January 19, 2007

The 2006 Year in Review

Q asked me to do a 2006 All-Male Revue, which I thought was a strange request, so I asked him if I might be able to just do a Review of 2006. He reluctantly agreed, so here goes nothing (with much thanks to Wikipedia and its submitters for doing the leg work).

The 2006 Year in Review
  • January 2: The Ohio State Buckeyes defeat the Notre Dame Fighting Irish 34-20 in the Fiesta Bowl in what ESPN will later tell the public is the absolute most lopsided 14-point victory in the history of complete and utterly dominating blowouts.
  • January 3: Twelve deceased coal miners and one survivor are discovered in the Sago Mine Disaster near Buckhannon, West Virginia in the United States. Samuel L. Jackson has an unhealthy desire to speak to the sole survivor, pictured here.Unbreakable.
  • January 4: Texas defeats Southern Cal 41-38 in the BCS National Championship Game. Southern Cal head coach Pete Carroll and quarterback Matt Leinart blame Reggie Bush for failing to push running back LenDale White two yards on a critical late 4th down possession.
  • January 7: Embroiled in multiple scandals, former U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay announces he will not seek to reassume his former post, but rather will assist Southern Cal head football coach Pete Carroll in recruiting new players.
  • January 22: Kobe Bryant, used to forcing his balls through unyielding holes, scores 81 points in a single game, the second most of all time behind Wilt Chamberlain’s 100. 72 of the 81 points scored contract herpes.
  • February 5: Ben Roethlisberger wets the bed in Super Bowl XL in Detroit, so Notre Dame legend Jerome “The Bus” Bettis picks up the slack in his hometown and leads the Steelers to a win in his final NFL game. The Biscuit wonders what in the world caused Roethlisberger to have such a horrible game. Neck beards rule!
  • February 8: The 48th Annual Grammy Awards are held. Kelly Clarkson wins 2. No one cares, but I have an excuse to post a picture of Kelly Clarkson.Ow!  Kelly Clarkson!
  • February 10: The Winter Olympics open in Turin, Italy, reminding the world once again that this Just try not to die.is considered a sport.
  • February 11: Dick Cheney shoots his 78-year-old friend lawyer in the face with a shotgun. Aaron Burr unavailable for comment.
  • February 16: Kobe Airport, an offshore airport in Japan, opens for business. Immediately after the doors open, the airport is served with 12 paternity suits.
  • March 3: The inaugural World Baseball Classic begins in Tokyo. Alex Rodriguez wraps himself in bubble wrap during the tournament.
  • March 5: Three 6 Mafia makes history as they become the first African-American hip-hop group to win an Academy Award for Best Song and also become the first hip-hop artists to ever perform at the ceremony. Several journalists declare Notre Dame officials and fans racist for not attending the award ceremony.
  • March 11: Slobodan Milosevic dies, making Mark May the Biggest Living Asshole.
  • March 25: Half a million people in Los Angeles protest a proposed crackdown on illegal immigration. The Biscuit laughs and throws his illegal immigrant maid an individually-wrapped slice of Kraft American cheese.
  • March 30: After Japan beats Cuba to end the World Baseball Classic, Alex Rodriguez emerges from his cocoon, sees his shadow, and doesn’t hit for six more weeks.
  • April 8: The bodies of 8 murdered men are found in Shedden, Elgin County, Ontario. The loss of the 8 men halves the population of Sheddin. Local authorities blame Canada. Mark May blames Charlie Weis.
  • April 9: Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon is removed from office after 4 months in a coma. Joe Paterno, head coach of the Penn State Nittany Lions, is quoted as saying, “Four months? Phssssh. Amateur.”RIP Joe Paterno
  • April 11: President of Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad confirms that Iran has successfully produced a few grams of 3.5% low-grade enriched uranium. U.S. would counter with its own enriched uranium supply, but U.S. President George Bush sold it in town for some magic beans.
  • May 3: 9-11 conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui, is sentenced to life in prison, making Mark May the Biggest Asshole Not Serving a Life Sentence.
