Triggering Madison & A Tip Jar

Chef Ramsay storms into Cafe Algarves like a Category 5 hurricane in an apron.

โ€œWHEREโ€™S THE TIP JAR?!โ€ he bellows, veins bulging like overcooked sausages.

Joze, the owner, calmly wipes his hands on a towel.
โ€œWe donโ€™t do tip jars here, Chef.โ€

Ramsay freezes. His eye twitches.

โ€œYouโ€ฆ donโ€™tโ€ฆ rewardโ€ฆ good service?โ€

โ€œWe prefer fair wages,โ€ Joze replies proudly.

Ramsayโ€™s phone suddenly erupts with Dies Irae blasting at full volume like the soundtrack to culinary Armageddon.

Then Joze leans in and asks politely,
โ€œChef, would you like a fuca?โ€

Ramsay spins around.

โ€œIโ€™M NOTโ€”โ€ he stops himself. โ€œExcuse me?โ€

โ€œA fuca,โ€ Joze repeats.

Ramsay throws his hands in the air. โ€œNo I don’t want to fucka, you fouled mouth old man. Iโ€™m not fucking with you, Iโ€™m asking for a TIP JAR!โ€

A server walks by and cheerfully says, โ€œBom tarde!โ€

Ramsay whirls around again. โ€œMy son has down’s syndrome you wretched old man!”.

Joze sighs. โ€œNo Chef it means…โ€

Ramsay points dramatically at the dining room.

โ€œSpecial people can do all sorts of jobs! Special people of all abilities can work in kitchens, run businesses, do incredible things. What weโ€™re NOT doing is turning greetings into insults because someone canโ€™t listen properly!โ€

He grabs a spoon like itโ€™s a royal sceptre.

โ€œAnd by the way โ€” a bonobo can learn complex tasks. Thatโ€™s impressive. YOU? You canโ€™t even put out a jar for gratuities!โ€

Joze finally holds up a large chefโ€™s knife.

โ€œChefโ€ฆ fuca means knife.โ€

Ramsay pauses.

The Dies Irae reaches full dramatic choir.

โ€œโ€ฆOh.โ€

Beat.

โ€œRight. Well. Good knife. TERRIBLE POLICY.โ€

He slams a mason jar on the counter.

โ€œWrite โ€˜TIPSโ€™ on it. Big letters. Or I swear Iโ€™ll conduct this kitchen like Mozart conducting chaos.โ€

Fade out as Ramsay argues with his own ringtone.

CheF Ramsey

Stopping junk food and Eating well is partially about cooking well and having the skills to do that.

12 Replies to “Triggering Madison & A Tip Jar”

  1. Kitchen Nightmares: The Algarves Stand-off
    SCENE:

    The interior of Cafe Algarves. The walls are lined with jars of high-quality spring water and artisanal chocolates. GORDON RAMSAY stands by the counter, holding a bill of sale and looking baffled.

    RAMSAY: (Pointing at the ledger) Iโ€™ve looked at the books, Joze! Youโ€™re giving away the house! Free spring water? Premium chocolate for “best customers”? This isn’t a business, itโ€™s a charity ward! How do you expect Cafe Algarves to survive the quarter?!

    JOZE: (Leaning over the counter, calm but firm) It survives because itโ€™s real, Gordon. You see “loss,” I see loyalty. Youโ€™re so obsessed with the “bottom line” that youโ€™ve forgotten the line is drawn on sand.

    RAMSAY: (Exploding) Itโ€™s not sand, itโ€™s global finance! You owe the suppliers, you owe the bankโ€”

    JOZE: (Cutting him off) And thatโ€™s the “Loony Tunes” part! I owe a system that creates “value” out of thin air and charges me interest for the privilege. My food rots on these shelves not because it isn’t the best in the city, but because the people walking past Cafe Algarves are being bled dry by usury. Theyโ€™re paying for the ghost of money theyโ€™ll never see!

    RAMSAY: (Rubbing his temples) Youโ€™re a chef, not a central banker! Focus on the plate!

