Post by Artemis on Dec 14, 2003 15:22:26 GMT -5
French Pony
PPC AV Department -- A Different Flame, Part 1 (Archive)
Sun Dec 14 2003 1:14:03 pm
Hear ye, hear ye! The Balrog Sue has been PPC'd for your reading pleasure.
The PPC AV Department -- A Different Flame
"Marco!"
"Polo!"
"Marco!"
"Pol—oh, there you are, Frenchie." Adam hurried down the aisle to his partner and dropped his clipboard on a shelf. "How’s the inventory coming?"
Frenchie wrinkled her nose. "So far, I’ve counted three xhoomei recordings, seventeen of Bosnian hill singing, and one hundred seventy three different pop songs from Suefics. You?"
Adam leaned his head against a shelf. "I was cataloguing the Legendary Movies section when I came across the Star Wars Holiday Special."
"You poor thing."
"Wookiee porn! I will never look at Diahann Carroll with a straight face again!" Adam wailed.
Adam. Frenchie.
The AV Geeks tried to hide by squeezing themselves into the same shelf. It wasn’t that they didn’t have a healthy respect for the Rose of Sharon, but a summons from her invariably led to Bad Things.
Oh, stop it. It is useless to hide. Come out and present yourselves. There is an Assignment for you.
Trembling, the Geeks emerged from the stacks, brushing themselves more or less clean of archive dust. The Rose of Sharon, appearing at the door to the Cryptomusic Archives, waved her fronds against the resulting clouds.
"An Assignment?" Adam asked. "What sort of assignment?"
"Will singing Sues be involved?" Frenchie added suspiciously.
No. It is quite simple. I have examined the accounting you made yesterday of the B. S. Johnson Collection Of Improbable Sounds, and I find the collection lacking.
"But we catalogued everything," Frenchie protested. "It took a whole day. The footfalls of a cat –"
"—the trumpet of the swan – " Adam chimed in.
"George W. Bush uttering a grammatically correct sentence," Frenchie finished. "We wrote everything down. I’m sure of it."
Precisely. The collection must be expanded. I am dispatching you on a Collecting Mission. Please take a remote activator and your field recording equipment and bring back the roar of a Balrog.
"But Balrogs don’t make noise," Adam said.
Precisely. You will therefore collect recordings of all Balrog roars extant. And please, label them neatly.
There was no arguing with the Rose of Sharon. Frenchie and Adam set down their clipboards and started stuffing microphones, cardboard, cables and DAT tapes into their duffel bags. Frenchie clipped the remote activator to her belt and twisted the knob on the portal generator. Adam flipped through the list of disguises.
"We’ll be Orcs," he said. "The better to get close to a Balrog. Shall we take a Canon Analysis Device?"
Frenchie shrugged. "Might as well. It’ll help us determine the Improbability Level for cataloguing."
"Right." And with that, the Geeks stepped through the portal.
The first half of the Collecting Mission went surprisingly well. The Geeks hid in the rotoscoped shadows of Ralph Bakshi’s conception of Moria. There were plenty of hiding places for their microphones, and daring Frenchie even managed to weave a lavalier mike into the Balrog’s enormous mane when it wasn’t looking. The Balrog gave out a satisfying, if utterly uncanonical, series of roars, grunts and growls, and the DAT tape was sealed and labeled as to time, date and Improbability Level (High As A Kite On The Fourth Of July).
"Well, that went well," Frenchie said as the Geeks packed their duffel bags. "Let’s see. . . the BBC had a silent Balrog, so our next stop is The Movie."
"Lead on, Macduff," Adam said. "And. . . um. . . may our next mission not be rough!"
Frenchie rolled her eyes and clicked the remote activator. Nothing happened. She clicked it again. Still nothing. "Stupid activator," she grumbled. "It’s gone all two-and-a-half-dimensional."
"It’s the rotoscoping," Adam said, peering over Frenchie’s shoulder at the painted-over piece of electronica. "We’re still live-action, but we’re in a cartoon world. Maybe if we use a cartoon device to activate it. . . " He searched around and came up with a nail from an Orc boot. Squinting a little because of the lack of depth perception in Bakshi’s world, he stabbed at the remote activator. A portal obligingly opened up, and the Geeks wandered through without a second thought.
