From the Profile of Pepe the King Prawn
Everyday—the same thing! Everyday! It’s monotonous! Unbelievable! Everyday the same thing!
Well… except today.
Today we’re in some dark studio with sets and celebrities running around like chickens—and we have chickens too, which doesn’t really help things—unless of course you’re Gonso (and I hope you’re not).
“Hey, Pepe!”
“Dios mio!” I shouted, jumping off the floor. I turned around and stared into the glasses of Scooper. “Wha’d’re’jou’doing?” I shouted. “Jou scared me!”
Scooper lowered his head slightly. “Sorry about that,” he said. He drew in the clipboard he was holding against his dark green jacket. “But you’re wanted on set!”
“What for?” I asked impatiently—when the monotonous breaks, impatience comes out to play.
Our go-fer squirmed slightly. “For… for the next scene,” Scooper told me.
I stared at Scooper. “…Es Uma in it?” I inquired.
Scooper’s head tilted to the side. “She… uh… she shot her scenes yesterday, Pepe—she’s not here anymore,” he explained.
I sighed, I knew this, but, hey, a prawn can hope, si? “Hokay, fine,” I said, walking towards the set, “I’ll settle for squeaky’s girlfriend.”
“She and Beaker are on their lunch break,” Scooper said as he ran to catch up with me.
I grumbled my best annoyed grumble. “H’of course d’ey are! Pepe doesn’t need de ladies, hokay! No, no, he’s fine with Fotzie.”
Scooper glanced down at his clipboard. “Well that’s good,” he said, “‘cause he’s in the scene!”
I rolled my eyes. “UN-believable,” I muttered. “Where’s Kirk? D’is isn’t in my contract, hokay!”
Papers flipped as Scooper ran through the contents of his clipboard. “Actually, it is!” Scooper told me. He put the page on the clipboard in front of my face. “See, right there,” Scooper said, pointing to page. “‘Will work with bears when no women are available.’ Signed… by you.”
I read the contract again, just to make sure. He was right. I glared up at the go-fer. “Why do jou have d’is, anyway?”
Scooper shrugged. “Kermit thought it would be a good idea for me to hold everyone’s contracts,” he told me.
“Kermin?” I asked. “Where es he?”
“He’s waiting on the set,” Scooper said. “Where you should be!”
“Well go get him,” I told Scooper.
“What?”
“Go get him!” I repeated. “Jou’re de go-fer—go-fer him, hokay!”
Scooper sighed. “Okay, I’ll go get him—but you have to put your costume on for the scene, okay?”
“Hokay,” I agreed. Scooper scampered off to find Kermin. The deal was easy on my end—just a sock hat and four mittens and I’m ready to go (I was already wearing my red hoodie and yellow shirt—and no pants, if the womens were wondering).
I slipped on the mittens and hat as Scooper brought Kermin back to me. He did not look too happy. “Pepe what is it? We’re on a very tight schedule and we need to get this scene shot!” the froggy told me.
“I can’t shoot d’is scene, Kermin!” I shouted. “D’ere’s no womens in de scene, hokay!”
Kermin scrunched up his face—he always looked so funny when he did this. “Miss Piggy is in this scene, Pepe!”
“…What does d’is have to do with de womens?” I asked.
“WHAT?” I heard a very angry, very Piggy voice shout.
Kermin instinctively ducked and Scooper did the same. I gulped loudly. I could feel the bacon breath on the back of my neck. I slowly turned around and stared into Miss Piggy’s baby-blue eyes. “Erm…” I tried to speak. “Hola.”
“I heard what you said,” the porker growled down at me.
“Uhh… what did I say?” I asked innocently while trying to come up with an excuse.
“What does moi have to do with you working with a woman?” she hissed.
I hesitated… “I meant d’at jou are not de womens! Jou are a lady, hokay!”
Miss Porky glared down at me. “You’re lucky.”
“Grathius.”
“If your book wasn’t paying for moi’s shoes, you’d be karate chopped right now,” she said.
“D’is es why it came first, hokay!” I said with a snicker.
“Whatever,” Piggy said, rolling her eyes. “Can we just shoot this scene, please?”
A whistle blew somewhere.
“Nope,” Scooper told the pig. “Lunch break.”
“Great,” Porky said sarcastically. “C’mon Kermie, buy moi lunch.”
Kermin frowned. “If only because you asked so nicely, Miss Piggy.”
“Why we take so many lunch breaks?” I asked Scooper as the frog and the pig went off to do something that would surely make me sick.
Scooper shrugged. “It’s a union thing.”
“Junion?” I asked. “What junion?”
“Hoor de unie bor de snackie do!” said the Chef as he bobbled up to me and Scooter.
I didn’t really think the Chef was Swedish, but then again, I’m not really Spanish, so it’s okay, okay. “Jour junion?” I asked the raving chef.
“Jour what?” asked an annoyingly ratty voice. It was a fitting voice for Ritzo, though.
“Junion!” I shouted at the rat. “His junion!”
