Real-Life Cinderella: This Woman’s Dealing With a Rodent Infestation and Her Family Hates Her

Take note, Charles Perrault! And would someone PLEASE shove the hemorrhaging corpse of Grace Kelly out of the driver’s seat?? Because there’s a new, real-life Cinderella in town, and she’s a 36-year-old unemployed Missouri woman with a severe rodent infestation.

“My name is Dolores Twarp, I got rats and my stepmom is a bitch, what of it?”

We had the chance to speak with Dolores one enchanted evening outside a Kirkwood methadone clinic, where she regaled us with stories from her uniquely fairy-tale life.

“I moved in with my stepmom and stepsisters a few weeks back. But they’re always on my case about how I never do my chores and I need to stop free-bleeding on the ivory beige carpet. I’m also friends with a couple dwarves and one of em’ is pretty angry and the other is fucking stupid. But yeah, Cinderella works, I guess. Can I have a cigarette?”

And just like Cinderella, Dolores has a pretty hazardous rodent infestation.

“Oh shit yeah, the rats definitely do my bidding, but I don’t got much use for fancy gowns and elegant balls, so instead I make my rats grab me a Lunchable from the fridge, or if I sell some of my used panties online I’ll let them box ‘em up and take ‘em down to the post office. Sometimes it works, and then sometimes I find my old boy shorts serving as the load-bearing wall of a rat’s nest. But it’s the price of unpaid rodent deliveries.”

Unfortunately, Dolores does not have a fairy godmother and must deal with her evil stepmother on her own.

“Yeah, I’ll admit it, I’m the one who gave everyone in the house sucking lice. But I only did it because I thought they would eradicate the Rat Lungworm infestation. And no, actually I don’t know how everyone in the house caught Rat Lungworm. Why does everyone blame the lady with the loose rodents scrounging in her bed? Maybe my mom picked it up at the rotary club. You can’t prove she didn’t.”

But like every true princess, at the end of the day, Dolores simply wants true love.

“I’m just looking for a Prince Charming who won’t require me to wear a dental dam. So if you know anybody, tell ‘em to hurry up because this pumpkin’s already starting to rot.”

Bibbidi-bobbidi-boo, indeed!

Descendents Announce New Album “Milo Moves to Canada” Set to Release Late January

MANHATTAN BEACH, Calif. — Punk band Descendents announced a new album titled “Milo Moves to Canada” in response to Donald Trump’s election victory, which is set to release late January, confirmed sources.

“It’s the natural progression of Milo and his coming of age story,” said lead singer Milo Aukerman while testing out his brand new bunson burner he ordered off eBay. “First you go to college, then you don’t want to grow up, because naturally everything sucks, but then all of a sudden a wannabe dictator is reelected president and you have no choice but to move to Canada. Song titles include ‘Ontarioage,’ ‘Trudeauage,’ and ‘I Wanna Be a Moose.’ We even have enough material for a follow-up EP. That one will be titled ‘Milo Gets Universal Healthcare’ and will be released as soon as Milo becomes an official citizen of Canada.”

Fans couldn’t wait for the new album.

“Finally the band seems to be getting back to their roots,” said Greg Hypson. “I thought they were taking Milo in some sort of Bill Nye the Science Guy direction with their 2016 release of ‘Hypercaffium Spazzinate,’ since it had a bunch of beakers all over the album cover. Hell, Milo’s head and body were even depicted as some sort of nightmarish Lovecraftian laboratory flask. That one just didn’t speak to me. But moving to British Columbia is a message I can get behind.”

Experts were quick to note similar instances in music history.

“This isn’t the first time a punk band was going to title their album about our neighbors up north in response to major political events,” said critic Mel Drapson. “Green Day’s concept album ‘American Idiot’ was initially called ‘Canadian Genius.’ That was going to be about a guy who immigrated to Calgary during George W. Bush’s time in office. The Misfits’ ‘Walk Among Us’ was at first going to be titled ‘Walk Among Us in Saskatchewan,’ which was a concept album about an American zombie vampire werewolf living in Saskatoon to escape the Reagan administration. Punk bands are always trying to escape to Canada. Or at least writing about it.”