They had arrived just in time, it seemed. The Fellowship stood at one end of the narrow stone bridge. Gandalf confronted an impressively fiery Balrog in the middle. Frenchie hooked the microphone cord to the DAT recorder and inserted a tape as Adam held the boom.
The Balrog opened its maw and let forth a subtly threatening "hhhhhhhhhh" that shimmered out with the heat waves that rolled over the Fellowship and the hidden Geeks.
"That is some truly serious hallitosis," Adam said approvingly.
The old man raised his own sword and his staff in silent answer to the demon.
"You cannot pass!"
'As if I wanted to, you idiot!' Durin's Bane thought as he brought his flaming sword down upon the old man –
"What the?!" Frenchie ripped off her headphones and turned to stare at the Balrog. "It’s not supposed to talk in slang! That’s one of the things Jackson got right! This isn’t his movie! What happened?"
Adam frantically rooted around in the duffel bag and fished out the CAD. He waved it at the Balrog.
[DURIN’S BANE. BALROG MALE. CANON. OUT OF CHARACTER 74.63%.]
"Oh, fudgecakes and shinola, we’re in a Mary Sue story," Adam groaned. "The rotoscoping must have screwed up the remote activator. I keep telling Makes-Things to put a tougher casing on them, those electronics are delicate – "
"Screw that," Frenchie said. "If we’re in a Mary Sue story. . . where’s the Sue?"
"Don’t ask, maybe she won’t show up," Adam said. "Help me pack the equipment, stat!" The Geeks had only managed to pack the DAT tapes away when the Balrog fell, emitting a loud roar and a wave of Angst that knocked them to the ground. The minor bruising sustained by this was more than compensated for by the fact that the Geeks were already flat on their faces when a time distortion followed through, leaving them retching with the vertigo.
"Remind me to add Dramamine to the duffels when we get back to Headquarters," Adam said, when they could speak again.
"Never mind that," Frenchie snapped irritably. "I just want to know when we are and where that Sue is."
The ground shook, then shook again. Adam turned. He gaped. He tapped Frenchie on the shoulder. "Frenchie," he whispered. "Pick up the CAD and turn around. Very slowly."
Frenchie did so, and goggled. A female Balrog, with multicolored mane and deep blue eyes, was clomping lithely towards them. "Holy fire breathing fashion plate, Batman!" she gasped, and thrust the CAD between her and the monster.
[HARROW. BALROG FEMALE. NON-CANON. MARY SUE SUE SUE SUE HELP ME OBI-WAN! YOU’RE MY ONLY HOPE!]
Frenchie dropped the CAD just as it exploded. "A Balrog Sue?" she asked rhetorically. The Geeks watched in horrified fascination as the Balrog Sue crawled on all fours to the lip of the chasm and snuffed around.
"No..." the female whispered softly before she gathered her wits about her, spread her wings, and dove off into the abyss.
As she fell, the tip of one wing caught the microphone stand. The Geeks and their equipment were swept after her into the abyss.
Long time she fell, and they fell with her, pausing in their screaming only to speculate on what latitude and longitude they had reached, whether they might emerge in a country where people walked upside down and once to enjoy a pot of marmalade lodged incongruously in a passing crevice. Just as they could see the waters of the subterranean lake growing closer, there was a roar and a dreadful jerking. For a brief, queasy instant, they were falling up, and then there was a soft whumph! and all was quiet.
Frenchie hauled herself out of the snowdrift in which she had landed and looked around. The Balrog Sue was occupied searching for the Balrog. Adam lay in a rapidly melting snowbank. Shards of microphone and DAT recorder lay all around them. Frenchie cursed in Yiddish. She poked around in the snow some more and came up with the duffel bag, which contained the DAT tapes themselves, unharmed. A quick eyeballing of the surrounding area revealed that the remote activator had fallen near the dead Balrog.
She assessed her situation, and did not like what she came up with; stranded in a Sue story, surrounded by the remains of her equipment and her unconscious partner. Frenchie pulled the headphones over her ears in a vain attempt to feel normal.
As it turned out, she did so just in time to avoid the brunt of the pop song that thundered through the air as the Balrog Sue found her mate's body. The headphones protected Frenchie's ears, and instead of reducing her eardrums to shreds, it merely stunned her so that she fell face first into the snow across Adam's body.
