Thursday 3 May 2012


Hello again, eager followers of narrative recapitulation:

   If you are one of the literally two or three people who have been following our account of Sparky’s disappearance into an alternate dimension, you will be aware that our pint-size picaroon had been trapped among the programs of the curiously-named Golden Age of Black-and-White Television. Stumped for a method to bring him back to what passes for reality down our way, Science Boy, Moose and I went off to seek help. As we left him, Sparky was in the process of giving a hard time to Tom Terrific:


   As fate (or a writer’s shortcut) would have it, our ace in the hole on all matters supernatural, Milady Madeira M’Dear, had already gotten wind of the problem through her crystal ball, and was hard at work on a solution. A part-time practising sorceress with full borrowing privileges at the local branch of the Witches’ and Warlocks’ Lending Library, M’Dear has dabbled in potions, hexes, and incantations for more years than it’s polite to ask a lady (particularly a lady who can turn you into a toad for asking it). When we arrived at M’Dear’s pied-à-terre, she was thumbing through the index of her favourite reference book:



   This cursory research seemed to indicate that our current dilemma was beyond the reach of either the “bubbling-cauldron” or the “abracadabra” approach. Instead, M’Dear opted for a good old-fashioned in-person whammy on Sparky’s cathode ray prison, delivered from a reverse layout off a triple-twisting arabesque:


   All that did for Sparky was get him into a nasty standoff with Agnes Moorehead:


   However, every good witch’s motto is “if at first you don’t succeed, zap it harder”, and M’Dear is no exception. Falling back on a tried-and-true formula for success on television, she decided to try doing it with mirrors:



   The end result of this attempt gave M’Dear’s application of English an unnecessarily literal aspect:


   After a continuity announcement about the rescheduling of a cricket test match due to rain (imagine that in England), Coronation Street came on. I’m pretty sure that Macmillan was still Prime Minister at the time, but Britain was already swinging enough that the checking of ID’s at public houses was, shall we say, a little on the lax side:


   Rather than risk alienating you all with more inside references like that last one, I’ll end this chapter of the saga here. Meanwhile, on Uncle Fun and Sparky Land 2, a choice of viewing includes edited highlights of Rupert Murdoch hacking into his own cellphone so he can get all the dirt on what he’s been up to.

   Don’t forget to pay your licence fees before the Uncle Fun and Sparky Land detector van comes through your area.

Uncle Fun

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