"Another verified attack came when a careless zookeeper named Luke James, was brutally attacked and killed after not so subtly mocking the ferocity of the Cassowary at what was previously thought to be a safe distance."
Am I a bad person for laughing at this?
September 19 2006, 13:21:56 UTC 5 years ago
September 19 2006, 13:40:01 UTC 5 years ago
September 19 2006, 13:22:40 UTC 5 years ago
September 19 2006, 13:32:16 UTC 5 years ago
September 19 2006, 14:14:41 UTC 5 years ago
It isn't a terribly good idea to ridicule emus, either.
September 19 2006, 14:36:48 UTC 5 years ago
I laughed too...especially at this part: "...at what was previously thought to be a safe distance."
We're both going to hell. :)
September 19 2006, 14:41:39 UTC 5 years ago
For me, a safe distance from a cassowary is the opposite side of the fence. Yeesh.
September 19 2006, 15:45:00 UTC 5 years ago
I mean, I'd feel pretty worried about mocking a cassowary from here in Boston, in case a cassowary got Internet access, somebody posted about my cassowary-mocking to their LJ, the cassowary ego-googled on "cassowary" and found out about it, and hopped a flight over here.
'Cause, damn it, I'm pretty sure they could, and would, do that.
Hey! There's an idea for a movie: "Cassowaries On A Plane!"
September 19 2006, 15:45:49 UTC 5 years ago
September 20 2006, 00:22:59 UTC 5 years ago
*screeee* :D :D
September 19 2006, 15:52:07 UTC 5 years ago
No
Not bad at all. Stupidity deserves to be mocked (not that this helps, the mocked being too stupid to understand the mocking). :=P Wild animals do NOT "play nice". Boy is that bird, butt-ugly!September 19 2006, 15:52:43 UTC 5 years ago
September 19 2006, 16:51:52 UTC 5 years ago
I also love this concept:
a new understanding of safe cassowary mocking distances.
Thanks,
September 19 2006, 17:28:19 UTC 5 years ago
Never mock a ratite!
Admittedly, I'm just a kiwi, and we're little, but the rest of my family gets MEAN! Grown men have been known to run from enraged emus. Here's a poem I wrote about another family member, the ostrich.Feelin' Ratite
I feel struthious just now.
I don't want to hide my head
And refuse to face the facts
Or any of those cliches.
I want to run in the wind
With heavy wings flapping
And big, taloned feet stomping.
I want to bat thick eyelashes
And crane my long neck at you,
Tempting you to get so close
That I can take a big nip
Out of your pretentiousness.
I want to kick somebody
So hard they'll really stay kicked.
If I decide to lay eggs,
They'll be huge, porcelain things
Worthy to be turned to art.
I want to raise such a squack
That everyone who hears me
Will whisper to their children,
"Honey, look at that big bird!".
July 15, 2003
September 19 2006, 19:33:25 UTC 5 years ago
September 20 2006, 03:05:05 UTC 5 years ago
I had no illusions about how dangerous THEY were.
Cassowaries look like they are dressed for COMBAT!
I would expect a tourist to get whacked by an angry bird... anyone who knows animals would recognize atavistic postures in ANY animal they are working with.
DAMN!
That's a very funny turn of phrase.
I laughed.
September 20 2006, 14:23:06 UTC 5 years ago
September 20 2006, 14:50:00 UTC 5 years ago
This morning, I heard a story on NPR about Darwin (really well-told and entertaining).
When I went to look up the author, thinking about reading his Darwin bio, I came across this other book by him: Monster of God : the man-eating predator in the jungles of history and the mind, summarized as:It all seems to tie together...
September 20 2006, 15:10:49 UTC 5 years ago
Anonymous
September 30 2006, 15:36:43 UTC 5 years ago
Anonymous
October 1 2006, 19:28:36 UTC 5 years ago
October 3 2006, 01:44:22 UTC 5 years ago
In any case, it's a damn funny quote. And we did do some googling to try to find confirmation, and found that the only mentions of "luke james cassowary" were all quotes from wikipedia.