200 Words with Paul Dini #39 - No Karma Chameleon
17 Posted on Dec 9, 2008 in articles by Conor Kilpatrick |
LIVE COLOR-CHANGING CHAMELEONS! 1.99 each plus postage! From the moment they read those words in a comic book ad, the imaginations of my childhood friends Ricky Godfrey and his older brother Phil were afire with the idea of owning those miraculous reptiles. Though the Godfrey brothers usually had a relationship that rivaled India and Pakistan in contentiousness, they wanted the chameleons badly enough to work together to get them. They did odd jobs around the neighborhood, robbed their banks for birthday money and begged for advances on their allowances. After sending off their money order, they spent a weekend cleaning up an old fish tank, stocking it with colored gravel, a flat rock and other things to delight their pets. The two warring brothers had become best pals, and they frequently fantasized about proudly strutting through the neighborhood with their mighty lizards crawling before them, straining at their leashes and snapping their jaws like Komodo dragons. Finally the big day arrived and so did the lizards, in a tiny cardboard box. One of the chameleons was bright-eyed and alert, while the other was shriveled and still. Tearfully Phil delivered the bad news to Ricky: “Oh, I’m sorry. Yours is dead.”
Paul Dini is the Emmy and Eisner Award winning writer of Batman: The Animated Series, Superman: The Animated Series, Detective Comics, Countdown among many, many other things. You can find him online at either kingofbreakfast.livejournal.com or http://www.jinglebelle.com/.
Comments
huuum. $1.99. Sounds like a steal of a deal. So, um, did the alert lizard change colors or was the lizards an alagory of the boys and their changing colors?
Posted by Theoran on 12/09/08 at 04:21 PMIt is unwise to suggest murder amongst chameleons. If they wanted to keep any one of us quiet, we'd never see them coming.
Posted by Quentin on 12/09/08 at 04:24 PMThe last line made me laugh a lot.
Posted by conor on 12/09/08 at 04:28 PMIt would be neat if the surviving chameleon, guilty of fratricide, was cursed with a red hand for the rest of its life.
Also, if I were to mail a chameleon, I'd set it on top of a sheet of stamps so that it could record the proper postage on its skin and then drop it in a mailbox with an address label.
Posted by PaulMontgomery on 12/09/08 at 04:35 PMdiabolical were the deeds that went down in the darkeness of that box.
Posted by Quentin on 12/09/08 at 04:41 PMThey used to ship live animals, by MAIL! Times have changed.
Posted by josh on 12/09/08 at 04:44 PMBwhahaha! Nice.
Posted by Neb on 12/09/08 at 05:41 PMThat's a great anecdote. Great punchline.
Posted by Crippler on 12/09/08 at 06:18 PMFor an extra buck you could have had the x-ray vision chameleons.
Posted by s1lentslayer on 12/09/08 at 06:23 PMTwo words.... Sea Monkeys.
Posted by bean6344 on 12/09/08 at 06:50 PMWhat a way to kick off my night! Great story. That last line killed me. (oh god... hate puns sometimes.)
Posted by Anson17 on 12/09/08 at 09:18 PMI always wanted to buy those x-ray specs and the hovercar they used to advertise in comics but gainful employment for 8 year-old in KY in the 70s was hard to find. This new junk they try to sell to kids today just isn't as cool as the junk in my generation. Anyone remember Grit magazine? That's quality junk.
Posted by ultimatehoratio on 12/09/08 at 09:59 PMI miss the Johnson Smith Co. ads! I finally talked my mother into letting my buy the hovercar. It was basically a whirling piece of sharp metal bonded to a plastic pie plate. The fact that I'm using all 10 fingers to type right now is a small miracle.
Posted by NJBaritone on 12/09/08 at 10:09 PMOh man I always wondered what that really looked like. You were a spoiled child, sir!
Posted by ultimatehoratio on 12/09/08 at 10:14 PMBrilliant.
Posted by gordon on 12/10/08 at 10:14 AMthat was hilarious, never saw it coming
Posted by gwiz on 12/10/08 at 05:25 PM


Murder?
Posted by PaulMontgomery on 12/09/08 at 04:08 PM