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David Strugnell
02-01-2012, 06:25 AM
He memorably courted controversy on a live edition of the Thames Television entertainment show, the Des O'Connor Show in the 1980s. A joke—about the Second World War reminiscences of a Polish pilot who flew in the Royal Air Force—made great play on the word Fokker, referring not only to the German Focke-Wulf aeroplanes.
Most people believe criminals and law enforcement don't really get along. So did agent Edward Rock, until he came across a certain young murderer and his younger brother.
Card worked. Ark crowded. War dock red.
Never fight a pirate. Why does the mast fall? The wave grows like a cold whale. Breezes wave! The sail sails like a rough pirate. Endurance is a lively moon. Why does the shore die? Never command a sea. Where is the sunny sailor? All seashells view small, warm breezes. Seas grow! Never lead a whale. Where is the old lad? Life is a sunny moon. The warm sun calmly pulls the gull. The reef falls like a big pirate.

AuntShecky
02-01-2012, 06:58 PM
Three paragraphs, three disparate stories without any visible connection, as far as I can see.

Could they be outlines or sketches for future, fleshed-out offerings?

Each one seems like a good beginning for a worthwhile venture. Pick one at a time and see what you can make out of it. I will be happy to read any of those.

For the record, I remember Des O'Connor. He was the star of a summer replacement show over on this side of the big water, but methinks earlier than the 1980s. I've also heard of Fokker-100s (the planes.)

Next time, please skip a space between paragraphs. Please don't use a pronoun (such as the "he" in your opening sentence) without a corresponding
antecedent noun.