Wedding of the Century Wrap-up
I was as surprised as you that I got an invite! Here’s what happened: on arrival, we were ushered into what looked like a fairly traditional wedding chapel that had been custom built inside Madison Square Garden.
Taylor was walked down the aisle by her lawyer, her accountant, and her business manager for the ceremonial signing of the pre-nup. (We all got copies—Travis gets nothing.) Then a disembodied voice came over the PA and told us to proceed to the rear of the chapel.
We did, and young acolytes handed us red-trimmed black, hooded robes. And none of this costume store satin shit, either: pure imported silk, baby! Mine had an Apple Watch in one pocket and an entire Biologique Recherche skin care kit in the other. “It’s dry-clean only,” the acolyte whispered as I took and then donned the robe.
We were led into a dark chamber bedecked with graven images so horrifying to the mind—yea, to the soul!—that I refuse to burden my readers with a description of them. Adam Sandler sang the ceremony in an alien and disturbing tongue, though this was not helped by him doing it as Operaman.
Selena Gomez pricked her finger with a ceremonial dagger and drew sigils on the altar with her blood. Taylor and Travis then mounted the altar for their ceremonial first coupling, with Boomer Esiason doing play by play and Terry Bradshaw doing color commentary. (I wasn’t sure all the stats were necessary, but to each their own, I suppose.)
Then Noah Kahan came out and sang a melancholy song about the difficulty of being a white man in Vermont. “Let us remember, friends, that marriage, like life, is not only sweet…but also bitter.” Catering staff appeared with shot glasses for all, and we all downed a glass of an unbearably bitter, unholy beverage whose very existence shattered my illusion of living in a world presided over by a loving God. I believe it was called Malört.
The rest of the evening was a blur. At one point a man whose very countenance seemed to bespeak aquatic ancestry—was he a man turning into a fish, or a fish turning into a man? And which possibility is more horrifying?—approached me and whispered in my ear, “Cthulhu F’tagn! Iä! Iä!”
I looked at him, trying to refocus my eyes that had glazed over due to the horrors I had already witnessed. “Don Knotts?” I said. “They brought you back from the dead for this?”
He got right up in my face and whispered, “Anything you desire can be had…FOR A PRICE!” My last memory was of his maniacal laughter.
I awakened this morning in a dumpster in Ho-Ho-Kus New Jersey with no memory of how I’d gotten there.
Overall, I give it two thumbs up!