“What’s d’at?” Ritzo asked me. “A juicy onion? Ha!”
“Jou’re dumb, hokay!” I told him. “Why are jou here anyway?”
Ritzo shrugged that cheeky little shrug of his. “I follow da food,” he said, motioning towards the Chef. “No mattah how bad it is! Heh heh!”
I stared at Ritzo, and then looked at the Chef. “What junion?” I asked again.
The Swedish Chef started to babble on about something I couldn’t understand and Scooper looked at me. “The Union of Gluttonous Laughing Yodelers,” he explained.
“U… G… L… Y… HA! U.G.L.Y.!” Ritzo laughed.
I shook my head. “Jour junion jodels?” I asked the Chef.
“What?” Ritzo asked.
“I said, ‘jour junion jodels!’” I shouted. “Listen, hokay!”
“I am listenin’! But… good grief! Talk about an accent!”
“Jou’re going to have an accident if jou’re not careful, hokay!” I growled, preparing for battle with the rat.
“Noooo!” shouted the Chef. “Noo, noo, noo! Noo hitsa de ratskie! Ya, ya. Bloo hoor de loonge!”
“Fine,” I said, giving up my fight with Ritzo. “We’ll do lunch.”
“Can I come?” Scooper asked.
“Sure, we need someone less recognizable to keep the paparazzi off our tails,” Ritzo said.
Scooper frowned. “That’s not what I—”
“Si, si, jou can,” I told the go-fer. “Let’s go somewhere fancy, hokay!”
“Pft, are you payin’?” Ritzo asked.
“No,” I said, shaking my head. “Kirk is. He owes me.”
“For what?” Ritzo asked.
I shrugged. “Somet’ing, I’m sure. Besides… I have his credit card.” I flashed Kirk’s plastic in front of Ritzo, Scooper, and the Chef.
“Oh, very nice!” Rizzo said, patting my back.
“Grathius amigo,” I said.
“Well can we get going already?” Scooper asked.
“Hold on,” Ritzo said, “I forgot I told Gonzo I’d go to lunch with him.”
“UNbelievable! C’mon, Ritzo! Every time! Every time jou do d’is, hokay!” I shouted.
“Oh come on,” Ritzo said. “It’ll take t’ree minutes—tops!”
“Fine,” I said. “Just don’t let him bring de chicken—es molting season!”
The Chef, at the mention of chickens, shouted something and ran off in the opposite direction. We all shrugged it off and Scooper pointed ahead of us. “I don’t think it’ll be too much of a problem not having Camilla with us,” he said.
Our eyes followed the path of Scooper’s pointing finger to where Gonso and Carmina were obviously having a fight.
“Hey, hey, hey!” Rizzo shouted as he tried to break up the bickering. “What’s goin’ on?”
Gonso sighed. “Camilla is upset because I told ‘Cheeky Chickens Weekly’ that she was an internet star—and they took it the wrong way,” he said.
“Brawk bawk bagawk baw!” Carmina clucked furiously.
“Please,” I said to Carmina, “I don’t t’ink anyone will call jou a hot internet chick.”
“I would!” Gonso shouted.
“Si, but jou’re a weirdo,” I told the weirdo.
“Brawk bagawk!” Carmina shouted at me.
I gasped. “I am not!”
“What’d she say?” Ritzo asked.
“I don’t know…” I admitted. “But I’m sure it was mean, hokay.”
Scooper rolled his eyes. “And you wonder why no women want to be in scenes with you.”
“C’mon, es a chicken!” I said. “She’s not a womens!”
“BRAWK!” Carmina squawked, running towards me, beak first.
The sharp orange beak landed on me more times than I could count. As she pecked, her white feathers flew off of her body—molting season, you know. By the time she retreated off of me there weren’t any feathers sitting on her now naked body.
I rubbed my head. “Dios mio… I did not order de chicken strip, hokay!”
Gonso’s eyelids waggled back and forth. “I should have! Ha ha ha!”
“BRAWK!” Carmina clucked. She ran off, naked and near tears, through the crowded production studio.
“Kirk! Kirk!” Gonso shouted as he chased after his chicken. “Keep the cameras on!” Gonso laughed wildly as he ran.
Ritzo, Scooper, and I exchanged glances. “Well what now?” Scooper asked.
I shrugged. “Lunch, hokay.”
Ritzo and Scooter shrugged too. “Okay.”
As we left, Kermin and Miss Piggy came back from their disgusting lunch date. Kermin looked around the studio, now empty of us and full of a shouting chicken and weirdo. He shook his head slowly. “It’ll be Christmas before we get this special finished,” he said.
Miss Piggy ran her hair through her fingers and examined herself in her handheld mirror. “As long as that’s not what you get moi for Christmas,” she said.
Kermin smirked. “How about a book deal instead?” he asked.
The pig slammed her mirror shut. “Cancel Pepe’s first, then we’ll talk.”
The frog smiled. “Think of it this way… he’ll be out of our hair for the promotional tour.”
Miss Porky smirked. “Very good point, mon cher.”