(KUTV) SALT LAKE CITY A Salt Lake County woman has been arrested, accused of attacking her husband with a hammer on Friday night.Although another news story off of Fark was about a man who stabbed his 70 year old father to death, and then immediately after managed to kill himself by decapitating himself with a chainsaw. I'm not exactly sure how he managed to do it, but it seems like he managed to completely cut his own head off. (Shudder)
Joel Ricks told authorities that his wife Amy told him she had a surprise for him. He said she blindfolded him and led him into the basement of a Holladay condominium.
The woman then allegedly struck her husband with a hammer multiple times.
The man was able to escape and called 911. Deputies arrested his wife for aggravated assault.
So, this changes from time to time. I try something, I fail, I try something else, I fail. Someday, something will not fail.
Wednesday, May 09, 2007
God People are Funny.
I mean, c'mon! That's just funny.
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3 comments:
OK, since I am catching up, and am so self important that I am sure you wish to know my thoughts on almost everything, I'll respond to the Marie Antoniette post. Actually, the Madame Tussad part. Madame Tussad's wax gallery is still around, and is awesome. Its in London, and I've been there twice. Pretty cool. Anyway, here is a little tidbit on Madame Tussad
"Madame Tussaud claimed to be part of a distinguished Swiss family, though in reality she was descended from a long line of executioners (perhaps offering a genetic explanation for her penchant for horror). Papa had absconded and Marie's eighteen-year-old mother took the infant to Berne, entering domestic service for Dr. Curtius, a maker of wax anatomical models with a profitable sideline in erotic wax tableaux. Curtius soon spotted little Marie's precocious talent and enlisted her to help with the waxworks ...The menage moved to Paris and when the opportunistic Curtius became a prominent Jacobin, his dinner party circuit expanded to include the revolutionaries Marat and Danton; Marie would be reacquainted with them during the Terror when she modelled their corpses. [Soon she] was playing a starring role in the Terror. Stoically picking her way through the newly stormed Bastille with Robespierre as a guide (she soon would soon be casting his decapitated remains), stepping through the gore in the Tuileries, fainting away as Marie Antoinette climbed the scaffold, but reviving in time to collect the royal head, Tussaud seems to have been present at every important occasion. Crossing the Channel [with her wax models to] Georgian England ... the new middle classes flocked to the exhibition, which offered them history, news and celebrity gossip not just about monarchs, statesmen and military figures, but also notorious criminals and fashionable actresses. Tussaud's medium was perfectly suited to the era's new culture of impermanence. As fashions came and went, those no longer in the public eye were removed and melted down."
SJ
OK, for some reason I can't comment on your Rodrigo and Gabrielle post, but I must agree with you, pretty f'n sweet. Reminds me of Arizona where you can go to these off the wall Mexican bars and watch acoustic guitar players perform some amazing shit.
SJ
P.S. Chink
Did you just finish exams or something? Or did you just come back and read all these at once?
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