At press time, Descendents announced a 30-city Canadian tour that coincidentally begins on Inauguration Day.

Naive Man Puts Money Into 401(k) as if Future Exists

BENTONVILLE, Ark. — Local naive man Collin Blakeman blissfully contributed savings to his 401(k) despite the fact there is no future in which he will be able to use them, sources who need to have their Xanax prescriptions refilled confirmed.

“It’s exciting watching my portfolio grow and it gives me peace of mind knowing that by the time I’m ready to retire decades from now, I’ll have a nice little nest egg,” said Collin Blakeman, 34. “I’m on track with my retirement fund that by 2057 I’ll have enough saved up that I’ll be able to travel and see the world. I’ve always wanted to see the Great Barrier Reef and also Alaska to see those giant icebergs and maybe some polar bears. Heck, I’d even be happy to go to Los Angeles and see Malibu. There will be so many opportunities for me in the future.”

Some friends of Blakeman say they think he is wasting his time and money by saving for a future that doesn’t exist, however.

“I don’t get why Collin, or anyone for that matter, would bother wasting their money saving for the future. Does he not see what is going on around him?” said Tim Slinger while frantically scrolling news stories on Reddit. “Everything is so fucked and the world is literally on fire. And oh… look at this! It’s an article about how microplastics are basically everywhere and are probably floating around in my brain right now. If I were Collin I would just spend my money getting wasted to numb the crushing weight of reality which is what I am going to do right now.”

Financial planner Kelly Trainor says she understands how in these troubling times some may be wary of saving for an uncertain future but she still advises her clients to contribute to savings and not just because otherwise her career would become irrelevant.

“I always tell my clients that I get it. You look at any news now and you can’t help but feel like things are bleak,” said Trainor. “But I always say to them that if you just ignore the certainty of an impending climate disaster, escalating global nuclear tensions, international terrorism, domestic terrorism, the near certainty of worsening pandemics, major US cities engulfed in wildfires, whatever the fuck those drones are in New Jersey, and probably some other unimaginable hell that surely awaits humanity, it’s still best to continue to invest in their futures.”

At press time, Blakeman said he was in talks with a realtor about buying a house that as he claims “Will be great to raise a family in and who knows, maybe someday even have my grandchildren visit.”

Opinion: I Have Finally Come Up With a Theme for My “Pandemic Album” and That Theme is Isolation

As a creative, it has always been imperative for my art to speak to its moment without feeling confined to any particular zeitgeist. Timelessness cannot be forced. Instead, it must be cultivated naturally through curiosity, trust, and patience. That’s why I’m proud to say that I’ve finally realized isolation should be the prevailing theme of my album about the COVID-19 pandemic.

I can still vividly recall – back in 2020 – when the coronavirus was declared a pandemic and everything started shutting down. The loss of regular in-person human contact was disorienting, to say the least. As was being confined to my basement studio, which didn’t get much in the way of sunlight. I knew this period – however long it may be – necessitated chronicling. What I struggled to arrive at was an overarching concept, one that evoked not just this era-defining event but also bridged it to humanity and its inherent need for connection. I knew it would come to me eventually. But when?

There were a few false starts. For instance, in October 2020, I thought the theme could be “werewolves” but then I remembered I had just rewatched “The Howling.” Then, I think it’s a murderous bipedal revenge demon until nope, I had just rewatched “Pumpkinhead.” I was kind of freaking out about it once stuff started opening back up. For my own peace of mind, I had to let go and let it come to me. I won’t say my hope didn’t waver at times. But I never gave up entirely. The other night, as I was falling asleep, it suddenly hit me five years later: isolation.

Like, just think about it. The pandemic was a time of distance, physically, emotionally, and mentally. I’ll never forget – on about the fourth day of quarantine I started looking through old yearbooks and talking to my cat like he was my therapist. If that’s not isolation, I don’t know what is.