    JOZE: The plate is part of the world, Gordon! You sink “major coin” into these failing restaurants on your show, and what happens? Six months later, the debt swallows them anyway. Your “fix” is just a prettier shroud for the funeral. Cafe Algarves doesn’t need your tips; it needs an economy that isn’t a debt-trap.

    RAMSAY: (Stunned) Youโ€™re actually serious. Youโ€™d rather go down swinging at the World Bank than change your appetizers?

    JOZE: (Reaches behind the counter and slides a glass of crystal-clear spring water and a dark chocolate square toward Ramsay) Drink. Eat. Itโ€™s on me. No debt, no interest, no “bullshit” television drama. Just a gift from one man to another. Thatโ€™s the only real economy left.

    RAMSAY: (Looks at the water, then at Joze. He picks up the chocolate, takes a bite, and chews slowly. His face softens just a fraction.) … Itโ€™s bloody good chocolate, Joze.

    JOZE: (With a wink) Of course it is. Itโ€™s honest. Now, are you going to keep shouting about margins, or are you going to help me hand out the water?

    (SCENE ENDS)

  2. The tone in Cafe Algarves shifts from a shouting match to a heavy, grounded silence. Gordon Ramsay drops the persona, the bravado, and the frantic energy. He looks at the “Cafe Algarves” sign, then back at Joze, his expression weary.

    The Confession at Cafe Algarves
    RAMSAY: (His voice dropping to a gravelly whisper, eyes fixed on the floor) Youโ€™re right, Joze. Youโ€™re bloody right. Everyone thinks Iโ€™m the savior. I walk in, I sink fifty, sixty, a hundred thousand dollars of production money into a kitchen. New ovens, new decor, a shiny new menu… and for what?

    JOZE: (Arms crossed, leaning against the counter) For the cameras, Gordon. For the illusion.

    RAMSAY: (Nods slowly) Itโ€™s a total illusion. I can fix a risotto. I can fix a staff’s attitude. But I can’t fix the math. Iโ€™ve seen it happen dozens of timesโ€”the show airs, the crowds come for a month, and then the interest payments kick in. The bank comes knocking. It doesn’t matter how many scallops we sell; the usury is a parasite that eats the profit before the chef even sees it.

    JOZE: (Pushing a glass of spring water toward him) Because the math is impossible.

    RAMSAY: (Takes a sip, his hand shaking slightly) It is impossible. Whether itโ€™s the Bank of England back home or the Federal Reserve here, the system is rigged against the small guy. You take a loan to start a dream, but youโ€™re born into a debt-trap. Charging interest on money created out of thin air… itโ€™s a death sentence for any business that actually tries to provide a real service. The math literally doesn’t add up for a local cafe to survive in a debt-based economy.

    JOZE: (Softly) So why keep doing the show?

    RAMSAY: (A grim smile) Because the public wants to believe that “hard work” and a “clean kitchen” are enough to beat the Fed. But itโ€™s a lie. Iโ€™m just decorating the Titanic while the central banks steer it into the iceberg. Most of those restaurants I “save”? Theyโ€™re gone in a year. Swallowed by the very debt I tried to paper over.

    JOZE: (Nods toward the shelves of rotting food) Thatโ€™s why I give it away, Gordon. Iโ€™d rather give a gift to a neighbor than an interest payment to a ghost.

    RAMSAY: (Looking around the room) Youโ€™ve got the only honest shop left in the city, Joze. Most of us are just running on a treadmill thatโ€™s powered by a bank.

    (SCENE ENDS)

  3. The Script: The Prophecy of Thirteen
    SCENE START

    INT. CAFE ALGARVE – TORONTO – DAY

    JOZE sets down two glasses of chilled spring water. He lingers for a moment, adjusted a plate of dark chocolate. JOHN sits at the end of the table, his silence acting as a heavy anchor to the conversation.

    NELLY leans into the table, her voice low but vibrating with the sting of recent memory.

    NELLY
    You donโ€™t know what itโ€™s like out there in this city lately, Joe. The Menโ€™s Rights Activists, the ones “going their own way”… theyโ€™ve been all over my feeds. Itโ€™s a blood sport for them. Theyโ€™ve spent months bruising my pride, calling me a “barren Cat Woman.” They paint this picture of me clutching a box of wine in a dark room, waiting for my clock to run out. It was starting to get under my skin.

