Fortnightly Writing Competition - What if? (WINNER ANNOUNCED!!)

Started by tzachs, Thu 01/11/2012 22:02:25

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tzachs

What is the future preparing for us?
You tell me!
These are the rules:
1. Think of one aspect of the future that can change. Rephrase it in a "what if" sentence: "What if this and this will happen?"
2. Think of the answer, how will people's lives change?
3. Create your story around that.

For example:
1. What if there will be a hologram above people's heads showing their last score in a universal intelligence test?
2. It will motivate people to learn more and the average intelligence will rise. People who have lower scores will be ridiculed, they'll get frustrated and driven to crime. There will be an entire industry dedicated to cheat through those tests. There will be an underground movement that wants to stop it.
3. The story will tell of two best friends, where one tries to cheat through the intelligence test and the other joins the underground, and this difference tears them apart.

If you need more inspiration and haven't seen it already, I recommend watching Black Mirror.

The deadline: 18/11 (which, surprisingly enough, is in the future!)


Ponch

Quote from: tzachs on Thu 01/11/2012 22:02:25
The deadline: 18/11 (which, surprisingly enough, is in the future!)

Are you telling me that I can write a story that will appear right here in this thread... in the future?! But what if I choose not to write one? Will that be changing the future? Or am I supposed to write one and not writing it will change the future.

Oh noes! I don't want to destroy the universe with a paradox. But I don't want to risk not not destroying it either. What am I supposed to do?!?  8-0

miguel

Ponch, you can write something remarkable, something that would make us readers change our view on life and cows, and then delete it on the very last minute before the competition ends, delete your ags profile as well, your email accounts and facebook. You then would have changed the future without even existed...
Working on a RON game!!!!!

Ponch

And then I could return with no explanation of where I went or why. Perhaps I've already done this in the past, when I called myself Ghost.  (laugh)

tzachs

Quote from: Pönch on Thu 01/11/2012 23:12:04
Quote from: tzachs on Thu 01/11/2012 22:02:25
The deadline: 18/11 (which, surprisingly enough, is in the future!)

Are you telling me that I can write a story that will appear right here in this thread... in the future?! But what if I choose not to write one? Will that be changing the future? Or am I supposed to write one and not writing it will change the future.

Oh noes! I don't want to destroy the universe with a paradox. But I don't want to risk not not destroying it either. What am I supposed to do?!?  8-0
In the future, you have already written the story, so you don't really have a choice now, you have to write the story.
Also, don't listen to miguel, you have to publish it too! So does miguel, for that matter! And Ghost too, now that he's come back from the dead! And everybody else also! Write stories!

Ghost

Quote from: tzachs on Fri 02/11/2012 18:02:38
And Ghost too, now that he's come back from the dead! And everybody else also! Write stories!

I hear you and I will do so!  (nod)

tzachs

Only 4 more days, the future is almost here!
Let's see some entries, if you don't write stories, there won't be any future!!!

Ponch

I have a beginning and an end for a story, but no middle. I can only hope future Ponch can figure out how to bridge the two bits, else a paradox is sure to ensue!  8-0

tzachs

Ooh, beginning and end with no middle, that can actually be a great theme for a future competition!

Ghost

Quote from: Ponch on Wed 14/11/2012 22:41:38
I have a beginning and an end for a story, but no middle. I can only hope future Ponch can figure out how to bridge the two bits, else a paradox is sure to ensue!  8-0

I have a headline and a middle part and a nice set of umlauts. Wanna mix-and-match?

Ponch

Quote from: Ghost on Sat 17/11/2012 00:31:01
Quote from: Ponch on Wed 14/11/2012 22:41:38
I have a beginning and an end for a story, but no middle. I can only hope future Ponch can figure out how to bridge the two bits, else a paradox is sure to ensue!  8-0

I have a headline and a middle part and a nice set of umlauts. Wanna mix-and-match?

And get umlauts all over my incomplete story? Is that the sort of America I want to live in? No sir! I couldn't look myself in the mirror if I did.  :=

Ghost

Ökäy. Shöuld häve the störy döne tömörröw.

Dang. Now I used ALL my umlauts! Sorry Ponch, you can't have any now and America is säfe!

