soundman
17th July 2007, 12:09 PM
some days you just cant win.
Cliff Rogers
17th July 2007, 12:18 PM
Oldie but still a goodie. :2tsup:
pawnhead
17th July 2007, 01:08 PM
Dethroned! (http://urbanlegends.about.com/library/blbricks.htm)
Exploding toilet stories go way back, but the motorcycle variant repeated here is of recent origin and has been traced to a specific publication, 'Motorcyclist' magazine, which published it originally in 1984 (and again in 1991).
Note that the victim's wife is always held to blame in these stories, for it's she who dumps the explosive substance (gasoline, paint thinner, cleaning fluid, etc.) into the john.
Punchline of some rural variants: "Must've been somethin' I ate!"I think the Mythbusters did a show on exploding toilets as well. Still funny though. :D
I like this one:
As told by Cory Vandenham...
I am a general contractor and heard this story from an insurance investigator:
A bricklayer working on a three-story-tall chimney had set up a pulley system so that his helper could raise the bricks up to where he needed them. As he was working, his helper complained about how difficult it would be to get the last of the bricks up to the flat roof of the building. Just then another contractor had some material delivered and it was placed on the roof by a fork lift brought to unload it. The bricklayer asked if the driver would load the rest of the bricks up there as well and the driver agreed. The bricklayer realized that he would not need his helper any more and sent him home.
When the bricklayer completed the chimney he noticed that he had quite a few bricks left over and that the fork lift was no longer at the jobsite. Now he had to figure out how to get the leftover bricks back down by himself. If he dropped them, they would surely break. So he decided to use the pulley he had set up earlier to lower them down.
First he went down to the ground and raised a large metal bucket up to the roof level using the rope and pulley. Next, he tied the rope off onto a railing and climbed back up to the roof and loaded the bricks into the bucket. Then he went back down to the ground. He knew that the bricks would be heavy, so he wrapped the rope around his hand a couple of times and then untied the end of the rope with his other hand. Well, the bricks were heavier than he imagined and with physics being as it is, he was immediately launched upwards at a high rate of speed.
As he was racing up towards the roof he encountered the bucket full of bricks coming down at an equally fast rate. He collided with the bucket and broke his nose and his shoulder. The bucket passed him by as he sped upwards. He reached the pulley just before the bucket hit the ground and broke a few of his fingers as they were pulled into the pulley. When the bucket hit the ground, its bottom fell out and all of the bricks spilled onto the ground. Now the fun reversed. As the now light bucket sped upwards, the mason took a shot to the groin when one of his legs slipped into the empty bucket.
He then tilted enough to fall out of the bucket and continued with his gravity experiment. Eventually he landed on top of the pile of bricks and broke both feet. He collapsed in pain there on the bricks, but was glad to be alive. He let go off the rope and cried out for help.
It was then that the bucket hit him in the head and fractured his skull.
The Barrel of Bricks (http://urbanlegends.about.com/library/blbricks.htm)
Tonyz
17th July 2007, 09:43 PM
the brickie story is from an old Irish song ...something about why Paddy wasnt at work today.
Used to br a regular on Maccas 'Australia All Over' program ABC radio sunday am
echnidna
17th July 2007, 09:53 PM
theres been a few versions recorded
black1
18th July 2007, 04:09 PM
mythbusters did the one with the bricks cant remember the outcome though