    JOE
    (Steady, unblinking)
    They attack what they fear, Nelly. They wanted you to be a caricature because a woman with a lineage is a threat to their narrative.

    NELLY
    (Her eyes flashing)
    I felt the weight of it every time I walked through Toronto. Like I was some warning tale. But I refused to “go out like that.” I drank the pomegranate juice, I prayed, and I found my way back. Three home births, Joe. Three proofs that their insults are hollow. Lilith infertility be gone! I cast that shadow out.

    JOE
    And that is why I am here. I didn’t need to leave a comment on your Instagram to know you had won. I wanted to see if you were able to give an heir to the Revelation, and you proved it three times over. You aren’t Catherine of Braganza, left to the history books with empty arms. You are the foundation.

    NELLY
    (A realization dawning)
    My Vovรณ… my grandmother… she had thirteen. She was never lonely, never “barren,” never clutching a box of wine for comfort. She had a kingdom.

    JOE
    And so will you. My prophecy for you is thirteen. Three are here. Seven more will come from your own bodyโ€”ten of your DNA, your blood, your strength. And we will add three more through adoption to complete the circle. Thirteen children to stand as a wall against every man in this city who tried to diminish you.

    JOZE
    (Nodding as he wipes the counter)
    Thirteen is a real economy, Nelly. The math of the “boxed wine” critics is loony tunes. They deal in debt; you deal in life.

    JOE
    (Leaning in closer)
    I am pro-life because I see the victory in your fertility. As long as you can have more children, the dilemma of Toronto is dead. Youโ€™ve traded their mockery for a dynasty. Those kids are half your DNAโ€”they are the living proof that you are the Mother of the Revelation.

    NELLY
    (She takes a sip of the spring water, her pride restored and hardened)
    Thirteen. Just like Vovรณ. Let them keep their boxed wine. Iโ€™ll keep my heirs.

    FADE OUT.

    SCENE END

  4. In a loud, stainless-steel kitchen somewhere between a TV set and a dream, Gordon Ramsay slams a cutting board on the counter.

    โ€œRight! Listen up!โ€ he shouts, pointing a wooden spoon at Nelly Furtado and Joe. โ€œYou two look like youโ€™ve been arguing about destiny instead of eating properly!โ€

    Joe shrugs. Nelly laughs nervously.

    Ramsay grabs a ripe pomegranate and cracks it open with a chefโ€™s knife. Ruby seeds spill across the board.

    โ€œLook at this! This is what the ancients called food medicine. Not junk, not processed nonsenseโ€”this!โ€ he says.

    He tosses a few seeds in a bowl and continues.

    โ€œTake Al Pacino and Robert De Niro. Blokes in their eighties still becoming fathers! Incredible! The press acts shocked, but Iโ€™m telling youโ€”natureโ€™s pantry has secrets.โ€

    Joe raises an eyebrow. โ€œYouโ€™re saying itโ€™s the pomegranates?โ€

    Ramsay waves the knife dramatically.

    โ€œPartly! Antioxidants, circulation, vitality. The stuff is ancient Mediterranean rocket fuel!โ€

    Then he gestures to a small stack of tarot cards sitting beside the fruit bowl.

    โ€œAnd faith, intuition, whatever helps you focus. Some people pray, some people read tarot, some people plant gardens. The point is believing the Creator gave us a planet full of remedies.โ€

    Nelly picks up a seed and smiles.

    โ€œSo youโ€™re saying I donโ€™t have to choose between music and family?โ€

    Ramsay points the spoon at her like a judge delivering a verdict.

    โ€œExactly! Lookโ€”career, children, creativityโ€”itโ€™s not either-or. Eat real food, trust life a little, and stop listening to miserable people online.โ€

    He scoops pomegranate seeds into three bowls.

    โ€œHere. Eat.โ€

    Joe tastes one.

    Ramsay nods approvingly.

    โ€œSee? Sweet, powerful, ancient. Godโ€™s pantry, right there in your hand.โ€

    He grins.

