Not that there's ever an especially good month when your only job on this planet is to sit around, get fat and occasionally pop out eggs.
It's kind of like living your entire life as a "Honey Boo Boo" cast member. But with a shred of dignity.
This particular rough
month actually started trending two weeks ago when, early in the morning
on July 9, a truck carrying more than 5,000 chickens overturned in
downtown Salem, Oregon. Sadly, many of the poor little cluckers died.
Others, perhaps stunned from the crash, just wandered aimlessly about
the streets, suddenly free from captivity. Which must've been remarkably
weird.
"Gertrude, is this heaven?"
"No. It's Salem."
The story quickly found its way around the Interwebs because, really, it has all the makings of must-see news.
"Apparently This Matters" Is Jarrett Bellini's weekly (and somewhat random) look at social-media trends.
Was there a big crash?
Yes. Was there negligence involved? Possibly. Did hundreds of live
animals on a roadway have to be rounded up by humans.
Abso-freakin-lutely!
It was gold.
But just when the Salem
truck story seemed to go away -- as oddball stories eventually do -- it
magically came roaring back. All thanks to PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals).
In response to the
crash, the organization proposed a 5½-foot-tall, 250-pound statue of a
giant bloody chicken on crutches, memorializing the hundreds that
perished in the crash. PETA hoped it could stand at the intersection
near where the accident happened to alert livestock truckers to be extra
careful and to remind motorists that "chickens are among the most
abused animals on the planet."
PETA spokeswoman Shakira
Croce added that "the best way to prevent crashes like this is to go
vegan so that chickens don't have to make the trip to the slaughterhouse
in the first place."
Personally, I love the
idea. Mind you, not because of my politics -- when it comes to such
matters, I have no opinion. But I do love absurd landmarks. And every
city needs something delightfully wackadoo.
Like a big chicken.
Oddly enough, we actually have a big chicken right here in Atlanta's northern suburb of Marietta. We call it ... the Big Chicken.
The huge structure
stands 56 feet high, rising into the air from a KFC. So, in a sense, it,
too, is a monument to dead chickens. Dead chickens coated with 11 herbs
and spices.
Metro Atlantans are really proud of Marietta's famous Big Chicken. It's pretty amazing.
The best part about Marietta's Big Chicken is that people actually use it as a directional landmark.
"Make a left at the Big Chicken. Go one block up. And you'll find me on the sidewalk. I'll be the one not wearing pants."
So it's helpful. And I've actually seen it used in serious news stories. This is a real excerpt from a 2009 article in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
"A Marietta police
officer involved in a two-car accident Saturday afternoon is fine,
according to police officials. The incident occurred around 3:25 p.m. at
Cobb Parkway and Roswell Road in front of the Big Chicken."
Naturally, if you didn't know about the landmark, reading this would blow your mind.
"That must've been one crazy-ass chicken."
Unfortunately, PETA's
Bloody Chicken of Salem statue was officially shot down this week by the
Oregon Department of Transportation. Kevin Hottman, a city traffic
engineer, noted that it's a congested area and the statue "would be a
distraction and possibly a hazard."
So, now, chickens in
Salem will just have to live in constant fear of another roadside
tragedy while they're on their way to get slaughtered.
And speaking of chicken
slaughter, there was another story that started trending this week. It
was about an Arizona woman who found a chicken foot in a package of
breast meat from Safeway.
Chicken foot mixed in with breasts - in other countries, this counts as a bonus.
The disgusted shopper tweeted, "Hey, @Safeway, does this look like 'chicken breast' to you? I'm vomiting."
Despite the Internet chastising the woman
for overreacting, Safeway nevertheless confirmed that the chicken foot
was real and issued a statement saying, "While the part does not pose a
health risk, we are investigating how it became packaged in with our
product."
And then the ghost of the chicken issued its own statement:
"I'm incredibly sorry
that my severed foot somehow ended up in the same package as my severed
breast. I know that must've been unsettling. PS: My head is in a
landfill."
Yep. It's been a rough month for chickens.
source cnn.
No comments:
Post a Comment