It didn’t stop there. If anything, this sense of isolation grew the more time I spent by myself, gradually losing touch with the outside world. It may seem like an obvious theme in hindsight. But some things can only be realized in hindsight. And I truly believe that the time spent waiting for it to come to me has only strengthened my ability to communicate it.

And the best part? The lyrics are all already taken care of thanks to ChatGPT.

Questlove Wonders What He Must Have Done in Past Life to be Forced to Listen to Jimmy Fallon Every Night for Past 15 Years

NEW YORK — Ahmir K. Thompson, better known as Questlove from the band The Roots, recently questioned what kind of horrible person he was in a past life to have been forced to work for Jimmy Fallon on “The Tonight Show” for the past 15 years, according to other staff members wondering the same thing.

“I know it seems like I’ve got a good thing going here,” a rehearsing Questlove stated before being pushed aside at his drum kit by Fallon who wanted to spontaneously riff. “But as you can see there’s more to life than money and fame. You know what it’s like when you feel pressured to laugh at every stupid joke your boss makes? It’s like working with a real life version of Michael Scott without the charm. I’ve never believed in reincarnation until a few years ago when I figured I must have been a real piece of shit in a previous life to have to see this guy’s face every day. I probably massacred a whole village of 18th century peasants or something.”

Fallon chimed in with his take on Questlove’s employment.

“He’s such a kidder!” giggled Fallon as he handed out copies of his latest holiday album to anyone unfortunate enough to make eye contact. “Seriously, that dude knows he’s lucky. He gets to practice his craft while at the same time having a front row seat to one of the funniest shows and most zaniest hosts on TV. Trust me, bro, people love me. They tell me to my face all the time each year when I do their yearly reviews and their paychecks depend on it.”

Expert Katie Simpson explained how reincarnation may impact other celebrities.

“The list is long,” said Simpson. “Many celebrities in unfortunate situations may very well have done misdeeds in past lives. According to my research, Kevin Eubanks, who spent his career working with Jay Leno, lived a past life where he was in charge of signing off on the safety of hydrogen to fuel the Hindenburg. And DJ Tony, who had the dubious honor of working with Ellen Degeneres on her talk show for eight years, was found to have very likely been the reincarnation of Joseph Stalin.”

At press time, Questlove nearly drove off the road after Fallon jumped up from the back seat with one of the Jonas Brothers for an impromptu karaoke song.

Every Book on Elon Musk’s Shelf Just False Lever That Reveals Yet Another Katana Room

STARBASE, Texas — A contractor working on Elon Musk’s new Texas mega-mansion revealed that every book on the billionaire’s shelf was just a false lever that reveals a katana room, sources confirmed.

“You have no idea how much of a nightmare building this library was—see that shelf over there, the one with forty copies of ‘The Art of Epic War by Elon Musk’? Each copy is a fake lever that opens up its own individual katana room,” said Mark Galloway, examining the blueprints of the Imperium Wing. “Normally I’d be excited to win a contract this big, but every day he’d come in and give weird notes like ‘more yeet’ or ‘can you make the katana moan when I remove it from the display.’ Not to mention he keeps trying to pay me in something called SkibidiCoin. Sir, I don’t know what that is but I don’t want to accept any currency that comes out of a virtual toilet.”

Elsa McCormick, a maid at Musk’s mansion, revealed the difficulties of cleaning the labyrinthian interior of his palatial manor.

“Mr. Mus—oh, excuse my insubordination, he prefers God-Emperor of Mankind—The God-Emperor is very specific about how I clean his ‘cerebral dojos’,” said McCormick, carefully dusting a custom katana with a handle carved from a copy of ‘Atlas Shrugged’. “I do prefer this job to working in the Holodeck rooms, though. It makes me very uncomfortable when he commands me to read a bedtime story to his thirty virtual children who are programmed to call me ‘Mommy Grimes.'”

Musk himself insisted that his many secret rooms were necessary to concentrate on pioneering the next technological revolution.