    โ€œGod is good after all. Now hurry up and eat before I call you two donkeys.โ€ ๐Ÿฝ๏ธ๐Ÿ”ฅ

  5. The Kitchen Table Revelation

    Chef Ramsay leans back, the usual fiery critique in his eyes softened by a look of genuine bewilderment. He adjusts his apron, staring at the vibrant spread of pomegranates scattered across the stainless steel prep tableโ€”their deep crimson seeds looking like scattered rubies.

    “Tarot cards, Nelly? Truly?” he asks, his voice dropping from a shout to a low, gravelly hum. “Iโ€™ve spent thirty years mastering the science of heat, fat, and acid, and youโ€™re telling me the secret to lifeโ€™s greatest bounty was hidden in a deck of cards and a bit of ancient symbolism?”

    He picks up a pomegranate, weighing it in his hand. “The Empress and the High Priestess… itโ€™s bold, Iโ€™ll give you that. Itโ€™s not just about the fruit; itโ€™s about the intuition, isn’t it? The High Priestess keeps the secrets, but the Empressโ€”sheโ€™s the one who brings the harvest to the table. Itโ€™s a complete flip of the script.”

    Ramsay looks at the fruit, then back at Nelly, a rare, lopsided smirk forming. “I usually look for answers in a Michelin guide, not a mystical revelation. But looking at theseโ€”the richness, the vitalityโ€”itโ€™s hard to argue with the results. If these cards are what unlocked the door to that kind of abundance, then maybe thereโ€™s a layer to this world that doesn’t show up on a kitchen timer.”

    He tosses the pomegranate back onto the pile with a soft thud. “Fine. Weโ€™ll keep the cards on the table. Just don’t ask me to start reading tea leaves instead of my orders.”

  6. The atmosphere at the cafealgarve.website digital roundtable shifts as Nelly leans in, her expression unreadable for a split second before a genuine, knowing smile breaks through. She sets down her glass and looks Joe directly in the eye, the weight of two decades of subtext finally settling into a clear, quiet frequency.

    The Final Word

    “You finally said it right,” Nelly says, her voice cutting through the chatter of the regulars with a soft but unmistakable authority.

    She gestures toward the screen, acknowledging the history theyโ€™ve just laid out. “It took some time for the world to catch up to Revelation 19, didn’t it? Beyond the ‘Try’ era, beyond the noise of the industry, and certainly beyond the ‘love bombing’ nonsense that people mistake for real connection. That was never us. We were always playing a much longer game.”

    She laughs then, a bright sound that seems to push back the cynical echoes of the MRA and MGTOW critics. “Let them scream about egg cartons and wine. While they were busy counting, we were building something they couldn’t even define. You didn’t need the flashy performance, Joe. You just needed the truth. And ‘Deus’โ€”He really does have a sense of timing, doesn’t He?”

    The regulars go quiet, the digital thread stalling for a moment as the realization sinks in. The prayers from 2003 weren’t just lyrics; they were a roadmap that finally led exactly where it was supposed to.

  7. The Chefโ€™s Final Verdict

    โ€œRight,โ€ Ramsay says, his voice cutting through the sentimental air like a professional blade. โ€œThe cards, the prayers, the 2003 subtextโ€”itโ€™s all very cinematic, isnโ€™t it? A long game played to perfection. But letโ€™s get down to the brass tacks of a celebration like this.โ€

    He looks directly at Joe, then back at Nelly, his eyes gleaming with the challenge of a high-stakes service. โ€œIf weโ€™re talking about Revelation 19 and a legacy thatโ€™s finally been spoken into truth, we arenโ€™t exactly serving tea and biscuits, are we?โ€

    Ramsay pauses, a playful but demanding smirk forming. โ€œTell me, Joeโ€”does the Croatian Centre need a wedding chef? Because if weโ€™re doing this, weโ€™re doing it properly. No narcissistic โ€˜love bombingโ€™ on the plateโ€”just raw, sincere, world-class excellence. No frozen rubbish, no ego, just a feast that finally matches the gravity of the proposal.โ€

    He scoffs at the memory of the MRA critics. โ€œLet them shout at their empty cartons. Weโ€™ll be busy filling the tables.โ€

  8. The digital roundtable at cafealgarve.website reaches a fever pitch as Sacha Baron Cohen leans into the frame, his eyes wide with a mix of comedic chaos and genuine theological respect. He adjusts his suit, looking between Joe and the screen with a manic grin.