  • May 27: Notre Dame recruit Chris Stewart flaps his arms in South Bend, and a 6.3 magnitude earthquake strikes central Java in Indonesia.Chris Stewart.  Not small.
  • June 9: The World Cup begins in Germany. The American team misses its flight to Germany and fails to show up for its matches. Zinedine Zidane headbutts Marco Materazzi in the chest. For the fourth consecutive time, the World Cup is expected to spark American interest in soccer. America smiles politely at soccer, lets it crash on its hide-a-bed for a month, and then speeds it to the airport so it doesn’t miss its flight home.
  • June 19: The Carolina Hurricanes defeat the Edmonton Oilers 4 games to 3 to win the Stanley Cup. Americans everywhere say, “So, what’s this soccer thing I’ve been hearing about lately?”
  • June 20: The Miami Heat win the NBA Finals 4 games to 2. Dwyane Wade is named MVP. It's a different world. Americans everywhere say, “Hey, did you catch the Hurricanes-Oilers game?”
  • June 23: In Miami, the FBI arrests seven men, accusing them of planning to bomb the Sears Tower and other attacks in Miami. Kermit is surprised that terrorists, unlike ESPN, recognize Chicago as an actual city.
  • July 5: North Korea successfully test fires long-range Taepodong-2 missile. Chicagoans still call for Brian Griese to deliver nuclear warheads rather than Taepodong-2.
  • July 9: Italy wins the World Cup over France 1-1. 1-1? What’s that, America? You say you miss Dwayne Wade?
  • July 18: The SS Nomadic, built to serve as a service and repair boat to Titanic, returns home to Belfast with its smokestack tucked between its legs and a pink slip on its desk.
  • July 21: St. Louis is hit by two major violent windstorms in a span of three days. Wind?! Pussies.
  • July 23: American Floyd Landis wins the Tour de France. Americans are about to ask what happened with the Italy-France game, but then tour officials announce that he failed a doping test. You couldn't tell this guy was a dope? Americans are surprised that officials couldn’t tell he is a dope.
  • July 31: Fidel Castro, President of Cuba, temporarily relinquishes power to his brother Raúl before surgery. Cigar connoisseurs, shortstops keep fingers crossed.
  • August 9: Maurice Clarett, ambassador of the Ohio State University, is arrested in Columbus after making an illegal U-turn and leading the police on a chase in a sports utility vehicle. He is finally stopped after driving over a police-mounted spike strip. Police say they were forced to secure a cloth around Clarett’s mouth after he allegedly spit at the officers and called them “nigga haters” during the arrest. According to Columbus Police Sgt. Mike Woods, the officers discovered a hatchet, a loaded AK-47 variant, a Hi-Point Pistol and two other loaded handguns in his vehicle along with an open bottle of Grey Goose vodka. The officers use Mace to subdue Clarett after attempts to subdue him with a Taser prove ineffective because he is wearing kevlar body armor. Unfortunately, Clarett’s arrest causes him to fail to deliver the body armor to tOSU quarterback Troy Smith prior to the National Championship game.Clarett's Arrest
  • August 10: London Metropolitan Police make twenty-one arrests in connection to an apparent terrorist plot that involved aircraft traveling from the United Kingdom to the United States. New TSA regulations are put into effect, permanently banning all liquids and gels, including but not limited to deodorants, colognes, toothpaste, and gel implants, in both checked and carry-on baggage. Biscuit cancels his plans to bring a stripper back from Vegas.
  • August 23: In Austria, Natascha Kampusch manages to escape after being kidnapped eight years ago by Wolfgang Priklopil, who locked her in his cellar. Priklopil commits suicide by throwing himself in front of a train. Congratulations are extended to the new Biggest Living Asshole Pedophile, Mark May.
  • August 24: The International Astronomical Union declares Pluto “not planet” and Chris Stewart “planet.”
  • August 31: Edvard Munch paintings The Scream and Madonna are recovered in a police raid in Oslo, Norway, more than two years after they were stolen. Stolen Tyrone Willingham painting The Bubble Scream is still missing.
  • September 1: Media says that the Notre Dame Fighting Irish will have a very tough time beating the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets at home, calling GT a “very underrated team.”
