Dave Barry Is from Mars and Venus (4 page)

BOOK: Dave Barry Is from Mars and Venus
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So I say let’s fire up the rockets and get this program going before gravity gets so strong that all we can do is lie on the ground, helpless, while turtles rain down upon us. If you agree, write to your senators and congresspersons today and let them know where you stand. Stress the urgency of the situation. Stress their responsibility as public officials. Above all, stress that there’s room in the rocket with Ed.

This certificate proves that I was confirmed at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church on December 18, 1960. The church evidently had much lower standards in those days.

THE HOT SEAT

I
f you were to ask me how I came to set my toilet on fire, I would answer you in two simple words:
Reader’s Digest
.

I am referring specifically to the February 1995 issue of
Reader’s Digest
, which was sent to me by alert reader Jeff Jerrell, who had spotted a startling article originally written for
Health
magazine by Mary Roach.

The article is about germs, which are extremely tiny organisms—many of them smaller than the artist formerly known as Prince—that can be found in huge quantities virtually everywhere. To get an idea of what I mean, conduct the following:

Scientific Germ Experiment

Get a microscope and some spit. Put the spit on a glass slide and put it under the microscope lens. Now look through the eyepiece. You’ll notice, if you look closely, that you can’t see anything, because you have no idea how to operate a microscope. But while you’re looking, billions of germs, left on the eyepiece by the previous microscope user, will swarm into your eyeball—which to them is a regular Club Med—
and start reproducing like crazy via wild bacterial sex. You’ll probably need surgery.

Getting back to
Reader’s Digest:
The February article concerns leading University of Arizona germ scientist Chuck Gerba, Ph.D., who is a serious student of bacteria found in bathrooms. Consider the following absolutely true facts:

  1. He routinely goes into public rest rooms, unarmed, and takes bacteria samples from the toilets.

  2. His son’s middle name is “Escherichia,” after
    Escherichia coli
    , also known as E.
    coli
    , which is a common type of fecal bacteria.

Needless to say I had to call this man.

“You named your son after
bacteria?”
was my opening question.

“He finds that it’s a good conversation starter,” Gerba replied. “If we’d had a girl, we were going to name her ‘Sally Salmonella.’”

Gerba told me that there are definite hazards associated with his line of study.

“When you spend a lot of time taking samples on your knees in the stalls of public rest rooms,” he said, “people tend to call the cops on you. I’ve had to do some fast talking. I tell the cops, ‘It’s okay! I’m a scientist!’ And they say, ‘Yeah, right, we arrested a couple of scientists in this stall just last night.’”

Gerba told me that, in the course of his studies, he has learned some Amazing Toilet Facts:

Toilet Fact No. 1
—Based on scientific measurements of the holes in public-toilet seats, “Americans have the biggest butts in the world.”

Toilet Fact No.
2
—In any group of public toilets, the first stall is likely to have the least bacteria, and the middle ones are likely to have the most, because more people use them. (In determining the rate of usage, Gerba went into public toilets and
numbered the toilet paper squares.)

Toilet Fact No.
3
—The cleanest public toilets are found in national-chain restaurants; the worst are found in gas stations.

“I’m surprised,” Gerba said, “that no new life form has ever evolved from a gas-station toilet.”

Toilet Fact No. 4
—Every toilet user leaves a unique bacterial pattern; we know this thanks to a breakthrough technique Gerba developed called (I am not making any of this up) the Commode-A-Graph.

“If there’s ever a crime committed on a toilet,” Gerba said, “I can tell you who did it.”

(Asked if this technique could be a factor in the O.J. Simpson trial, Gerba replied, “Not unless he washed his hands in the toilet.”)

Toilet Fact No. 5
—When you flush, a process called “aerosolization” takes place, in which the toilet shoots out an invisible cloud of tiny, germ-infested water droplets that get all over everything. In
Reader’s Digest
, author Roach quotes Gerba as saying that if you keep your toothbrush within six feet of a commode, “you’re basically brushing your teeth with toilet water.”

So we see that a toilet is really nothing more than—to use a scientific parlance—a Yuck Bomb. The question is, what can you do about it? Is there any way to get a toilet
really
clean? This brings us to the truly fascinating part of Roach’s article, wherein Gerba and his family, demonstrating the only way to kill all the bacteria, put laboratory alcohol on
their commode bowl and—this is right on page 64 of
Reader’s Digest
, if you don’t believe me—set it on fire.

Let me stress right here that Gerba is a recognized toilet expert, and he had a fire extinguisher ready, and toilet-torching is VERY dangerous. You, the layperson, would be an irresponsible idiot to try it.