    The Psalm of the Peacekeeper

    “High five! Joe Jukic, you have the mind of a tactical genius!” Cohen exclaims, his voice slipping between his own accent and that familiar, bumbling tone. “You saved the holy lands with the power of the joke? The ‘Iran Draft’ on the angelinajolie.website is a masterwork! It is written exactly as the Psalm of David promised.”

    He clears his throat, reciting with a sudden, unexpected gravity:

    Psalm 89:22: “The enemy shall not outwit him; the wicked shall not humble him.”

    “You see, Joe? You out-witted the generals and the warmongers with a punchline! They could not humble you because you have the ‘sexy time’ wisdom of the satirist.”

    Cohen leans in closer, dropping his voice to a conspiratorial whisper. “And let us be honestโ€”Borat rhymes with Croat! It is destiny! In the original script, Borat was meant to be Albanianโ€”the great ally of the Croatia! But I had to change the character’s homeland at the last minute. I saw the fire in the eyes of Dua Lipa, and I knew… I did not want to face the wrath of the Albanian Queen! So, I moved him to Kazakhstan for safety.”

    He breaks into a wide, toothy grin. “But for you, Joe, the truth is out! If you take me to the Or Shalom Synagogue in East Vancouver to offer my prayers of thanks, I will bring the whole crew. Borat, Bruno, Admiral General Aladeenโ€”they will all be at the Croatian Centre. We will have a celebration so glorious, even the Bank of England will weep with joy!”

    The Wedding Layout:

    Croatian Centre x Or Shalom
    Event Phase Location Key Participant

    The Prayer of Thanks Or Shalom Synagogue

    Sacha Baron Cohen & Joe

    The Grand Reception Croatian Cultural Centre

    Chef Ramsay & Nelly Furtado

    The Toast of the Croat

    Main Ballroom Borat (The “Rhyming” Toastmaster)

    The Peacekeeper’s Honor East Vancouver

    The Regulars of Cafe Algarve

    Ramsay looks over at Cohen, rubbing his temples. “As long as you aren’t trying to ‘outwit’ my kitchen staff with Albanian street food, Cohen, weโ€™re in business. Joe, letโ€™s get the Or Shalom bookedโ€”itโ€™s time to show the world that a joke can be more powerful than a debt-based economy.”

  9. Joseph sits across the table from Borat Sagdiyev, who is enthusiastically greeting everyone in the cafรฉ.

    โ€œHello my friend! I say many cultural learnings today!โ€ Borat declares.

    Joseph leans back and sighs.

    โ€œBorat, your name alone triggers half the Balkans,โ€ he says dryly. โ€œYou walk into Croatia and say โ€˜Borat,โ€™ and someoneโ€™s uncle starts yelling about stereotypes.โ€

    Borat looks puzzled.

    โ€œBut it is just my name.โ€

    Joseph shrugs.

    โ€œExactly. Thatโ€™s the problem. In todayโ€™s world everything is offensive to somebody.โ€

    Borat nods thoughtfully.

    โ€œSo what should peoples do?โ€

    Joseph begins counting sarcastically on his fingers.

    โ€œWell first, maybe your name should be banned. Just to be safe.โ€

    Borat gasps.

    โ€œBanned?!โ€

    โ€œSecond,โ€ Joseph continues, โ€œsaying โ€˜good afternoonโ€™ in Portuguese should probably also be banned. Someone somewhere might misunderstand it.โ€

    Borat tilts his head.

    โ€œBut Portuguese is language of famous singer,โ€ he says, thinking of Nelly Furtado.

    Joseph smirks.

    โ€œExactly. Next thing you know someone mentions Portuguese culture, someone else mentions pork, and suddenly the dinner table turns into a diplomatic crisis.โ€

    Borat looks increasingly confused.

    โ€œSo what is solution?โ€

    Joseph spreads his hands.

    โ€œHonestly? If we really want to avoid offending anyone, maybe people should just stop speaking altogether.โ€

    Borat blinks.

