88
S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
walkouts, and hunger strikes
won
his United Farm Workers
of America a union contract
and insurance benefi ts. But
when dissenting UFW orga-
nizers went on a hunger strike
of their own to protest Chavez
having fi red them, he got up-
set—and fi led a $25
million
libel suit against them.
✖ ✖ ✖
A divorced father and washed-
up garbage collector at 40,
Barry Horne was a midlife cri-
sis waiting to happen. Forgoing
the usual sports car pur chase
or aff air
with a younger woman,
Horne instead launched a fi ve-
year campaign of fi rebomb-
ings against British companies
he viewed as animal rights vi-
olators. In 1997 he was caught and received an 18-year jail
sentence, the longest ever given to an animal rights protestor.
Four hunger strikes followed in an attempt to force a public
inquiry into animal lab testing—his longest was a record 68
days—to no avail. He died from starvation-induced kidney
failure in 2001.
✖ ✖ ✖
What’s so magical about magician David Blaine, anyway?
His “tricks” consist mainly of absurd feats of endurance—
encasing himself in ice for 66 hours,
burying himself alive
for a week—and while he name-checks Houdini as an infl u-
We Want Our
Welsh TV
When it looked like Margaret
Thatcher was about to renege
on an election promise to cre-
ate the fi rst Welsh-language
TV station, Gwynfor Evans did
what any concerned member
of Parliament would do: He
threatened to go on a hunger
strike. More surprising even
than Evans’s
petulant tactic was
that hard-nosed Thatcher gave
in, and Sianel Pedwar Cymru
(Channel Four Wales) began
broadcasting in 1982. The sta-
tion’s biggest hit to date: Su-
perTed, the animated adven-
tures of a magical teddy bear.
89
ence, at least Houdini tried to escape. Blaine just tortures
himself,
not to mention his fans, in the process. A 2003
stunt suspended him 30 feet above a London park in a glass
box, without food, for 44 days. (Sure, other folks have fasted
for longer than that—but who else has done it for no rea-
son?) Charitable Londoners decided
if Blaine wanted to tor-
ture himself, they would do their best to help him: eggs, beer
cans, and paint-fi lled balloons were all lobbed at the box,
and one prankster used a radio-controlled helicopter to
taunt Blaine with fl ying cheeseburgers. Call it a case of per-
fect celebrity justice.
03
Celebrity Justice:
Twenty “Trials of the Century”
Lately, media pundits and newsmakers have been dubbing
things “trial of the century” like it’s going out of style; ac-
cording to ever-hyperbolic
USA TODAY,
Martha Stewart,
Robert Blake, and Michael Jackson
each had trials of the
century—in 2005. Of course, we think that’s just silly: So
in the interest of setting the record straight, here are our
top 20.
1906:
Harry Th
aw, the trust-funded
son of a Pittsburgh in-
dustrialist, shoots Madison Square Garden architect Stan-
ford White in the face—during a show at Madison Square
Garden. Claiming White raped Th
aw’s wife, his lawyer wins
an acquittal
by arguing Th
aw suff ered from “dementia Amer-
icana,” affl
icting any American male whose wife’s purity is
violated.
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