AHSBenhoy
Saturday, October 15, 2016
The Next Step for Jim
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Thursday, May 16, 2013
Q5: The Pink Ping Pong Ball Story, Part Five
Okay, I’m going to rush this one because I need to
sleep. Sorry if this enormous ending I’ve
been leading up to is a complete disappointment.
After the kid asks for the pink ping balls for the third
time in a row, the parents never really let down their guard. They would try to approach their son casually
about what exactly he was doing with all the pink pong balls, but he refused to
tell every time. A very long time
passed, and the boy blossomed into a young man.
Soon, he found a girl and popped the question. She said yes.
Yay.
Anyway, on the night the parents found out their beloved yet
slightly misunderstood son was getting married, they embraced him,
congratulated him, and tentatively told him,
“Son, we are so proud of you. You’re very successful, and we love Ping”
(the boy’s fiancée was oriental).
“Son, we are willing to buy you any house you want, be it a
mansion or a box. Money is not an issue.”
Their son replied, “I have thought long and hard about what
I want for myself, and I have come to a decision.” The parents held their breath. “All I want is two thousand pink ping pong
balls.”
The parents were dumbstruck.
Why? Why did their son want these
and what was he doing with them? They
knew it was useless to ask him though, and they just wanted their son to be
happy, so they bought all two thousand pink ping pong balls for him. They never saw them again after that day.
Years and years went by.
The Child was now happily married, and had four children of his
own. One day, while taking a stroll down
the street at night, the Son was hit by a pink van and then abandoned on the
side of the road. Luckily, someone found
him, and was hospitalized in critical condition.
The doctors did their tests, and came up with the results
that the Son was not going to make it; he had internal bleeding and only hours
to live. The doctors let in the boy’s parents
to say a final goodbye.
“We love you, Son,” they said. What their son said next made the Mother
gasp.
“I have something to tell you,” he wheezed. “What I’ve been doing with all the pink ping
pong balls.”
“What is it, son?
Tell us,” was the Father’s reply.
The son opened his mouth to talk…
And then he died.
Q1: The Pink Ping Pong Ball Story, Part 3
And now, what you’ve all been waiting for: the conclusion of
the three blog long epic adventure story tale,
The Pink
Ping Pong Ball Story
If you haven’t
caught on yet, this is a continuation of my two other blogs, so you should probably
read them before you go and find out the ending to the whole story I’ve got
going. Now, where did I leave off? Ah, yes.
Ahem.
So another
perfectly normal year rolled around, and the Mother and Father never heard
anything about any pink pong balls. They
still dreaded their son’s ninth birthday, though, as they were sure he’d ask
for more pink ping pong balls (a most odd request). But to the overjoy of the parents, when they
offered him anything he wanted again, he wished for a new red tricycle. The Father was a little concerned that his
son was still riding a tricycle at age nine, but it beat the heck out of buying
more pink pong balls and thinking your son was crazy.
Years and
years passed, and the kid grew into a teenager.
It had been nearly eight years since the boy had asked for pink ping
pong balls, and his parents had almost entirely forgotten the whole
incident. Pretty soon, the boy was
graduating from high school with an advanced diploma. The parents, brimming with pride for their
son, and not afraid to ask the following question anymore, said,
“Son, we are
so proud of you. We are willing to buy
you any car you want; a Lamborghini, a Porche, a beetle, whatever you
want! Money is not an issue.”
The son
replied, much to his parents’ shock, “No thanks. I just want fifty pink ping pong balls.”
The parents,
utterly bewildered, gave their son what he asked. They never saw the pink ping pong balls
again. I totally lied about this being
the end.
Q3: The Best English Book
In my journey through the English language class that we are
required to take, I have read many horrible books, but the worst one by FAR was My
Darling, My Hamburger, by Paul Zindel.
This book was the most bland, plotless, pointless flop of a sorry excuse
for literature I have ever read to this day.
It seemed more like something you’d read as a class in health, as it was
all about abstinence. Who wants to read about abstinence?
I kind of forget how it goes to be honest with you, but I’m
pretty sure it went something like this: There are four kids. Two of them are good looking and have sex and
stuff and the other two are butt ugly, and they all just kind of hang out and
go to dances and stuff. That’s really
all I remember about the story, which slightly alarms me because I’m only just halfway
done with this blog.
Oh wait. This is
supposed to be about the BEST book I’ve ever read in English. Oh. Well
that would have to be Maniac Magee, which I read in fourth grade. Everybody else who was in school read it in
fifth grade, but my fourth grade teacher, Miss Imes, gave me the book to read
because she said I reminded her of the main character (Maniac Magee). Now that I think about it, Maniac Magee was
just an all-around weird kid, but I’m sure she meant well.
Anyway, I read the book, and it was alright. But the main thing that was good about it was
the year after that, when my fifth grade class read it as a class, it was really
lame and nobody could understand the storyline.