Baron

SPOIILER - Read plot outline only if you want to see the ending:
Spoiler

-What if hamburger's ate people?
-People become livestock, herded into feedlots and eventually abattoirs.  Hamburger's grow fatter on the high protein diet while the rainforests are decimated for increased man-pasturage. Eventually the culminating effect of mankind's flatulence is climate change and the doom of hamburger civilization.
[close]
PLANET OF THE BLTS

CHAPTER 1 -THINGS GO AWRY

   Spaceman Scott winced as a blinding flash erupted outside his snazzy space blimp.  At first he thought its (entirely superfluous) hydrogen envelope had  burst into flame, but quickly dismissed the idea due to the chemical absence of an oxidizing agent in space.  Still, the flash had been unnerving, so he decided to turn his craft back towards Earth.
   Strange, he thought.  The perialtimeter is not responding to the satellite link.  Other gauges began to whine one at a time.  Suddenly the NavCom alarm went off, bathing the cockpit in a periodic red glow.  Spaceman Scott stared grimly at the non-responsive control panel in front of him and scratched his manly beard in a manful way.  I'm gonna have to bring this sucker down manually, he decided.
   Landing an eight ton intergalactic brick safely is a hard enough task for a computer; for a human it was like trying to catch a popcorn kernel with your upturned nostril in the dark.  Spaceman Scott furrowed his brow in concentration as the space blimp hit the first turbulence of atmosphere.  The craft shook violently, and the nose in front of him became tinged with the first glint of heat glow.  He closed his eyes and counted slowly: too soon and he wouldn't have enough drag to slow his descent; too late, and the hydrogen in the envelope would ignite and blow the whole craft into more pieces than a jigsaw puzzle convention.
   Eight, nine, ten....  The heat glow became ever more intense, the shaking maddeningly jarring, like the spin-cycle of an unbalanced washing machine in freefall.  Spaceman Scott opened his eyes and pulled the manual envelope release lever.  In an instance the force of the atmosphere ripped it away, leaving only the gondola hurtling towards the puffy cloud tops.  Spaceman Scott opened the ailerons and tilted the nose up in an attempt to slough some speed.  In a moment the craft was engulfed in the veiling mists of the cloud.  We're coming in too hot!
   Peering out the window he could suddenly see the shrouded outlines of a forested mountain.  He heaved on the controls, but it was no use: the gondola smashed into a tree, shearing off the landing gear and half the fuselage.  Moments later he hit another tree which took the right wing, and then the collisions game fast and quick as the craft burrowed through the mossy undergrowth....

        CHAPTER 2 -ENSNAREMENT

   Spaceman Scott opened his eyes.  All was still, but there was the smell of smoke.  Instinctively he unbuckled himself from the pilot's chair and crawled out through the shattered remains of the windshield.  Standing atop what remained of the gondola he could see a swath of burning jungle in his wake.  Being a man's man from Texas all he did was shrug: man dominated nature, hence it was his prerogative to destroy it if it served his purpose.  If he'd had a fat stogie, he'd have lit it up in celebration of his own miraculous survival, then flick the smouldering ash into nature's subservient eye.  Takes a real man to pull off that kind of stunt, he chuckled to himself.
   Spaceman Scott made his way through the thick jungle.  It was hard slogging over rough ground and muddy swamps, and he was about to despair that his heroic landing would go unheralded should he  perish of exposure or starvation when suddenly he was beset upon by some strange horsemen.  They flung a lasso around his neck and pushed a scalding iron rod into the flesh of his left buttock, all before he could get a decent look at them.  Maybe it was the trauma of the smell of his own searing flesh (like bacon after a hangover), or maybe it was the PTSD resurfacing from the crash, but Spaceman Scott blacked out again.

        CHAPTER 3 -THE PASTURE OF PLEASURE

   He woke in a peaceful field, dotted occasionally with great shade-giving trees.  Instinctively he felt at ease in this savannah paradise, much like the environment in which his distant homonid ancestors had evolved.  He pulled himself up onto his feet and limped gingerly towards the nearest tree (his left buttock stung something fierce).  Approaching the tree he could see in the under-shade a small group of people lounging lazily, all of them mouths wagging.  Getting closer still, he could see that they were not talking at all but chewing.  He raised his hand in greeting.
   The folk under the tree eyed him shiftily while continuing to chew.  Spaceman Scott noticed now that they were all women, and that they were all naked.  And at this moment he noticed that he too was naked.  How convenient.
   â€œBetter watch out Big RT, ponchy man,” one of the women warned him.  “We in his herd.”
   Spaceman Scott smiled and reached back into his memory for the pimp-charm he used to be able to turn on like a tap.  Before he could get his groove on, though, he heard the rapid advance of footfalls behind him.  Turning he saw a large-chinned man lowering his head and charging right at him.  In disbelief he stood there, and then BAM!  The man rammed right into him, head first.  The force of the impact sent Ponch, I mean Spaceman Scott, reeling into the long grass.
   â€œWhat the hell did you do that for!?!” he gasped, rubbing his bruised ribs.  “You could have snapped your bloody neck!”
   The man called Big RT righted himself, turned, and pawed the ground with his naked foot.  Spaceman Scott could see his nostrils flaring around an iron nose-ring.  “Big RT herd!” he boomed.  “Take off, eh!”
   Spaceman Scott tried to reason with him, but in vain.  Instead Big RT just charged again.  This time Spaceman Scott had the good sense to dive out of the way at the last moment, sending Big RT head first into the tree trunk and knocking him senseless.
   The women, who had been feigning disinterest in the whole duel up to this point, suddenly perked up.  Still chewing hard with great gaping mouths they circled around him.  “You bull now, ponchy man.  What you name?”
   Now on much friendlier terms, Spaceman Scott was able to interrogate the women.  He didn't really understand what they said, for they spoke a simplified language, but the gist of it was almost too incredible to believe.  They were essentially free-range livestock.  Every year or so the riders would come and cull the herd, taking the young and plump and leaving a rump of the herd to breed.  They were forbidden clothes or any trappings of civilization, for the riders insisted that they themselves were the only truly intelligent beings on the planet.  Surprisingly the folk on the pasture counted themselves lucky here, he discovered, since conditions were much less salubrious elsewhere on this world.  Apparently an electric fence was all that confined them, and he was curious to explore further.  So after an appropriate interlude of accordion music with his hard-won herd Spaceman Scott directed his attention to escaping the pasture and exploring more of this strange planet he had landed on.