“You must keep your mind as sharp as a fine katana forged from the rarest space metals, and my many cerebral dojos allow me a place to complete complex astrobiomechanical calculations while honing my skills with the blade,” said Musk, hacking through a stack of ‘woke’ video games. “In fact, I have the highest-IQ master blacksmiths forging me new katanas around the clock. Satoshi-San here wrote me a fantastic haiku the other day: ‘Lord of space and time. Not weird, but cool, actually. Daddy would be proud.’ Simply tremendous, I shall have it emblazoned on the gates of my first Mars colony.”

At press time, President Trump visited Musk’s mansion and asked why he was having pajama parties with Benihana chefs in his dumb knife rooms.

We Honor David Lynch’s Legacy by Looking Back at 10 Scenes from his Filmography that Made Us Say “Wow, That Was Fucked Up”

Earlier this week, iconic American filmmaker David Lynch died, leaving behind an astonishingly brilliant and bizarre body of work that blends violence, romance, mystery, surrealism, and classic Hollywood panache into a style that no other director has matched. And within that body of work is a whole bunch of scenes that you’ve probably played on YouTube for an unsuspecting friend, prefacing the viewing with “Dude, you gotta see this, it’s so fucked up!” In honor of Lynch’s life and work, let’s look back at the ten weirdest, funniest, most disturbing examples:

10. Coffee Table Head Slice (Lost Highway, 1997)

Not only does Pete get to make out with Patricia Arquette, but when they’re ambushed by Andy (Michael Massee), he executes a flawless WWE-style rolling kick-throw that launches Andy across the room. Unfortunately, there’s a glass coffee table in the middle of that room, which pretty much perfectly bisects his head. In keeping with the typical Lynchian aesthetic, Pete and Alice examine this tableau with little more than bemused curiosity.

9. Shooting the Phantom (Inland Empire, 2006)

So you’ve just endured almost 3 hours of arthouse experimental horror insanity? Here’s some jumpscare nightmare fuel to send you home in a state of paralytic anxiety.

8. Laura Palmer’s Death (Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, 1992)

After countless slasher flicks throughout the ‘70s and ‘80s gave us all kinds of ways that popular blonde girls could be killed, Lynch outclasses them all with a scene that is genuinely touching, emotionally gutwrenching, and terrifying. The cry of “Please don’t make me do this!” will stick with you for quite a while.

7. Willem DaFoe’s Head (Wild at Heart, 1990)

After one of the most unsettling scenes of sexual assault in cinema history, Bobby Peru pulls a heist with Sailor in which he shoots two store clerks and then prepares to kill Sailor as well. Then he gets into a firefight with a sheriff’s deputy, somehow falls to his knees with his own shotgun jammed into his neck, and, well, remember Sub-Zero’s fatality in the OG “Mortal Kombat” game? The next few seconds are basically that.

6. All of Dune (1984)

The entire movie is messed up, though not in the same sort of existential freak-out way that Lynch’s other films are. More in a “Wow, people actually spent creative energy and money to make this movie, that’s a shame” sort of way.

5. Welcome to Lumberton (Blue Velvet, 1986)

In a tight 2 minutes, the opening sequence to Lynch’s masterpiece puts across a pretty well-trodden idea: Beneath the placid surface of Anytown USA, dark and anti-social forces lurk, just waiting to infest all that is good and righteous. It’s a cliché premise that’s been explored in cinema from Hitchcock’s “Shadow of a Doubt” to “American Beauty,” but nobody does it quite like Lynch. With nothing but a montage of oversaturated images and a Bobby Vinton song, this scene not only introduces the theme of the entire film, but subtly suggests that the people on the “good” side of this duality are unknowingly empowering the dark side. And all this before Kyle MacLachlan even finds that ear.

4. The Horrific Figure in the Alley (Mulholland Dr., 2001)

Even the first time you see the movie, you know it’s coming. Two men in Winkie’s Diner literally just discussed a nightmare about how fear leads to more fear, and how that fear is, naturally enough, wielded by a filthy man who hides in the dumpster behind Winkie’s, and as they leave the diner to see if the man is real, every single aspect of the cinematography tells you a jumpscare is coming, and then, sure as shootin’, it comes, but you still jump a mile and shriek like a toddler.