  • September 2: Notre Dame defeats Georgia Tech 14-10. The media calls Notre Dame “lucky,” as GT is a “very overrated team.”
  • September 3: Andre Agassi retires after his final match in the U.S. Open. Tennis legend John McEnroe says, “The world of tennis will sorely miss that f@#$ing sh@$head.”
  • September 8: Many members of the media pick Penn State to upset the #2-ranked Fighting Irish, saying that Penn State is a “very talented team with a great young quarterback.”
  • September 9: Notre Dame annihilates Penn State 41-17 because, according to the media, Penn State is a “mediocre team with a young quarterback who gets rattled under pressure.”
  • September 15: Spinach contaminated with E. coli kills one person and poisons over 100 others in twenty different states. In a poorly thought-out course of action, Americans call on Popeye to defend them from the outbreak. He yis what he yis.
  • September 16: The Notre Dame-Michigan game is canceled after Michigan head coach Lloyd Carr injures his nipple nursing quarterback Chad Henne.
  • September 19: Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra of Thailand declares a state of emergency in Bangkok as members of the Royal Thai Army stage a coup d’état. The army announces the removal of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra from power. The Prime Minister’s former secretary declares that she will shave her head until Notre Dame wins a national championship.
  • September 23: The Fighting Irish end Michigan State coach John El Smith’s career, scoring three touchdowns in the fourth quarter to overcome a sixteen-point third fourth quarter deficit. After the game, Smith sends his players to defend the field so that the Irish cannot plant a flag in it, as the Spartans had in Notre Dame Stadium the year before. As if the Irish would stick their flagpole in the Spartans’ field without wearing a condom, which are evil.
  • September 29: U.S. Representative Mark Foley (R-FL) resigns after it is revealed that he sent explicit e-mails for several years to underage male pages. Old-fashioned Mark May uses good old pen-and-paper.
  • September 30: Notre Dame continues restoring order to the universe by reminding Purdue that it sucks at football, administering a 14-point loss to the Boilermakers. Media personalities surprise the Irish faithful by failing to recognize the 14-point deficit as “one of the largest defeats in the history of modern college football.”
  • October 7: Notre Dame defeats Stanford 31-10. The media reports that Notre Dame is racist for beating the team that once employed Willingham.
  • October 10: Google buys YouTube for USD $1.65 billion and promptly renders it totally useless to pirates everywhere.
  • October 11: New York Yankees Pitcher Cory Lidle is killed, along with his flight instructor, when his plane crashes into a building in New York City’s Upper East Side. The accident is the only hit the Yankees get in October.
  • October 18: To honor Cory Lidle’s crash, Microsoft releases Windows Internet Explorer 7.
  • October 21: Notre Dame squeaks past UCLA 20-17 on a 45-yard touchdown pass from Brady Quinn to Jeff Samardzija with 0:27 left in the fourth quarter. Quinn’s 304 YDS, 2 TD, and 0 INT against UCLA are declared “mediocre” next to Troy Smith’s 220 YDS, 4 TD, and 0 INT against Big Ten powerhouse Indiana.
  • October 23: Jeffrey Skilling is sentenced to 24 years and 4 months in federal prison on charges relating to the financial collapse of Enron. His brother Tom forecasts a quarter century of golden showers.
  • October 27: The 2006 World Series is canceled due to lack of interest.
  • October 28: Notre Dame defeats Navy 38-14. The win is Notre Dame’s 43 straight over Navy. Tired of losing, Navy returns to South Bend and deploys a nuclear submarine into St. Joe’s Lake, leaving Gene Hackman in charge of the sub with Denzel Washington nowhere to be found.
  • October 31: Veteran game show host Bob Barker announces his retirement from The Price is Right effective in June of 2007 after thirty-five years as host, fifty years on television, and ten years of kicking Happy Gilmore’s ass.
  • October 31: U.S. senator John Kerry inadvertently calls American troops serving in Iraq idiots, causing both Democrats and Republicans to get up in arms. He later explains that he botched a joke meant to insult the intelligence of president George W. Bush. Democrats and Republicans are okay with that.
