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True tales of Lotto winners

by Audiman 

Posted: 22 May 2004
Word Count: 485


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Content Warning
This piece and/or subsequent comments may contain strong language.


Alan Jazzmags

A few days after Alan Jazzmags, 62, and his wife checked their selections, married them up with the official winning numbers, and then received a confirmatory phone call, Alan had an eerie, almost inexplicable feeling that he'd won the Audiville Lotto.

The Jazzmags' immediate family, their families, their in-laws, some distant cousins and some people they once met at a glazing convention all travelled to Audiville to help them celebrate their £64.3m prize.

Alan and Maureen, a former lime welder, insist they won't be changing anything. "The kids will still go hungry and cold, and work all hours for us," they said from their beachfront apartment in Waikiki.

Johnny Luftwaffe

You just never know which numbers are going to come up in the Audiville Lotto. But, if you're like Johnny Luftwaffe, 72, of Strategy Avenue, you don't take any chances. Johnny covered every base, spending over £11.65m on tickets that nailed every possible numerical combination. "Except one," said Johnny, from the psychiatric wing of Audiville General Hospital.

Jimmy Boyband

Jimmy Boyband, 82, who wishes to be known only as Jimmy Boyband, scooped last week's £54m jackpot. Jimmy says the money won't change his life. "No, I won't be retiring, but I'll sure as hell be taking it a lot easier behind my monitor," said Jimmy, who works as an air-traffic controller.

Jimmy was nearly disqualified under the rule that says you have to present an unlikely tale of outrageous fortune to claim a lottery prize. With this in mind, he deliberately picked an argument with his fishmonger. "I told the guy that charging £10 for trout was too much," said Jimmy. "I said I would pay him £9, and then I went to the store and used my pound to buy a Lotto ticket."

Jimmy is a great believer in charity, and hopes to donate the first half of his winnings to the Audiville Lotto Commission. "I'll be keeping the zeros," said a confused Jimmy, from his deckchair.

Emily Felony

Emily Felony, 59, has won £172.8m. Emily says her next step could be to help her much-loved father-in-law. He has been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, and medical bills alone will come to over £14,000. "I suppose this means I'll have to chip in towards the cost of his treatment now," said Emily, from her speedboat.

Adds Emily: "My husband and I will be celebrating with a trip for two to Disneyland. We have 26 grandchildren, 14 great nieces and nephews and seven great granchildren. It's just such a shame our trip clashes with term-time," said a delighted Emily from the back seat of her limo.

"I've always believed that raising children with strong Christian values, a powerful work ethic and a sense of community was the most important thing in life," says Emily. ˜But I know that's all bollocks now."

Emily also intends to buy Tom Jones and a share in a dolphin.






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Comments by other Members



Al T at 10:25 on 22 May 2004  Report this post
Hello Audiman, I like your style! Nice whimsical humour for a sleepy Saturday morning. These remind me a bit of The Far Side cartoons - have you ever thought of having them illustrated? Emily Felony was my favourite - most amusing, and a wonderful name.

Good stuff,

Adele.

P.S. when I first saw your name I thought you might be a German friend of mine who is inordinately proud of his Audi TT - have I blown your cover? (Cue the German jokes, I guess).

Dee at 12:52 on 23 May 2004  Report this post
Wicked, Audiman. Almost surreal.

Loved the ‘former lime welder’ line.

Dee.


ShayBoston at 17:17 on 30 May 2004  Report this post
This is good stuff Audiman. Fave line has to be 'Jimmy Boyband 82, who wishes to be known only as Jimmy Boyband'.

Shay


Nell at 08:59 on 03 July 2004  Report this post
Hi Audiman,

I've been reading your shorts for a while now, but today decided to start at the first piece you posted. I think The Far Side is the nearest comparison as Adele says; this is surreal and funny, and slightly dark too - it's like opening the newspaper and finding that you live somewhere quite different and the world has tilted on its axis. I think you've created something that could catch on with this.

Nell.

Audiman at 10:39 on 03 July 2004  Report this post
Thanks, Nell. I think it's down to something my wife puts in my coffee. Seriously, you'll find the main influences are Woody Allen's written work and the online Framley Examiner. There may be a lull now, as I've just about exhausted my archive. Must now discipline myself to write a new piece every few days. Once I've got enough, I'll start to market it. Any ideas?

Nell at 15:16 on 03 July 2004  Report this post
Audiman, I can imagine it as one of those slim books (with the cover designed like a newspaper (The Audiman Times along the top) that you buy to read on a train, or get given by someone who knows your odd sense of humour. No informed ideas for marketing or submitting I'm afraid; I think this will either grab an agent or publisher or not (no in between), so it'll be a question of submitting and hoping that you hit one who sees its potential.

Nell.


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