3. The Mystery Man (Lost Highway, 1997)

Robert Blake’s first appearance at a distinctively Lynchian party in the Hollywood Hills makes for one of those scenes that sort of splits the difference between funny and terrifying. Sure, he freaks out Fred with the ol’ “I’m both here and at your house at once!” parlor trick, and it’s creepy, but he still seems like an affable fellow. But when he appears in a VHS shot along with Fred’s murdered wife a little later? You’re gonna need a minute.

2. Voyeurism in the Closet (Blue Velvet, 1986)

So you found out your friend hasn’t seen “Blue Velvet,” and you were like “Dude! You haven’t seen ‘Blue Velvet’?! That’s crazy, we gotta watch it right now!” and it’s going pretty well until the scene where Jeffrey spies on Dorothy and Frank while they do their whole non-consensual BDSM with amyl nitrate in a gas mask thing, and suddenly your friend is looking at you like you’re a psychopath for owning this movie, and all your protestations about how it’s the greatest art film of the 1980s and was basically Lynch’s redemption project after “Dune” shit the bed can’t make up for the fact that you just made your buddy sit through one of the most depraved scenes ever put on film.

1. Visiting Mary’s Parents (Eraserhead, 1977)

There’s really not a single scene in this movie that isn’t deeply unsettling to the point of making you feel vaguely violated and dirty. The smash cut to the baby covered in sores? The Vaudeville-on-acid spectacle of the Girl in the Radiator? Henry being decapitated by the giant phallic parasite thing that apparently lives inside him? All good candidates for number 1, but for our money it’s the long sequence in which Henry visits his girlfriend Mary and her deranged parents, only to be slapped with paternal responsibility for the infamously inhuman “Eraserhead Baby.” Whether it’s Mary’s out-of-nowhere seizure that doesn’t even stop Henry from talking about his job as a printer, or Mary’s mother’s attempt to make out with him, or her making a salad by manipulating a comatose old woman’s hands like a marionette, or the giant parody of a grin on Mary’s father’s face as he talks about being a plumber, this scene is offputting in a way you can feel in your bones. But it’s the carving of the homemade chickens that will really stick with you. Lynch’s career-long fascination with the intertwined dynamics of the organic and the mechanical really comes home to roost (as it were) in this immortal moment of surrealist indie filmmaking.

Opening Band Thinks It’s Really Important You Know Their Bass Player’s Name is Steve

PORT TOWNSEND, Wash. — Local opening band Eyeball Soup thought it was crucial that the audience know their bassist’s name is Steve, confirmed sources who didn’t know what to do with that information.

“As the singer, frontman, and host of the band, I like to make it a point to provide the audience with each member’s name, instrument, and Social Security number so they can get better acquainted with us. Seems to work too because the crowd is always on their phones the entire time we play. I assume they’re just Googling Steve and simply cannot wait until after the set,” said vocalist Derek Fineberg while putting a name tag on the bassist so the crowd wouldn’t forget. “Besides, it would be extremely rude if we played our full 20-minute set without a proper introduction. Sometimes I even pause the show halfway through to ask all six members of the audience for their names. This way, it’s like we all know each other on an intimate level. It almost sometimes works.”

The crowd seemed excited to know about the existence of Steve.

“Wow, so cool that I finally know the name of a bass player,” said audience member Janet Remington. “Up until this point I had assumed they were all nameless. Primus? The Beatles? Red Hot Chili Peppers? No one ever knows the name of the bassist, yet here I am with the knowledge of Steve at my disposal. I am forever thankful that this band took time out of their set to let us know about him. I still won’t be buying their demo though.”

Experts understood the opening band’s reasoning for their bold move.

“Openers have to do everything in their power to get a crowd to care about them,” said scene veteran Lou Sastch. “It’s like the second you name an animal, the harder it is to kill it for food. Now that we all know about Steve, it would be emotionally traumatic to murder him for sustenance mid-set, he’s a fully realized human now. The same can’t be said about other more anonymous opening bands, however.”