This was because Mrs. PANEK decided it would be a good idea to have each
student read one sentence and then pick another student to read another
sentence and then read the book like that.
Not even joking.
Q2: Summer Plans
When somebody asks me what my plans are for the summer, or
the weekend, or anything really, I usually end up with the response, “Oh,” because
I never have plans for anything. I don’t
even have plans for how I’m going to finish this blog. Hey, speak of the devil, this blog’s prompt
is ‘What are your plans for the summer?’.
Great, well guess what? I don’t
have any.
“Oh.”
You see, I like to live life on the edge. Go where the wind takes me. I’m a bounty hunter. Just today, I wore a shirt that was all
white, but it had a blue striped pocket; a perfect example about how I don’t
play by the rules.
In other words, I don’t get invited anywhere. But I don’t look at it that way.
Oh wait; I have my foam Hunger Games. I do that every year, just because it
combines all of my favorite things into one event. But other than that, yeah, I’m a bounty
hunter.
You might recall, and this just occurred to me, the Foam
Hunger Games is what I wrote about for my very first blog ever in the history
of Ben Hoy’s blogs. Let’s take a moment
to reflect on what a long way I’ve come from there. Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh yes.
Anyway, back to me being a bounty hunter, as I realize more
and more that my summer this year won’t be as free as it always was. I’ll have to get a job! Aw man.
That pretty much means I’ll have to throw in the towel as a bounty
hunter who never gets invited to things.
You know what? I’ll
never stop being a bounty hunter. I don’t
care if I go broke. I’ll just write
blogs so much that someone will be forced to pay me for them. Like I said, I don’t play by the rules.
Q4: My Least Favorite Pop Icon
The pop icon that I dislike the most is the Pepsi one. I mean come on; would you just decide what
you’re going to look like? First you’re
just ‘PEPSI’ written in cursive, then you’re a red and blue ball with a
squiggly through it, and now… what are you now?
That is the thing that makes me dislike Pepsi: what is the
logo supposed to mean and why do they keep changing it? I think I know why, ladies and gentlemen, and
I will now present a theory. Ahem.
First, I would like you to picture the old Pepsi icon (the
half blue, half red ball with a white squiggly). Now picture the new Pepsi icon (the mostly
red ball with a smaller blue section and a curved white line separating
them).
Now, picture this: The circle shape that the Pepsi icon is
composed of is a depiction of the plant Earth in fifty years in the
future. The red section represents the
Communist Army, rising again and attempting to take over the world. Hear me out.
And the BLUE section represents the Global Alliance, an international
military that was formed after the Communists conquered Australia. Each of the sections on the circle represent
the land that each force (the Global Alliance and the Communists) has conquered.
The white line separating them represents a toxic, barbed wire ridden No Man’s
Land.
Now observe the evolution of the icon over the years. It started off as a draw between the two
forces. Each of them had conquered half
of the planet. But now the Red section
takes up most of the circle. The
Communists are winning.
What’s with that, Pepsi?
In conclusion, the Pepsi icon is just all around a bad pop
icon. It is always changing, and
promotes Communism imperialism on the entire world.
Thursday, May 2, 2013
P1: What Do I Watch on TV?
A lot of people seem to think I’m joking when I say I didn’t
stop watching shows like Sesame Street, Arthur, Veggie Tales, Word Girl, and
Super Why until I was in eighth grade.
Do you see the smile that is not on my face?
Up until I was unusually old, I was not even allowed to
watch PG-13 movies, and when I did, it was Star Wars Three: Revenge of the Sith,
and I had to fast forward through the part where Anakin fell into the
lava.
I used to watch the Saturday morning cartoons every Saturday
with my brothers. That was back before
the Japanese Invasion, and when the shows were actually good. You had your Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles,
your Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Fast Forward, your Xiaolin Showdown, your
Eon Kid, your Viva Piñata, and your Coconut Fred’s Fruit Salad Island. Awesome shows. But then it changed. I don’t really know what happened. All of a sudden, all of those shows that I
liked got replaced with Dragonball Z-Kai, ten different versions of Yu-Gi-Oh,
and those other Japanese shows where their lips are out of sync and they blast
pure energy out of their hands using their soul or whatever. It’s horrible. Who watches that crap?
I have two televisions in my house. Both of them are color. The one upstairs is really boxy but the one
in the basement is from the future. The
one downstairs also has Netflix, but Netflix does not let you watch Coconut
Fred’s Fruit Salad Island. I fear I have
lost that show forever.
Some people think it’s weird that I’ve never formally
watched Spongebob, but my TV gets around seven channels depending on the
weather. It doesn't really matter though,
because Coconut Fred’s Fruit Salad Island was pretty much the Tops brand Honey
Wheels to the Honey Comb cereal that is Spongebob.
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