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An AI Generated April Fool’s Carol

Posted: April 1, 2025 by datechguy in Uncategorized

At work today I had an inspiration imagining if a Christmas Carol was instead an April Fool’s Day story and given that AI can do almost anything I came home and asked Grok AI to do this:

using Charles Dickens “A Christmas Carol” and the movie adaptions featuring George C Scott, Alastar Sim and Reganld Owen as a base rewrite the story with the following changes:

While miserly, Scrooge’s actual fault is a lack of a sense of humor

It takes place on March 31st and April’s fools Day

Expand the story with the following additions:

  1. The Ghost of April Fool’s Past is Falstaff from Shakespeare
  2. The Ghost of April Fool’s Present is Karl Marx but with Groucho Marx sense of humor and language
  3. The Ghost of April Fool’s yet to come is based on Robin Williams

This is what it came up with:

A Fool’s Redemption

It was the dreary evening of March 31st, 1843, in a fog-choked London, and Ebenezer Scrooge sat in his counting-house, his face a mask of perpetual disdain. The looming specter of April Fools’ Day—a holiday of pranks and laughter—filled him with loathing. To Scrooge, humor was a frivolous distraction, a plague upon sensible men. His clerk, Bob Cratchit, dared not snicker as he scratched at his ledger, though his eyes betrayed a suppressed glee. Scrooge’s nephew, Fred, had earlier bounded in, exclaiming, “A merry April Fools’ to you, Uncle! Join us tomorrow for jests and jollity!” Scrooge’s reply was a snarl: “Jollity? I’d rather tally soot than indulge in such idiocy. Out with you!” Fred departed, chuckling, which only soured Scrooge further.

That night, in his bleak chambers, Scrooge bolted his door against the world’s nonsense. But as midnight tolled, a clamor erupted—chains rattled, and before him stood the ghost of Jacob Marley, his old partner. Marley’s spectral form was shackled, but atop his head perched a ludicrous jester’s cap, its bells tinkling absurdly.

“Marley, what mockery is this?” Scrooge snapped.

“These chains I forged in life,” Marley groaned, “and this cap I wear for shunning laughter. You, Ebenezer, scorn mirth as I did. Heed me: three spirits will visit tonight, or you’ll jingle into eternity as I do—a fool too late!” The bells jangled as Marley vanished.

Scrooge huffed. “Phantoms playing pranks? I’ll not be gulled.” Yet doubt crept in.

The First Spirit: The Ghost of April Fools’ Past (Falstaff)

At one o’clock, the room filled with a boisterous laugh, and in lumbered a corpulent figure—Sir John Falstaff, straight from Shakespeare’s taverns. His doublet strained over a vast belly, his cheeks ruddy with ale-soaked mirth, and he waved a cap-and-bells like a scepter. “Come, thou lean and joyless knave!” he bellowed. “I am the Ghost of April Fools’ Past—let’s to thy yesteryears, with a hey-nonny-nonny!”

Scrooge, grumbling, was swept to a sunlit schoolyard. Young Ebenezer sat alone, scowling as boys traded jests and tripped each other with whoops of delight. “A dull boy, wast thou,” Falstaff roared, slapping his thigh. “Why not tumble in the mud with them?” Scrooge muttered, “Folly breeds chaos.”

Next, they stood in Fezziwig’s warehouse, where the jovial master led a dance, cracking bawdy jests. Young Scrooge lingered by the wall, lips pursed. Falstaff guffawed. “Old Fezziwig, a prince of mirth! And thou, a sour sack of wine, too proud to caper!” Scrooge shifted uncomfortably. “He was a wastrel.”

“Wastrel?” Falstaff winked, quaffing an invisible tankard. “Nay, he lived, thou lump of melancholy! Dost thou not feel the jest of it?” Before Scrooge could argue, Falstaff vanished with a hiccupping laugh, leaving a whiff of sack and a lingering “Fare thee well!”

The Second Spirit: The Ghost of April Fools’ Present (Karl Marx as Groucho)

At two, a figure burst in—a bearded giant in a green robe, cigar in hand, with Karl Marx’s stern brow but Groucho Marx’s impish grin. “Well, well, Scrooge, you old sourpuss!” he quipped, waggling his eyebrows. “I’m the Ghost of April Fools’ Present—call me Karl, with a K and a chuckle! Let’s take a gander at the proletariat’s punchlines—outside of a dog, laughter’s a man’s best friend. Inside of a dog, it’s too dark to laugh!”

Scrooge recoiled as Karl dragged him through London’s streets, puffing smoke rings. They landed at Bob Cratchit’s home, where the family giggled over a sparse supper. Tiny Tim, frail but beaming, balanced a pea on his nose, crowing, “God bless us, every one—and may we always find a giggle!” Karl elbowed Scrooge. “Look at that kid—more spirit than a barrel of bourbon! You oughta join the union of fun, Ebenezer—dues are low, and the cigars are free!” Scrooge’s mouth twitched, unbidden.