At press time, Fineberg thought it was also important that their bass player was single and available for anyone who was interested.

J.D. Vance Wakes Up in Cold Sweat After Nightmare Where Minimum Wage Workers Had Health Insurance

WASHINGTON — Vice President J.D. Vance suddenly woke up from a recurring nightmare in which a minimum wage employee wasn’t in extreme medical debt due to a lack of insurance coverage, confirmed sweaty sources.

“It was awful. Cashiers, dishwashers, even Uber drivers were able to afford life-saving medicine! I think one was even a union member with incredible medical benefits. I never want to see such visions again,” said Vance while sitting down on his fainting couch. “This can’t be good for me. I need my minimum of 10 hours of sleep so I can do important work like appear on podcasts and shake hands with investors. Sometimes I even have a nightmare where children get lunch for free at schools. Won’t someone think of the taxpayers for once instead of the nutritionally deficient kids?”

His wife Usha Vance was at his bedside comforting him through this troubled time.

“The sheets are once again soaked from his terror sweats and also a little urine. Nothing out of the usual. However, he keeps muttering ‘pull your bootstraps’ and ‘get a real job like bitcoin investing’ in his sleep,” said the Vice President’s wife. “I’ve had to wake him up and assure him that as long as they live in America, the greatest country in the world, there’s little fear about his tax dollars paying for a wheelchair. He usually feels after I tell him the dollar amount of the U.S. military budget and then read a passage from his autobiography to him until he falls back into slumber.”

Vice President Vance contacted his long time mentor Peter Thiel for help.

“I told him to take a deep breath and remember that he has nothing to worry about. If it keeps happening, just hire a 19 year old to pump his blood into your veins,” Thiel said before looking off into the distance with concern. “Poor little guy. I hope he recovers. He’s still scarred from a childhood of seeing people who don’t receive scholarships to ivy leagues. He’s grown so much since then but I still worry about him. If he’s going to co-run this country, he needs to separate his reality from others’ nightmares of acquiring severe medical debt.”

At press time, Vice President Vance violently woke up from another nightmare where housing was affordable for first-time homebuyers.

I Have Reservations for 6:30, but I’m a Few Minutes Early So I Can Just Stand Outside, or Maybe I Should Just Leave, I’m So Sorry

Hi there. I have reservations for 6:30, but I’m a few minutes early. I can just stand outside—or maybe I should leave? I’m so sorry. I always set my clocks a little fast so I’m never late, but sometimes it means I get in a little too early. Marilyn has still never forgiven me for that time I was 20 minutes early to her Christmas party. Again, truly, I apologize.

I knew we should have circled the block a few times. Our GPS said we’d arrive at 6:19, but I thought maybe we could walk slowly enough from the parking lot. I warned my husband about this a mile before we arrived, but he was so sure everything would be fine. Yet here we are, at 6:23. I’m so embarrassed.

At least you’re open! As we were walking up, I thought you might be closed. I know I looked up your hours and successfully made a reservation, but when I saw the lights on and people bustling inside, I assumed you must be cleaning. But my husband insisted it was fine and that the open sign probably wasn’t a mistake.

Perhaps we could sit at the bar while we wait. Would that be easier? I see an open seat, so maybe I can sit there, and my husband can just kind of awkwardly stand behind me as waiters try to navigate the narrow lane of traffic. Would that be alright?

Oh, you’re ready for us? But it’s only 6:26, are you sure? No, you don’t have to take my coat. I’ll just drape it over my seat. A booth? I’ll just sit on it then. I agree it is quite a large fur coat, but it’ll be comfortable. I don’t mean to be so much trouble.

Tap is fine; I wouldn’t want to bother you for sparkling. Actually, now that I’m looking at the menu, do you mind if I ask a question? I’m not seeing anything that’s calling to me, but I do notice you have a grits side and shrimp cocktail appetizer. Do you think your chef could turn that into a shrimp and grits entrée? I can explain it to the chef if that would be helpful. Thank you so much.