        CHAPTER 4 -REVELATIONS

   At length he was able to tunnel his way beneath the fencing and escape.  Unfortunately he immediately bumped into a pair of the creatures that had caught him in the first place, who were out mending fences.  He had just assumed that they were some sort of master race of space aliens who had enslaved humanity, but now in broad daylight he realized that they were really giant talking hamburgers!  Their buns lifted off their patties in astonishment that he was wandering freely down the farm lane, and they rushed to grab their lassos. 
   Fleeing for his life, Spaceman Scott ducked into a nearby barn.  Walking down the aisles he was horrified to discover pen after pen full of lactating women, each strapped up to most uncomfortable looking pumping machines.  “What is all this for?” he demanded of one of them.  She just shrugged.  “Man cheese,” she stated matter of factly, before staring off into space once more.  A commotion at the far end of the barn suggested that the hamburger cowboys were on his trail, so Spaceman Scott slipped through the nearest exit.
   He was in a courtyard, across which stood another barn.  Lacking for any other cover he ran there, easily slipping through the oversized ovoid-shaped door.  Inside he discovered a sea of obese humanity, each yoked head-first through iron-grates over an eating trough.  He tried to ask them what was going on, tried to rally them to rebel with him against their wicked masters, but all he garnered was the occasional snort from men with more food stuck to their flapping jowls than Spaceman Scott habitually ate in a day. 
   He emerged from that second barn into a pen of the fat people, and there he lay low.  Surely an only modestly ponchy fellow such as himself could escape notice in such a churning crush of flab and sweat.  Too late he noticed the open truck doors, and the zapping prods in the hands of the Hamburger cowboys.  He was herded into the truck with all the others, where he discovered a novel version of hell.  The roof dripped with excrement, but it was the smell of fear that most pervaded the tight confines of the cattle trailer.  A chubby boy of no more than 14 eyed him wildly, the terrorized whites of his eyes over his unwiped nose etching themselves indelibly into Spaceman Scott's memory.  At last, when the trailer doors were thrown open again, it seemed like such a relief.  Somehow, however, Spaceman Scott suspected that the worst was yet to come.

         CHAPTER 5 -CHECK MATE

   Ahead of them lay yet another barn, only this one had a rank stench to it.  Spaceman Scott could not place the smell, but he knew foulness when he smelled it, and he knew that no good could come of it.  The others began to fret nervously as well, but they were herded along with the electric prods by their burger keepers. 
   Through the barn doors into the terrible darkness....  He could not see, but he could hear the cries, the screams.  Instinctively he went to ground, and rolled to the side lest he be trampled by his gigantic brethren.  Surprisingly Spaceman Scott was able to roll under the metal barrier that funnelled the river of humanity onward to their doom.  He supposed the hamburgers had not considered that a scrawny runt such as he would ever come to the processing plant.
   Standing in the shadows, his eyes slowly adjusted to the light.  Ahead of him his companions were being fitted with nooses that connected to an overhead conveyor belt.  Thinking quickly, Spaceman Scott flicked the emergency shutoff button on the conveyor belt and fled through the maintenance area of the abattoir.  Someburger spotted him and the hew and cry was raised.  He dashed out yet another door into the blinding light of freedom.
   The fresh air wafted against his face, and the soft sand churned beneath his toes.  He was next to the ocean, he realized.  Behind him there was a posse of hamburgers, all mounted on horseback.  Ahead of him was the vague outline of something familiar....  It looked like....by god, it was!  The tilted ruin of a McDonald's sign.  He was on Earth, and it was now ruled by hamburgers!
   He collapsed to the ground, raising a defiant fist towards the monolithic M.  “You bastards!” he cried.  Muffled giggles interrupted his lament.  He looked up to see a pair of juvenile hamburgers, each with a half-eaten manburger in its hand, sticking out their pickles and laughing at him.  “Nooooooooo!”
   The posse was almost upon him, but then a strange thing happened, and it was the hamburger civilization's undoing.  Decades of human breeding for consumption purposes had led to an explosion in the amount of flatulence that was emitted into the atmosphere.  At that precise moment some fat guy somewhere let a greasy one rip and that small amount of methane was the straw that tipped the scales.  The climate snapped, sending a tidal wave of melted arctic ice onto the beach and over the land.  The hamburgers were wiped out, as was most of humanity except for those freerangers up in the trees.  Perhaps one day they will rise again.

