CLEVELAND — Dave Dahl, best known as the face and founder of Dave’s Killer Bread, was inducted into the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame (RRHOF) during a ceremony last weekend, sources confirmed.
“When I was getting my life together in prison, I promised myself I’d get into the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame one day. I didn’t have a music career, a band, industry contacts, a microphone, or even a roll of gaffer tape to forget in the van. All I had was a vision: putting a cartoon of myself playing guitar on the bags of as many loaves of bread as possible,” Dahl said. “People always ask what chord I’m playing on that cartoon guitar. It looks like a C, but the pinky across the frets throws them off. All that matters is that I sold Dave’s Killer Bread for almost $300 million and am now recognized as one of the most important musicians in bread mascot history.”
Dahl’s qualifications were never in doubt.
“By leveraging something as simple as a bread bag, millions of people have seen Dave play guitar live. His iconic image sports the correct hair-to-mustache ratio, too,” said Mo Koybelle, chair of the RRHOF Nomination Committee. “Frankly, even without the guitar, he’s more rock ‘n’ roll than some of our other inductees. He spent 15 years in the pen for drugs, armed robbery, burglary, and assault. Then he rammed a police car with his Cadillac and sent three deputies to the hospital. I guess he ran out of knuckles to break, because he got hit with that punk PMA and hired ex-cons at his bakery as a ‘fuck you’ to the system. He used attention from the press to talk about mental health and recidivism. It’s said Jesus went looking for this motherfucker just to see if he was real, not the other way around. You can’t say that about drips like attorney Allen Grubman or the solo career of Ringo Starr.”
Experts saw Dahl’s induction as a sign of the times.
“In the AI era, the ‘vibe’ of creating music is more important than actually creating music. It’s natural that the social anesthetic of ‘bread and circuses’ would evolve into ‘bread and bread,’” said Dawn Dischope, music historian. “The next generation of Hall hopefuls should focus less on making music and more on releasing biodegradable Keurig pods, bacon-scented condoms, and branded urinal cakes. Leave the art to the machines.”
As of press time, Joe Camel, the famous jazz pianist, was added to the list of next year’s nominees.