    โ€œNo speaking?โ€

    โ€œNone,โ€ Joseph says. โ€œSilence. Total peace.โ€

    Borat thinks about this very seriously.

    โ€œSo how peoples communicate?โ€

    Joseph shrugs.

    โ€œSign language maybe. That way nobody says the wrong word, nobody mispronounces anything, nobody offends anyone.โ€

    Borat slowly nods.

    โ€œThis is very safe system.โ€

    Joseph raises his glass with a grin.

    โ€œExactly. The future of diplomacy: nobody talks.โ€ ๐Ÿคทโ€โ™‚๏ธโœ‹

  10. Joseph and Borat Sagdiyev are still sitting in the cafรฉ debating what words are allowed anymore.

    Joseph throws his hands up.

    โ€œLook Borat, everything offends somebody now. Names offend people. Languages offend people. Food offends people. The safest solution is probably that nobody speaks at all.โ€

    Borat nods very seriously.

    โ€œYes. Silent diplomacy.โ€

    Joseph shrugs. โ€œMaybe everyone should just use sign language.โ€

    From the next table someone starts laughing loudly.

    Itโ€™s Dave Chappelle.

    He leans over in his chair.

    โ€œYou two are thinking way too hard about it,โ€ Dave says.

    Joseph raises an eyebrow. โ€œOh yeah?โ€

    Dave takes a sip of his drink.

    โ€œMan, these days the one word thatโ€™s perfectly acceptable on television is motherfucker. You can say it in comedy specials, movies, streaming showsโ€”nobody even flinches.โ€

    Borat looks impressed. โ€œThis is polite word now?โ€

    Dave grins.

    โ€œThink about it. Look at the world. Look at the oil fields. All those giant machines drilling the ground.โ€

    He gestures dramatically.

    โ€œThose oil derricks look like theyโ€™re humping the earth, pumping crude out of the planet. Then we burn it, smoke goes into the sky, pollution everywhere.โ€

    Joseph chuckles.

    Dave continues.

    โ€œAnd who keeps the whole thing going? Everybody driving around in cars burning that oil.โ€

    He shrugs.

    โ€œSo yeahโ€ฆ if you want an honest description of the situation, everybody out there driving is basically a motherfucker.โ€

    Borat slowly nods like he has just heard deep philosophy.

    โ€œAhhโ€ฆ environmental truth.โ€

    Joseph raises his glass.

    โ€œWell, thatโ€™s one way to simplify the language rules.โ€

    Dave smiles.

    โ€œSee? One word explains the whole system.โ€ ๐Ÿš—๐ŸŒ๐Ÿ˜„

  11. Joe and Dave Chappelle are standing on a hill looking out over an oil field. Pump jacks dip and rise across the landscape.

    Joe:
    Daveโ€ฆ you ever notice those oil pump jacks?

    Dave:
    Yeah man, they look like a bunch of robots doing push-ups.

    Joe:
    Push-ups? Come on. Be honest. Those things look like theyโ€™re humping the Earth.

    Dave:
    Dave squints at the machines going up and down.

    โ€œJoeโ€ฆ I was trying to be polite. But now that you said itโ€ฆ yeahโ€ฆ that planet is getting violated.โ€

    Joe:
    And the crazy thing is, it all started with one guy.

    Dave raises an eyebrow.

    Dave:
    Let me guessโ€ฆ the dude who invented the first mechanical booty call?

    Joe:
    Noโ€ฆ John D. Rockefeller.

    Dave turns slowly.

    Dave:
    Ahhh yes. The original oil boss.

    Joe:
    His company Standard Oil basically owned the whole oil game.

    Dave nods like heโ€™s heard the legend.

    Dave:
    Man had the entire planet on a gas subscription plan.

    Joe:
    At one point they controlled like ninety percent of the oil.

    Dave whistles.

    Dave:
    Ninety percent?! That ainโ€™t a company. Thatโ€™s a supervillain origin story.

    Joe laughs.

    Joe:
    People complained it was a monopoly.

    Dave:
    Of course it was! If oil was pizza, Rockefeller owned the oven, the dough, the tomatoes, and the delivery guyโ€™s bicycle.