Fortunately, I am not a layperson; I am a trained humor columnist, and if there’s one thing I enjoy, it’s a clean toilet. So I tried Gerba’s technique, and I have to say that, in a darkened room, a flaming toilet has a strange kind of beauty that can only be described as “a strange kind of beauty.”

I’m tempted to speculate here on whether it might be possible to use this same technique to kill bacteria on other surfaces, such as the bodies of Tobacco Institute scientists, but I think I’m already in enough trouble as it is. So let me leave you with these important Toilet Health Reminders: (1) Avoid those middle stalls; (2) Move that toothbrush; and above all, (3) Don’t sit down until the bowl has completely cooled.

THE PILGRIMS
WERE TURKEYS

T
hanksgiving is a time of traditions, and there is no tradition more meaningful than the annual U.S. Department of Agriculture warning about fatal food-dwelling bacteria.

This year, I’m pleased to report, the department has outdone itself: For the first time ever, the department has officially advised Americans
not to stuff their turkeys
. Many alert readers sent in an Associated Press item in which the acting director of the Agriculture Department’s Meat and Poultry Hot Line—whose name is (I am not making any of this up) Bessie Berry—is quoted as saying: “Improperly cooked stuffing can cause serious illness or even death.”

I am frankly wondering if stuffing should be regulated, like assault rifles, to prevent it from falling into the wrong hands.

Bank Teller:
May I help you?

Robber:
Hand over the money!

Second Bank Teller:
Do as he says! He’s holding improperly cooked stuffing!

But the looming specter of a painful death should in no way dampen the festivity of your Thanksgiving dinner. Just make sure the food is prepared in accordance with federal guidelines (“STEP ONE: Lighting the Blowtorch”). And before you eat, don’t forget to bow your head for the traditional prayer of thanks (“We thank Thee for this bountiful meal and ask Thine forgiveness for the fact that we hath ordered pizza”).

Another traditional thing you should do is teach your kids the true meaning of Thanksgiving. I suggest you have them put on the following historical play,
The Very First Thanksgiving
, which I wrote myself after several backbreaking minutes of research in the encyclopedia.

The Very First Thanksgiving

(SCENE ONE: Some Pilgrims are standing on the deck of the
Mayflower.)

First Pilgrim:
Well, here it is, the year 1620
.

Second Pilgrim:
Yes, and we have been on this tiny ship, the
Mayflower,
for many weeks, fleeing persecution in England because of our religious views
.

Fourth Pilgrim:
Also, we wear hats that look like traffic cones
.

First Pilgrim:
What happened to the Third Pilgrim?

Second Pilgrim:
He’s throwing up
.

Fourth Pilgrim:
Hey, look! There’s Plymouth Rock! Pull over, captain!

Long John Silver:
Arrr
.

(SCENE TWO: The Pilgrims are standing on the shore.)

First Pilgrim:
Well, this looks like a barren area with poor soil and harsh winters, offering little chance for our survival
.

Other Pilgrims:
Perfect!

Robber:
Hand over the money!

First Pilgrim:
Hey! You already did your scene in this column!

Robber:
Whoops
.

Second Pilgrim:
Look! A Native American!

Native American:
Fortunately, I speak English. My name is Squanto
.

Fourth Pilgrim:
“Squanto”? What kind of name is “Squanto”?

Second Pilgrim:
It sounds nasty! It sounds like, “Mom! The dog made Squanto on the linoleum!”

First Pilgrim:
What’s “linoleum”?

Second Pilgrim:
I have no idea
.

Squanto:
I’m going to show you how to plant maize and beans using alewives, shad, or menhaden as fertilizer
.

Fourth Pilgrim:
“Alewives”?

Squanto:
That’s what it says in the encyclopedia
.

(SCENE THREE: One year later.)

First Pilgrim:
Well, here it is, one year later
.

Second Pilgrim:
That was a pretty harsh winter
.

Fourth Pilgrim:
That was definitely the last winter I plan to spend in a small confined space with people eating a diet of maize and beans
.

First Pilgrim:
Also, as you will recall, we had a lot of starvation and disease, the result being that half of us are dead
.

Second Pilgrim:
Time for a celebration!

(SCENE FOUR: The Pilgrims and Squanto are seated at a banquet table.)

First Pilgrim:
So here we are, at the (burp) first Thanksgiving
.

Second Pilgrim:
I definitely want the recipe for this ale-wife dip
.

Fourth Pilgrim:
Hey, Squanto, what are those drums saying?

Squanto (after listening for a moment):
Lions 14, Bears 7
.

First Pilgrim:
You know, Squanto, without your help, we never would have survived this winter. So we’ve decided to take over all of North America and pretty much obliterate your culture
.

Squanto:
Sure
.

First Pilgrim:
Really? You don’t mind?

Squanto:
No, not at all
.

First Pilgrim:
Great!

Squanto:
Try this stuffing
.

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