to have a cute baby animal on it.


Conclusion: Animal Planet is not a real television channel. Joke's on us for believing that a network channel completely devoted to things that don't talk could ever keep up with today's reality television market. Dogs don't throw tables at each other. Cats don't have catch phrases. Discovery Communications has been trolling us for years. Proceed accordingly.

Two Fun Gals Arrested Fulfilling Bucket List; One Was Eating Jerky

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Two Fun Gals Arrested Fulfilling Bucket List; One Was Eating Jerky

Two Florida women—childhood friends, recently reunited—were arrested Wednesday for attempting to shoplift swimsuits. One of them, the Ocala Star-Banner reports, was eating beef jerky. The women told cops they were attempting to cross an item off their bucket list. (Presumably stealing, or maybe just "getting swimsuits for free somehow," or maybe eating beef jerky in Walmart in which case the shoplifting was really not warranted.)

The bikini bandits, 36-year-old Andrea Mobley and 38-year-old Jennifer Morrow, explained to police that they were childhood friends who had recently reconnected and come up with a bucket list of activties they wanted to do together before their bones turned to dust. Item one: commemorate their reunion with some petty theft. The petty theft their lives would have been incomplete without performing (hence: bucket list). To Walmart!

A store security officer told police that she saw Morrow browse the racks and stuff some bathing suits into her purse while Mobley ate beef jerky. Mobley then went into a fitting room and put a swimsuit on under her clothes (and over her belly, full now, of beef jerky). Then the women attempted to exit the store without paying.

Here's how the Star-Banner describes their mindset and dietary habits:

“[Mobley] said putting on the suit was ‘an impulsive thing,’ as was eating the beef jerky.”

People. You have gotten out of control with your bucket lists.

You see Morgan Freeman do something in a movie once, and all of a sudden you’re eating dinner at the Chevre d'Or in France and you’re wearing an all white suit and living in a big white room and you’re driving Miss Daisy. Just because Morgan Freeman does something, doesn’t mean it’s a good idea for you to do it.

The problem with bucket lists is that they are not consecrated documents that trump the law of the land. You know what “stealing” is, in addition to item No. 8 on your bucket list? Illegal. You might feel like you’re not really stealing—you do have enough money to pay for this knickknack, after all you’re just pocketing it to cross a number off the ol’ bucket list!—but most stores do not have a “valuable life experience” loophole when it comes to prosecuting shoplifters.

Of course you want to relish the power that comes from feeling a victim’s lifeless body slump back against your own or know the rush that comes from setting a stranger’s house on fire. We all want that. But these activities are illegal and, hence, good things to leave off your bucket list.

Morrow and Mobley were both arrested and taken to jail, where their bond was set at $250 each. Morrow told a judge that stealing the swimsuits was “not something I wanted to do, but we both decided to do it.” Mobley told the Star-Banner it was Morrow's idea to steal.

Hopefully the next item on their bucket list was “break up a lifelong friendship.” If so, they're right on pace.

[Ocala Star-Banner // Image via Shutterstock]

To contact the author of this post, email caity@gawker.com.

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