Daily Archives: August 17, 2023

Special “Patronage County Today” E-dition

 

image006image003

WE’RE STILL CATCHING UP,

SO THIS E-DITION FROM THE ARCHIVES IS FOR SATURDAY, AUGUST 12, 2023
TRUMP’S NINE-HUNDRED-AND-THIRTY-FOURTH DAY OUT-OF-OFFICE
AND BLUEGRASS BUREAU CHIEF KEN CAMBOO SAYS THE TRUMP CAMPAIGN WOULD LIKE TO THANK THE FISHWRAP FOR PROMOTING THEIR FUNDRAISING CAMPAIGN. DONATIONS HAVE INCREASED DRAMATICALLY SINCE THE TRUMPSTER CANCELLED HIS APPEARANCE WITH THE DISBARRED BARRISTER FROM NOKY.
PATRONAGE COUNTY

These Fictitious People Still Sound A Lot Like Some People We Know

         image004Here’s another column featuring the same sleazy 1980s characters at the satirical Patronage County Courthouse, to illustrate things going on hereabouts these days, so our Persons of Consequence might gain yet another useful perspective on the news.

These articles are Beloved Whistleblower Publisher Charles Foster Kane’s attempt to encourage undiscovered young writers, such as the struggling columnist below who shares his acute and surprisingly accurate take on local Politics as Usual in satirical Patronage County.image009

  “Have a Nice Weekend” By James Jay Schifrin

image005

One sure sign of the high degree in which the work ethic is held by most residents Patronage County these days is everybody’s fanatical obsession with telling everyone they meet to “have a nice weekend.”

It used to be that everywhere you went, people were telling to have a nice day.  Now the same strangers are telling you what kind of time to have on your weekend. 

Mondays and Thursdays are devoted to asking what kind of weekend you had. Wednesday is a free day. On Thursday, people ask if you’re planning anything special for the weekend. And on Friday, no conversation can be officially concluded until each participant insists that the other has a nice weekend.

Americans’ preoccupation with wishing everybody a nice weekend is understandable, because people suffer so terribly during the week. Monday through Friday people put in their time on their jobs. Saturday and Sunday they don’t.

Things are different in other countries where pride in one’s job and productivity are higher. In Japan, for example, all day Saturday people ask each other what kind of week they had. And as the weekend comes to a close, they offer a prayer, saying, “Thank God it’s Sunday.”  

image023This op-ed column first appeared in the feisty Mt. Washington Press personally edited by eminently renowned publisher Dennis Nichols on August 15, 1984.

image003image006