[net.music] EXCLUSIVE -- How Rich Rosen Does It!!!!!

liz@unirot.UUCP (Mamaliz ) (12/12/85)

[from the desk of Mike Whollop, investigative reporter]

It has come to the attention of certain net "officials" that Rich Rosen
is responsible for what has been deemed to be an "excessive amount of
writing".  One very important system administrator has stated that "It
is impossible for one man to produce this much cogent thought in a week."
Well, our cracked investigative team has proven this noteworthy system
administrator to be absolutely correct.

The Rich Rosen credited with all this does not actually exist.  No, he is not
an "AI" (artificial intelligence) project, nor is he an "NS" (natural
stupidity) project, though many of the latter variety have cropped up on the
net at various times.  There is actually a person named Rich Rosen, but he
lives in a hut in Skmelnsk, Utah, and does not know what a computer is.  A
dummy corporation called Nestor Enterprises pays Mr. Rosen handsomely for the
use of his name, and an occasional use of some of his words.  But the
incredibly unbelievable verbiage emanating under the name Rich Rosen, with the
computerese jargon name of "pyuxd!rlr", is not, and of course could not, come
from any one person.

We visited Nestor Enterprises' home office in Waukegan, British Columbia.
It is well obscured in the midst of a large shopping mall (the Waukegan
Galleria).  Behind the Radio Shack, right next to the Merry Go Round,
with a secret entrance in the back of a tailor's shop, we found Nestor
Enterprises.

What we found back there was astounding.  There were 138 struggling authors,
being paid slave wages for piecemeal work, not just by the article, not even
by the word, but BY THE LETTER, sitting at cramped desks using dimly lit
TI-745 hardcopy terminals, forced to use a primitive editor called "ed"
rather than more sophisticated modern word processing tools.  We spoke
to one of these sweat shop employees, a man named Gary Forrest.

	"Heck, I'm a devout Christian and I *love* the Grateful Dead, but
	 they MAKE us write this stuff.  I mean, anything that shows the
	 slightest variance from the position this mythical person holds
	 is thrown out, and if you write too much unorthodox material you're
	 out on the street. ... But, heck, I've got a family to support.
	 I really have no choice.  They pay us $1 for every thousand
	 characters.  It's really awful.  But my wife is pregnant and my
	 dog is sick, and I've got bills to pay, heck, I need the money.
	 Why, to make ends meet, today, I wrote an article to net.abortion
	 about manipulative rhetoric, another article to net.philosophy
	 about wishful thinking, and one more article to net.news.group
	 about some guy proposing that Rich Rosen be removed from the net!
	 I mean, heck, does he want us all to starve?"

We heard similar tales from other writers working for Nestor.  Majors works
hard to make ends meet, so he takes on every assignment he can, from a list
posted daily on a huge board, of some 400,000 articles the Rich Rosen persona
might respond to.  Others work only in specific areas.  The Rev. Carl Wanger
specializes in articles about religion.

	"You know in my travels I've heard just about every line about
	 the non-existence of God, and now it's all paying off.  It's just
	 a matter of picking some line out of my repertoire and harping on
	 it.  If I actually bothered to think about what I write, I think
	 I might go mad.  But all the money I make writing this goes to the
	 church, so it's all for a good cause. ... What is rough is this
	 quota we have to make.  If we don't account for 2% of the total
	 net volume, so that system administrators can quote that statistic
	 to their heart's content all over the net, we get docked 25% of
	 our pay."

We even heard about a department devoted solely to developing signature lines,
which often squanders its funds on wild parties and expensive vacations, going
back to Rich Rosen, the man whose name they pay to use, for suggestions for
new signature lines at the last minute.  We continued our investigation by
flying to Utah to meet this Rich Rosen.

Some people have said "Rich Rosen can't possibly be as obnoxious as he appears
on the net".  Well, THIS Rich Rosen actually exceeded the limits of imagination
in this area.  When we arrived at his hut, he killed our cameraman with his
teeth, maimed the soundman with the landmines surrounding his hut, and pointed
a nuclear decompositor (at least that's the term he used) at this reporter
when asked what his name was.  We finally managed to settle him down and
begin the conversation by offering him some chocolate truffles.

"MR. ROSEN, ARE YOU AWARE OF YOUR NAME BEING USED BY THE NESTOR CORPORATION?"

"'Course I am, y' silly boy, heh heh heh.  They pay me furty dollars a month!"

"DO YOU HAVE ANY INPUT INTO WHAT GETS SAID?"

"Jesus Calliope, how the hick em I s'posed t'know?  I don't read the stuff
	that gits writt, ya thinks I'm crazy?"

"YOU DON'T READ ANY OF IT?"

"Curse not, might cause brain damage!  And even if I did know how, I wouldn't
	read it!"

"BUT THEY SAY THEY COME TO YOU FOR INPUT ON OCCASION."

"Cupla guys came down here with a chocolate mousse cheesecake and had me
	talking t'them fur a few hours, and they writ down ever'thing I
	said. Y'know, life's possible, but the bus of thought has many
	parts in La Paz."

"BUT HAVE YOU ANY IDEA WHO IS BEHIND THIS, WHAT THEY'RE DOING IT FOR,
	WHO'S FUNDING IT, ..."

"Now, slow down, sonny, start at the beginning..."

What Mr. Rosen told us was shocking.  Who is funding this effort to flood
the network with an overload of articles?  Well, it seems to be coming from
several places.  One of the chief investors in Nestor Enterprises is the rock
star Madonna.  She could not be reached for comment.  But public records show
that at least 20% of the company is indirectly owned by her.  In recent times,
she had direct operational control of the signature line division.  Another is
Dr. Gene Scott, the television evangelist, who owns close to 25% of the firm. 
Apparently, though, this is really not Gene Scott alone but a consortium of
religious evangelists working in tandem, led by Pat Robertson.  There are
other smaller investors in the firm, including rock stars like Jerry Garcia,
Kate Bush, and Lionel Ritchie, and other entertainment figures like John
Travolta and Phyllis Schlafly.  But by far the biggest chunk of the firm is
owned by False Front Operations, a dummy corporation owned and operated by both
the Central Intelligence Agency *and* the KGB, which also owns MTV, CBN, and
Roy Rogers restaurants.

And what is the purpose behind flooding the network with endless streams
of articles?  Well, that's still not clear.  It seems that sometimes it
is used as a promotional tool for the shareholders of Nestor Enterprises,
yet at other times it serves an absolutely opposite function.  Dr. Hector
Emolument, chairman of the Department of Unclassifyable Phenomena at
Skleeb University in Kuala Lumpur, speculates:

	"I don't know."

We then traveled to Saint Tropez, ostensibly to meet Linda Frascoli, executive
vice president in charge of signature lines.

	"No, that's preposterous.  Of course we're not a front for the CIA. 
	 We're just a tax write-off for a lot of people with lots of money to
	 burn.  All this talk about us transmitting subliminal electronic 
	 messages to alter people's brains is preposterous."

	"ALL WHAT TALK ABOUT TRANSMITTING SUBLIMINAL ELECTRONIC MESSAGES..."

	"Oh, nothing, nothing, ..."

More on this story as it develops.

phoenix@genat.UUCP (phoenix) (02/23/86)

Power corrupts.  Absolute power corrupts absolutely.

Whom the gods destroy, they first make mad.

Can you imagine what might be accomplished should this person be persuaded
to turn their talents to the use of the Forces of Goodness? .

-- 
					The Phoenix
					(Neither Bright, Dark, nor Young)


---"A man should live forever...or die trying."
---"There is no substitute for good manners...except fast reflexes."