PPC AV Department -- A Different Flame, Part 1 (Archive)
Sun Dec 14 2003 1:14:03 pm
Hear ye, hear ye! The Balrog Sue has been PPC'd for your reading pleasure.
The PPC AV Department -- A Different Flame
"Marco!"
"Polo!"
"Marco!"
"Pol—oh, there you are, Frenchie." Adam hurried down the aisle to his partner and dropped his clipboard on a shelf. "How’s the inventory coming?"
Frenchie wrinkled her nose. "So far, I’ve counted three xhoomei recordings, seventeen of Bosnian hill singing, and one hundred seventy three different pop songs from Suefics. You?"
Adam leaned his head against a shelf. "I was cataloguing the Legendary Movies section when I came across the Star Wars Holiday Special."
"You poor thing."
"Wookiee porn! I will never look at Diahann Carroll with a straight face again!" Adam wailed.
Adam. Frenchie.
The AV Geeks tried to hide by squeezing themselves into the same shelf. It wasn’t that they didn’t have a healthy respect for the Rose of Sharon, but a summons from her invariably led to Bad Things.
Oh, stop it. It is useless to hide. Come out and present yourselves. There is an Assignment for you.
Trembling, the Geeks emerged from the stacks, brushing themselves more or less clean of archive dust. The Rose of Sharon, appearing at the door to the Cryptomusic Archives, waved her fronds against the resulting clouds.
"An Assignment?" Adam asked. "What sort of assignment?"
"Will singing Sues be involved?" Frenchie added suspiciously.
No. It is quite simple. I have examined the accounting you made yesterday of the B. S. Johnson Collection Of Improbable Sounds, and I find the collection lacking.
"But we catalogued everything," Frenchie protested. "It took a whole day. The footfalls of a cat –"
"—the trumpet of the swan – " Adam chimed in.
"George W. Bush uttering a grammatically correct sentence," Frenchie finished. "We wrote everything down. I’m sure of it."
Precisely. The collection must be expanded. I am dispatching you on a Collecting Mission. Please take a remote activator and your field recording equipment and bring back the roar of a Balrog.
"But Balrogs don’t make noise," Adam said.
Precisely. You will therefore collect recordings of all Balrog roars extant. And please, label them neatly.
There was no arguing with the Rose of Sharon. Frenchie and Adam set down their clipboards and started stuffing microphones, cardboard, cables and DAT tapes into their duffel bags. Frenchie clipped the remote activator to her belt and twisted the knob on the portal generator. Adam flipped through the list of disguises.
"We’ll be Orcs," he said. "The better to get close to a Balrog. Shall we take a Canon Analysis Device?"
Frenchie shrugged. "Might as well. It’ll help us determine the Improbability Level for cataloguing."
"Right." And with that, the Geeks stepped through the portal.
The first half of the Collecting Mission went surprisingly well. The Geeks hid in the rotoscoped shadows of Ralph Bakshi’s conception of Moria. There were plenty of hiding places for their microphones, and daring Frenchie even managed to weave a lavalier mike into the Balrog’s enormous mane when it wasn’t looking. The Balrog gave out a satisfying, if utterly uncanonical, series of roars, grunts and growls, and the DAT tape was sealed and labeled as to time, date and Improbability Level (High As A Kite On The Fourth Of July).
"Well, that went well," Frenchie said as the Geeks packed their duffel bags. "Let’s see. . . the BBC had a silent Balrog, so our next stop is The Movie."
"Lead on, Macduff," Adam said. "And. . . um. . . may our next mission not be rough!"
Frenchie rolled her eyes and clicked the remote activator. Nothing happened. She clicked it again. Still nothing. "Stupid activator," she grumbled. "It’s gone all two-and-a-half-dimensional."
"It’s the rotoscoping," Adam said, peering over Frenchie’s shoulder at the painted-over piece of electronica. "We’re still live-action, but we’re in a cartoon world. Maybe if we use a cartoon device to activate it. . . " He searched around and came up with a nail from an Orc boot. Squinting a little because of the lack of depth perception in Bakshi’s world, he stabbed at the remote activator. A portal obligingly opened up, and the Geeks wandered through without a second thought.