         THE END
         
Spoiler
Or is it....?
[close]

Ponch

I like the cut of this Spaceman's jib.  :cool:

tzachs

Great story, Baron! This could very well be our future in the end, we should all be aware and vigilant.

Ok, so the deadline has officially passed. Ghost & Ponch (or anybody else), do you need an extension? Some more future perhaps?
I'm sure Baron doesn't want to win on default, so I'm gonna give it one more day (if somebody wants more time, please shout out asap). 

Ponch

Sadly, I must throw in the towel. I've tried several times, but I can't find a way to get from the opening scene to the twist ending that satisfies me.  :embarrassed:

Hopefully Ghost will have more luck. We can't allow those monocled, high-society types to think that they can just win all the trophies.

Baron

Quote from: Ponch on Mon 19/11/2012 18:36:57
We can't allow those monocled, high-society types to think that they can just win all the trophies.

You can't stop me thinking that!

Ponch

#17
Quote from: Baron on Tue 20/11/2012 02:03:13
Quote from: Ponch on Mon 19/11/2012 18:36:57
We can't allow those monocled, high-society types to think that they can just win all the trophies.
You can't stop me thinking that!

At last! Inspiration!



"Mom, do I have to wear this?"

"Yes, Timmy. You have to wear it. Everyone has to wear one."

"But I look dumb. All the kids will laugh at me."

"No, they won't. They'll be wearing them too. You'll see."

"How? I can't see. Everything's all fuzzy and stuff."

"Only half of everything is fuzzy, Timmy," she sighed. "The bad half. The half you're seeing the old way. You have to learn to see the new way. Then it will all be okay."

The propaganda from the newsmen slipped out before she could catch herself and she hated herself for it.

"But Mooommmmmmmmmmm!'

"Go outside and wait for the bus," she said with that certain tone she knew he must obey.

And don't wander out into the street by accident, she thought to herself and gave a quick, silent prayer as he stumbled across the kitchen and fell against the door frame on his way out.

This is just how it's going to be from now on, she thought, resigning herself to it. Raising Tim by myself is going to be hard. Goodness, I wish John were still here.

But John had protested these new changes. No one liked them, of course. But what could you do? You can't fight the government. And that hideous man had been elected, fair and square. And now John had been dragged from his cubicle at work and sent off to the re-education camps. And he'd stay there until he died... Or until he learned to love his monocle.

She studied hers in the mirror. It was hard to see her own reflection. Her brain hadn't come to terms with a world in two different focuses.

Focuses? Foci? She wasn't sure. But pondering the proper pluralization briefly took her mind off the splitting headache she had endured ever since the new law had passed and she'd been forced to have herself fitted for this damn monocle.

John was right. I should have voted for the other guy, she realized belatedly. But that slogan "I'll Show You A Better Vision Of Tomorrow" had just been too good to resist.

Who knew that President Baron would keep his promises. No politician ever had before.

Clever bastard, she thought, and a single tear escaped her aching eye.


Baron

Well, I realize we may not yet have seen all the submissions, but for me Ponch's piece demonstrates such a mastery of prose and ideas that I can't help but vote for him.  As I read his work I saw in my mind's eye a city on a mountain where young and old, rich and poor, jive-talkers and straight talkers all pranced about holding hands in one big circle of harmony.  And, in the due course of time, surely those folk in the re-education camps will be doing the same.  Like his mom, bless her unerring line-toeing, I too was moved to shed a single tear of joy at this paragon of literature, this magnus opus, this beautiful world that we can all get to if we just will it to be so.

Ghost

I'm out, guys. I was too busy enjoying your stuff- clever clever entries!

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