Saturday, February 21, 2009

Campground in Wakefield: 1991

When I was a boy, Grandpa Uno and I were playing catch along side his flower garden at the campground he had a site at. I threw the ball so hard that it went right by him and rolled along the gravel and into the women's room of the public latrine building.


Grandpa was never one to turn down opportunity and sent me, a boy of seven, into the unknown place. It was dark, rank, and a 68 year old chain smoker named Gloria Gifford was stepping out of the shower. She taught me things I never wanted to know.


In sixth grade, Mr. Audet, my science teacher, tried to teach us about sex. I was the only one who raised my hand.


Thanks Grandpa Uno.



Thursday, February 19, 2009

Granpa Uno - Film: 2007

Mandy Kelly brought up a recollection. She suggested that a movie should be made of Grandpa Uno's life. In fact, there already has been. Universal Studios and Dreamworks came together to produce the life story of Grandpa Uno in 2003. The film was directed by Martin Scorcese, George Lucas and Stephen Speilberg, took nearly four years to produce and cost the studios a combined $5billion.


The role of young Grandpa Uno was played by Haley Joel Osment, young adult by James Vanderbeek, middle aged by Tom Cruise. The old Grandpa Uno was played by a number of actors: Richard Gere, Anthony Hopkins, Jack Lemmon and Paul Newman. In one very obscure though seemingly artistic scene, a 50-year old Uno was performed by Ving Rhames.

While anticipated to be a huge success, the film was completed in 2007 at a length of 622 hours, 14 minutes. Test audiences claimed the length to be far too long, despite having been edited from 734 hours, 44 minutes; and the film was canned.


Audiences also claimed that the role of Grandpa Uno was not adequately filled, and the studios agreed, filing paperwork for the exhumation of Grandpa Uno's remains, which are expected to be reanimated for the second attempt at the film. The voice of the reanimated Grandpa Uno will be provided by ventriloquist/comedian Jeff Dunham. The film is expected to resume filming in 2011.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Grandpa's First Pet: 1903

As a boy, Grandpa Uno's first pet (pictured below) was the talk of his Costa Rican town of Guapiles. No one had seen anything like it. Though nobody could determine if it was male or female, based on its erratic genitalia, he called it a "she" and no one could have been the wiser. Her name was Betsy. The creature grew at an exponentially rapid rate, as Grandpa fed it the entrails of recently slaughtered sheep - whatever parts were not to be used by the local meatpacking plants - and daily portions of Uno's Burger Sliders.

In 1912, the creature was too large to be harbored in Costa Rica, and authorities forced Grandpa Uno to relocate her to Scotland, where he had little choice but to abandon her in a lake - or "loch" - where the locals began to call her "Nessie."




Wales: 1943

During World War II, Grandpa Uno led a large battalion overhill in a grassy town in Wales. Atop the hill, they fought, and were winning. Then General Grandpa Uno marched them back down and the battle began to turn.

The battle continued for days, up the hill and down the hill. When they were up, they were up. And when they were down, they were down. At one point, they were only halfway up the hill and Grandpa Uno's men were neither up nor down.

In the end, Grandpa Uno brought both sides together over Island Bliss Margeritas and Tuscany Bread, which would later be added to the menu at Pizzeria Uno. They came to terms and decided to credit the battle to a fictional character known only as "The Grand Old Duke of York."

We all know the truth.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Prohibition: 1923

During the Prohibition, Grandpa Uno owned and operated his own distillery. While most at the time were brewing via bathtubs in basements, Grandpa Uno formulated his beer concoctions in three different monasteries located in the suburbs of Cincinnati.

Though the friars were, themselves, wholly sober and did not stand for the consumption, manufacturing or distribution of alcohol, they recognized the separation of church and state and allowed Grandpa Uno the ability to rent small spaces on their holy grounds for his budding enterprise.

Sponsored by Pizzeria Uno's Cincinnati locations, Grandpa Uno was able to fund the economically struggling monasteries, managing their basic operations, which included the harvesting and cultivation of wheat and barley for his secret formulae.

At the end of the prohibition, the recipes were purchased by larger distillery corporations and named "Pabst", "Blue Moon" and "Coors" - named after the monestaries at which they were designed: St. Pabst, Our Lady of the Blue Moon, and Monsignor Coors' Monastery for the Socially Awkward.

Each of Grandpa Uno's beers can now be found at any Pizzeria Uno location!

Krapp's Last Tape: 1995

I remember the time me, Jeff, Grandpa Uno, and a homeless guy named Bill Palansky improvised our own version of Krapp's Last Tape. God, Grandpa Uno shouted at the top of his lungs - stifling the passers-by of Kennedy Plaza: "May the excrement fly!!" It was a gut-wrenching performance, and perhaps the deciding factor in why Jeff became an actor.

Carnival in Narragansett: 1989

I remember the time Grandpa Uno took us to the carnival down in Narragansett. Gandpa brought fourteen Uno pizzas and told all the little kids that wanted to to eat them that they were opped with asbestos. We ate like kings. Then he balloon-sword-fought Binkie the Clown for nearly three hours (Binkie had some pizza too) and won. Now Binkie attends each of our birthday parties free of charge.

Gumbo Cook-Off: 2002

In 2002, Grandpa Uno participated in the 72nd Annual Funk, Mississippi Gumbo Cook-Off. His gumbo recipe, judged by Chef Vincent Crispo – a local hero, renowned for his innovative style of Southern cuisine – placed second to last. However, Grandpa Uno was far from dissatisfied, as his booth was always swarmed with Funkians seeking his uniquely-flavored recipe. The gumbo, called Spinoccoli Gumbolicious, tasted much like its similarly-named Pizzeria Uno deep dish counterpart.

The only chef who scored lower than Grandpa Uno was a man named Johnny Bojangles, whose recipe reminded Chef Crispo ‘of Hiroshima – or [his] mother’s bratwurst.’

The Great Grandpa Uno Mishap - Argentina: 1993

It was a mysterious event surrounding Grandpa Uno going to the Pampa Plain and upsetting that enormous herd of bovine and then mistaking the Aurora Australius for something quite different. While slightly acid tripping at the time, he punched a thirteen year old boy that had stepped on his shoelace earlier that day, and upon the sighting of the Aurora Austrialus, he confused it for the agoraphobia he had been cured of as a child. Standing distraught in the middle of the Pampa Plain, he manically sought out immediate shelter. The nearest place was Pizzeria Uno on State Road in Orlando. He ran the whole way, stopping only twice, for liquor and the loving embrace of an unknown woman.

Weeks later the unknown woman showed up at his doorstep claiming that after that last piece of pie they had shared together, she had fallen madly in love with him and had been trying to track him down ever since. The pie was lemon meringue thin crust pizza (something he had once proposed to Pizzeria Uno, though field-testing demonstrated it to be "too good for [their] clientele"). Grandpa Uno paid homage to the woman, though not willing to sacrifice his livelihood and future for her, by naming a small town which he founded in Western Pennsylvania "Meringue, PA." There he produced community theatre productions, including three works of Beckett and a musical version of 101 Dalmations.

Birth of Grandpa Uno: ??

We know not when, exactly, Grandpa Uno was born (Birth name: Grandpa Andonicus Uno). All that we know is that he was a major factor in the outcome of the Mexican-American War.