They had arrived just in time, it seemed. The Fellowship stood at one end of the narrow stone bridge. Gandalf confronted an impressively fiery Balrog in the middle. Frenchie hooked the microphone cord to the DAT recorder and inserted a tape as Adam held the boom.
The Balrog opened its maw and let forth a subtly threatening "hhhhhhhhhh" that shimmered out with the heat waves that rolled over the Fellowship and the hidden Geeks.
"That is some truly serious hallitosis," Adam said approvingly.
The old man raised his own sword and his staff in silent answer to the demon.
"You cannot pass!"
'As if I wanted to, you idiot!' Durin's Bane thought as he brought his flaming sword down upon the old man –
"What the?!" Frenchie ripped off her headphones and turned to stare at the Balrog. "It’s not supposed to talk in slang! That’s one of the things Jackson got right! This isn’t his movie! What happened?"
Adam frantically rooted around in the duffel bag and fished out the CAD. He waved it at the Balrog.
[DURIN’S BANE. BALROG MALE. CANON. OUT OF CHARACTER 74.63%.]
"Oh, fudgecakes and shinola, we’re in a Mary Sue story," Adam groaned. "The rotoscoping must have screwed up the remote activator. I keep telling Makes-Things to put a tougher casing on them, those electronics are delicate – "
"Screw that," Frenchie said. "If we’re in a Mary Sue story. . . where’s the Sue?"
"Don’t ask, maybe she won’t show up," Adam said. "Help me pack the equipment, stat!" The Geeks had only managed to pack the DAT tapes away when the Balrog fell, emitting a loud roar and a wave of Angst that knocked them to the ground. The minor bruising sustained by this was more than compensated for by the fact that the Geeks were already flat on their faces when a time distortion followed through, leaving them retching with the vertigo.
"Remind me to add Dramamine to the duffels when we get back to Headquarters," Adam said, when they could speak again.
"Never mind that," Frenchie snapped irritably. "I just want to know when we are and where that Sue is."
The ground shook, then shook again. Adam turned. He gaped. He tapped Frenchie on the shoulder. "Frenchie," he whispered. "Pick up the CAD and turn around. Very slowly."
Frenchie did so, and goggled. A female Balrog, with multicolored mane and deep blue eyes, was clomping lithely towards them. "Holy fire breathing fashion plate, Batman!" she gasped, and thrust the CAD between her and the monster.
[HARROW. BALROG FEMALE. NON-CANON. MARY SUE SUE SUE SUE HELP ME OBI-WAN! YOU’RE MY ONLY HOPE!]
Frenchie dropped the CAD just as it exploded. "A Balrog Sue?" she asked rhetorically. The Geeks watched in horrified fascination as the Balrog Sue crawled on all fours to the lip of the chasm and snuffed around.
"No..." the female whispered softly before she gathered her wits about her, spread her wings, and dove off into the abyss.
As she fell, the tip of one wing caught the microphone stand. The Geeks and their equipment were swept after her into the abyss.
Long time she fell, and they fell with her, pausing in their screaming only to speculate on what latitude and longitude they had reached, whether they might emerge in a country where people walked upside down and once to enjoy a pot of marmalade lodged incongruously in a passing crevice. Just as they could see the waters of the subterranean lake growing closer, there was a roar and a dreadful jerking. For a brief, queasy instant, they were falling up, and then there was a soft whumph! and all was quiet.
Frenchie hauled herself out of the snowdrift in which she had landed and looked around. The Balrog Sue was occupied searching for the Balrog. Adam lay in a rapidly melting snowbank. Shards of microphone and DAT recorder lay all around them. Frenchie cursed in Yiddish. She poked around in the snow some more and came up with the duffel bag, which contained the DAT tapes themselves, unharmed. A quick eyeballing of the surrounding area revealed that the remote activator had fallen near the dead Balrog.
She assessed her situation, and did not like what she came up with; stranded in a Sue story, surrounded by the remains of her equipment and her unconscious partner. Frenchie pulled the headphones over her ears in a vain attempt to feel normal.
As it turned out, she did so just in time to avoid the brunt of the pop song that thundered through the air as the Balrog Sue found her mate's body. The headphones protected Frenchie's ears, and instead of reducing her eardrums to shreds, it merely stunned her so that she fell face first into the snow across Adam's body.