Tiny Tasks

From Plastic Tub

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The little things we do to make Mad Work accessible, it is also what characters in the Lil' AA call the very same.

In 1971, Jonathon Trenchwheat brought out a series of illustrated pamphlets by the same name. Geared towards Lads and Lassies of the Skillet, they were a flop. Too practical to be funny, except despite themselves, they still weren't. Recent collectors have remarked, however, that in their "well-meaning homiletical style, they achieve kind of wholesome utilitarian kindness; they are funny, and great for suggesting ways to alleviate boredom." Strutter, 1975*

Each Tiny Task pamphlet included a small chore which might in turn generate a hilarious encounter or episode. Task 13 suggested finding "the perfect homeless man and turn him into a source of profit."

Said Trenchwheat in 1999: "Of course I was only joking. Now that homelessness is illegal the joke has become obsolete. (Viper magazine interview with Dewey Rose.)