  • November 3: Science predicts that 90% of maritime life forms will be extinct by 2048 after Charlie Weis goes on seafood diet.
  • November 3: Ted Haggard resigns as president of the National Association of Evangelicals, after allegations of methamphetamine use and sexual relations with a male prostitute. The prostitute is later discovered to be named Mark May. So are the methamphetamines.
  • November 4: Notre Dame blows out North Carolina 45-26. The media does not condone the use of the word “blowout” to describe the game, preferring the cliches “long, drawn-out battle” and “God I hate when Notre Dame wins.”
  • November 5: Former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein is sentenced to death by hanging after an Iraqi court finds him guilty of crimes against humanity. Bob Davie and Tyrone Willingham are still at large.
  • November 8: U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld “resigns,” just when America was starting to warm up to him.
  • November 11: Notre Dame beats the Air Force Falcons 39-17. PETA is up in arms at Notre Dame’s insensitivity toward the Falcons.
  • November 17: Cosmo Kramer (Michael Richards) makes racist comments to African American hecklers at the Los Angeles Laugh Factory. Mark May has apparently moved on to comedians.
  • November 17: PlayStation 3 is released in U.S. The headline is accurate. One Playstation 3 is released in the U.S.
  • November 17: Former Michigan coach Bo Schembechler dies, allegedly while trying to purchase the PlayStation 3.
  • November 18: Notre Dame defeats Army 41-9. All those “Armed Forces Trophy” jokes ESPN has been making finally pay off. guinness-guys.jpg “They’re making fun of us because we have three service academies on our schedule this year!” “Making fun of us by using our schedule, despite the fact that we have a harder schedule than most conference schedules?! BRILLIANT!”
  • November 19: Wii released in US, effectively ending ChisND’s status as a regular HLS reader.
  • November 23: Alexander Litvinenko, a former Russian KGB agent, is assassinated in a London sushi bar, possibly by the Russian Security Service, the FSB, or possibly because the sushi bar didn’t follow this simple guide. Bad.  Bad.  Bad.  Good.  Bad.  Bad.  Bad.  Bad.  Bad.  Bad.
  • November 25: The Notre Dame-Southern Cal game is canceled after Southern Cal head coach Pete Carroll gets injured while trying to fellate himself. Southern Cal fans wonder why Carroll wasn’t satisfied with the job the media was doing.
  • November 28, 2006: U.S. District Judge James Robertson orders the Treasury Department to change U.S. banknotes to make it easier for blind and visually impaired people to determine their denominations. The blind and visually impaired vocally praise the decision, not realizing that no one else is in the room with them.
  • December 9: The Ohio State Buckeye quarterback Troy Smith wins the Heisman trophy despite not being the best quarterback in the country, largely for “overcoming the difficulty of being a scumbag thug with a pea-sized brain all of his life.”
  • December 10: Orhan Pamuk of Turkey wins the Nobel Prize in Literature, narrowly beating out Mark May. Mark May declares the Nobel Prize Committee “racist,” and pouts for the rest of the ceremony.
  • December 26: Former US President Gerald Ford dies at the age of 93 years. The cause of death was a flight of stairs.
  • December 30: Saddam Hussein, former Iraq president, is executed in Baghdad. “Hey, is this Mark May? Well, I have some good news…”
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5 Comments

At January 19th, 2007 at 2:02 pm, domer.mq said...

Awesome.

At January 19th, 2007 at 3:56 pm, subwaydomer26 said...

Very nice. It’s too bad about Lllloyd and da poodle.

At January 20th, 2007 at 9:55 am, gwzimm said...

Mark May will be guest of honor at the Aryan Nation Convention in Alabama.

At January 21st, 2007 at 4:08 am, The Biscuit said...

Dude, that was hand-cut Swiss, NOT American. And my maid loved that shit.

At August 20th, 2007 at 6:22 pm, AltaGid said...

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Very often try to enter the site, but says that the password is not correct.
Regrettably use of remembering. Give like to be?
Thank you!

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