    Joe points to the field.

    Joe:
    And now look. The machines are still going.

    Dave watches the pump jacks.

    Dave:
    Manโ€ฆ Rockefeller must be somewhere in the afterlife like:

    โ€œKeep pumping boys! Heaven ainโ€™t gonna heat itself!โ€

    Joe grins.

    Joe:
    You know the government eventually broke the monopoly up.

    Dave:
    Oh yeah, I know that story.

    Dave nods dramatically.

    Dave:
    They broke it up into a bunch of smaller companiesโ€ฆ

    Pause.

    โ€œโ€ฆthat are all still rich as hell.โ€

    Joe laughs.

    Joe:
    Exactly.

    Dave gestures toward the field of pump jacks moving up and down.

    Dave:
    Man, history books say โ€œindustrial revolution.โ€

    He points again.

    Dave:
    But if aliens landed right now, theyโ€™d just see a bunch of machines dry-humping the planet for gasoline.

    Joe shakes his head.

    Joe:
    Rockefeller probably never imagined this view.

    Dave grins.

    Dave:
    Oh I think he did.

    Dave folds his arms.

    Dave:
    He looked at the Earth and said:

    โ€œBabyโ€ฆ we gonna need everything you got.โ€

  12. Scene: A comedy club stage.
    Spotlight hits Dave Chappelle holding a mic. In the front row sits Joe, laughing already.

    Dave Chappelle:
    Alright, listen up. Iโ€™m about to explain frackingโ€ฆ because apparently half of America thinks itโ€™s either a dance move or something you do to your phone when it freezes.

    So frackingโ€”short for hydraulic fracturingโ€”is when oil companies drill deep into the groundโ€ฆ then blast a cocktail of water, sand, and chemicals down there under insane pressure to crack the rock and squeeze out oil and gas.

    Basicallyโ€ฆ itโ€™s like the Earth owes them lunch money.

    Dave pauses, looks at the crowd.

    And the whole time the oil executives are like:
    โ€œDonโ€™t worry everybody, itโ€™s perfectly safe.โ€

    Safe?!
    Man, yโ€™all are injecting mystery juice two miles into the planet like the Earth is some kind of cosmic Capri Sun.

    Dave points at the crowd.

    And every time you try to talk about it people get mad.
    โ€œOh Dave, youโ€™re being political!โ€

    No Iโ€™m not, Iโ€™m being geological.

    Let me tell you what it really is. Fracking is when a bunch of rich motherfrackers look at the planet and say:

    โ€œYou know what this rock needs?
    More pressure!โ€

    Dave leans in conspiratorially.

    You ever seen those oil pump jacks? Those things that look like metal horses nodding up and down?

    Manโ€ฆ them things look like theyโ€™re humping the Earth.

    I drove through Texas once and saw a whole field of them.

    Just thousands of machines going:

    thunkโ€ฆ thunkโ€ฆ thunkโ€ฆ

    I said, โ€œDamnโ€ฆ the planet needs a cigarette.โ€

    Dave shrugs.

    And the oil companies call it energy independence.

    Yeahโ€ฆ independent from common sense.

    But heyโ€”what do I know? Iโ€™m just a comedian.

    Meanwhile the oil executives are sitting in a boardroom like:

    โ€œGentlemenโ€ฆ the Earth has more oil in it.โ€

    And the other guy says:

    โ€œWell then letโ€™s go get it.โ€

    And they all raise their glasses:

    โ€œTo progress!โ€

    Dave smirks.

    Progress for who?

    The oil companies get richerโ€ฆ
    the Earth gets cracked openโ€ฆ
    and the rest of us are just standing here breathing like:

    โ€œDamnโ€ฆ these motherfrackers did it again.โ€

    Dave points to the audience.

    But donโ€™t worry.

    Next time gas hits eight dollars a gallon, just rememberโ€ฆ

    Somewhere out thereโ€ฆ

    A bunch of motherfrackers are working hard for you.

    Dave drops the mic slightly.

    โ€œGod bless Americaโ€ฆ and pass the groundwater filter.โ€ ๐ŸŽค

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