Pauly Shore flushes out Circle plot with Mr. Rogers tip

We were finally in at Swastique, the overpriced hot-to-trot West
Hollywood dining spot rumored to be the home base of operations for
Rupert Murdoch’s dastardly TV Inner Circle.

Posing as valets, our employee jackets gave my kung-fu kitty
common-law wife Christy, The Anarchist and me free reign to scour
the place for clues about the Inner Circle’s next evil
plot.

“I’ll keep my eyes peeled out here,” The
Anarchist told Christy and me, “Besides, Britney Spears just
handed me the keys to her Escalade. I’m gonna search it for
panties, err “¦ clues.”

The interior was like some post-modern nightmare. Everything was
dark. There was no lighting in the traditional sense of the word,
but everywhere you turned a television was tuned to FOX cable
affiliates, FOX News and FOX Sports.

“There’s definitely something rotten in
Denmark,” Christy said. “All the people working here
look eerily familiar.”

She was right. Everyone from the hostesses to the waiters,
bartenders and busboys had something in common. All of them had
faces only late-night infomercials could love. Then it hit me.

“Dear Jehovah,” I moaned. “All these employees
are reality TV show rejects.”

“It’s like a graveyard for the people TV
forgot,” she replied.

The whole gang of the tragically pseudo-hip was there, and too
many to recognize with any sense of accuracy. However, the ghostly
faces of NBC’s “Fear Factor,” MTV’s
“Battle of the Sexes,” ABC’s “The
Bachelor,” and FOX’s “Married by America”
were all there to represent their reprehensible 15 minutes of
shame. Even Joe Millionaire Evan Marriot was working as a
bouncer.

We rushed to the toilet to take solace from the sensory
overload.

“Hey, buuuuddy,” the bathroom attendant said.

It was Pauly Shore.

“Don’t you have a 1-800-COLLECT commercial to
shoot?” Christy asked.

“Nah. Carrot Top beat me to it. But Mr. Murdoch gives all
us rejects a spot here at Swastique. And every once in a while he
gives us another shot at the Big-Time. Like my ex-lover Nancy
McKeon.”

“Who?” I asked.

“Jo from “˜The Facts of Life,'” Christy
said.

“Yeah,” Pauly said. “Now she’s a
hot-shot cop on Lifetime’s “˜The Division.’ Or my
other ex-lover “¦ Anna Nicole Smith. She’s bigger now
than she ever was.”

Though pun not intended, Shore was right. Los Angeles is the
perfect town for the tragically hip, the almost famous. Everyone is
ensured a shot and when it inevitably falls through, there’s
the all-purpose actor-slash-model fallback: waiting tables.

“This town is full of high-priced, big-tipping
restaurants,” Shore told me, drying my hands with a linen
towel, spritzed with a little CK One.

“You are full of insightful wisdom,” Christy told
Shore, speaking with the reverence one would pay to the Buddha.
“Can you shed any light on this Inner Circle
fiasco?”

“I hear things, buddy. It’s amazing what people
grunt when trying to pinch a loaf.”

“Heinous,” Christy gagged.

“Project SARS is on the decline”“ Murdoch
didn’t kill off the Hong Kong black market like he hoped to.
But he’s planning something big. All I know is that it
involves Mr. Rogers and an asteroid.”

Just then a poison dart hit Shore right in the eye. He twitched
like a weasel for a couple moments before keeling over. Christy and
I decided to make a hasty exit.

Back inside The Anarchist’s classic El Camino, we filled
him in.

“Mr. Rogers and an asteroid, eh? I’m stumped,”
he said.

All of us were.

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