The I Team

The I Team
It's not the news, it's better!

Friday, August 30, 2013

Biggest Rocket in US Launches Top Secret Satellite


MSNBC Headline – 8/28/13

NEW YORK, NY – The United States has done it again! Just to show how badass we are, the government has finally launched their well publicized, super duper secret and incredibly technologically advanced spy satellite into outer space on the largest rocket in American history.   

“We thought it was high time to remind the world just how much ass we can kick,” said John Hanks, the White House Commander of Outer Space Rockets and Technologies. “So we put this totally high-tech spy camera thingy – which is way more totally high tech then anything coming out of Asia right now, by the way – on our biggest, fastest, most explosive rocket. It’s all supposed to be very hush-hush though, so try not to tell anyone.”

At exactly high noon today, the government began the countdown from their undisclosed research lab underneath the middle of Times Square. When the clock on every video billboard in New York struck zero, the streets at the intersection of Broadway and Seventh Ave opened and our kick-ass rocket flew into outer space like a fiery eagle swooping in on a helpless field mouse – but in reverse. It was awesome.

“It was awesome,” claims 83 year-old New York resident, Molly Hurmet, who was one of thousands gathered along the sidewalks of Times Square to witness this historic and classified event. “The streets opened up and it was all like ‘cruuunch’, and then we could see right into that secret lab under Times Square no one knows about. The next thing you know there’s this rocket the size of like, probably Rhode Island or something, that’s just zooming into space. It definitely restored my faith in our government.”

However, the total and complete awesomeness of the spectacle isn’t what impressed citizens the most. No, what really struck people as “pretty legit” was how the government let us in on the top-secret science project from the very beginning.  “I remember reading something online like a year ago about a gigantic rocket that was gonna launch some spyware into outer space or something,” says Hurmet. “I was like, ‘OK, another rocket. Whatever.’ But then I kept reading and the article was all like, ‘This is super duper top secret, so please don’t tell any of your foreign friends,’ and that’s when I was like, ‘Whoa, this is pretty legit.’ I was so happy the government would trust me like that. It says a lot, you know?”

Crowds began to gather shortly after 8 this morning, when President Barack Obama tweeted the high-noon launch info. Needless to say, the crowds left pleased and with a renewed faith in the omnipotence of the government. Also, crowds were asked to please not share anything they witnessed, and we must ask our readers to do the same.

-Pete Higgins

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Are Coffee and Sushi OK in Pregnancy? Book Says Yes



CNN Headline 8/20/2013

Pregnant women across America don’t know what to believe anymore. Neither, for that matter, do sushi chefs, the people of Seattle, illiterates, or anyone under 35-years-old. Why? According to an internet headline, something called “book” is challenging our preconceived notions and telling us how to live our own lives.

“I was into my second trimester,” says 27-year-old pregnant Portland resident, Sidney Morgan. “When I stumbled upon this headline on stumbleupon.com telling me a book said I could eat sushi again. At first I was like, ‘Awesome-sauce! I totes heart sushi,’ but then I got curious. I couldn’t find a website of this book. Not a Facebook page, a Twitter account, or a single pic on Instagram. I started to seriously question the credibility of this so-called ‘book’.”

Sidney is not alone. Once the hallmark of the written word, over the past decade books in America have seen a serious drop in their use, credibility, and importance. When once we’d turn to books for knowledge and information, more and more people have found clicking a headline and skimming an online article, or reading a 140-character blurb to be a far more convenient and reliable source of information.

Cullen Danks, noted internet explorer at Kirkwood Community College, understands the public’s rationale. “The times have changed, bub, and you best get used to it,” explains Danks. “Why read, like, a thousand, even two-thousand words in a book – which is basically just a dead tree with some ink spilled on it, by the way – when you could go online and get essentially the same info in like a second, then have plenty of free time to check scores or look at naked Asian chicks piss on King-Kong? It just doesn’t make sense anymore in today’s go-go-go culture. Books are so old and irrelevant. I mean, there are roughly a million stories right now on Google News about Kim Kardashian’s beef with Katie Couric, but will there even be one single book about the drama? I doubt it.”
 
Books are so chock full of words and paragraphs that it’s unreasonable to ask any one person to pay attention for that long. It’s that sort of unrealistic expectation that has led many, Sidney Morgan included, to distrust books and the “information” they might contain.

“What kind of person would write that many words about sushi and coffee and its relationship to pregnancy?” Sidney asks.  “I mean, they could just come out and tweet, ‘Pregnant ladies, it’s OK to eat sushi and drink coffee.’” Wouldn’t that be enough? Why do they need to go and write a kagillion words about it, with facts and studies and probably spreadsheets? Seriously, who needs all those words about pregnancy and sushi? What are they trying to hide?”

What are they trying to hide? Books, with their fancy tables of contents, page numbers, and billions of characters. Books, walking around town wearing a tie, holding a briefcase thinking they’re oh so much better then us. What are they trying to hide behind their facts and numbers and complex storylines? Sadly, we will never know.

-Pete Higgins