Next, they crashed Fred’s party, where guests swapped sugar for salt and cackled. Fred toasted, “To Uncle Scrooge—may he trade his frown for a whoopee cushion!” Karl snorted. “Your nephew’s got more class than the bourgeoisie and twice the wit! I’d say he’s got you pegged, but I wouldn’t say it in a room full of pegs!” Scrooge glared, but the laughter tugged at him.

Karl’s grin faded as he parted his robe, revealing two scrawny urchins: Ignorance and Want. “These are your kids, pal,” he deadpanned. “No laughs for them—capitalism’s a real knee-slapper, huh?” Then, with a puff of cigar smoke, he was gone.

The Third Spirit: The Ghost of April Fools’ Yet to Come (Robin Williams)

At three, a hooded figure emerged—silent, cloaked in black, yet radiating an electric energy. As it lowered its hood, Scrooge glimpsed a face alive with manic warmth: a Robin Williams-esque spectre, eyes twinkling with mischief and melancholy. It said nothing, merely pointed with a flourish, and Scrooge followed, sensing a wild humor beneath the grimness.

In a future London, men mocked a dead miser—humorless, forgotten. “Scrooge? He wouldn’t laugh if you tickled him with a feather duster!” one chortled. The spirit’s eyes danced, as if to say, Oh, captain, my captain, what a punchline! At Bob’s home, Tiny Tim’s chair sat empty, the family’s joy snuffed out. The spirit mimed a tear, then a pratfall, its silence screaming absurdity.

In a graveyard, it gestured to a stone: Ebenezer Scrooge—No Fool Like an Old Fool. Scrooge gasped. “Spirit, you mad genius—give me a chance! I’ll laugh, I’ll live—don’t leave me in this punchline!” The figure spun, flashed a grin that lit the dark, and dissolved into a burst of spectral confetti.

April Fools’ Day

Scrooge awoke on April 1st, a grin splitting his face. He flung open his window, cackling at the dawn. “Boy!” he hollered. “What day is it?”

“April Fools’, sir!” came the reply.

“Glorious! Fetch me a whoopee cushion—the biggest—and a horn for Tiny Tim! Keep the change, you little rogue!” His laugh echoed, raw but growing.

At Bob’s, he burst in, honking the horn. “A week off, Bob, you sly fox—and a raise! Let’s prank the street!” Tiny Tim tooted his own horn, and Scrooge roared, tears of mirth streaming. At Fred’s, he took a pie to the face, howling, “Well struck, nephew! I’m a fool reborn!”

From then on, Scrooge was London’s merriest soul—jesting with Falstaff’s gusto, quipping like Karl with a cigar, and living with the wild joy of a Williams riff. Tiny Tim thrived, and Scrooge proved that even the sternest heart could dance to life’s absurd tune.

And so, as Tiny Tim proclaimed, “God bless us, every one—and may the laughs never stop!”

Will someone please ask all these idiots who are cheering violence against Tesla cars and Tesla owners, who are by and large rich leftists if they REALLY want to normalize political violence in a country when a very large amount of their political foes are armed?


One of the dumbest things POTUS 46 Mr. Autopen did was not allow Elon Musk to save the Astronauts who were stranded in the space station in orbit.

Will somebody ask the Democrats what the plan was if Kamala won? If Musk was going to be persona-non-grata and Boeing wasn’t able to get the job done how were the Astronauts going to get down?

By not letting Musk do it was Biden was still in office their rescue became a TRUMP success and a Biden/Democrat failure instead of it being an AMERICAN success.

Idiots.


You don’t have to go far on the net or the media to see leftists denouncing Chuck Schumer as the greatest traitor since Judas for voting for cloture on the GOP budget.

Fetterman of Pennsylvania, who already announced he would vote for cloture was already pissing off Democrats for his support of Israel that he shares with Schumer so hitting him would be redundant but Schumer, he was a new and apparently legit target.

Jon Stewart did a huge piece on Schumer first acting tough then folding on a shutdown and in that piece he noted that the GOP needed 8 votes to stop a Democrat filibuster.

Yet while Stewart named and shamed Schumer he seems to be weak on his math as Schumer and Fetterman only brought the GOP vote to 53 as Rand Paul did not support the the bill leaving the GOP still seven votes short.

This proved not to be a problem as Gillibrand Schumer’s fellow Democrat senator from NY, Both NH Democrat Senators Hassan and Shaheen (who is retiring), Cortez-Matso of Nevada , Schatz of Hawaii, Peters of Michigan, Angus King of Maine an independent caucusing with Democrats) and Dick Durbin (Illinois) the Democrat Whip and #2 Dem in the Senate.

Yet neither Stewart nor any of the other leftists screaming bloody murder online or on the air seem to have a word to say about any of them?

I wonder why?


Speaking of Fetterman he asked a rather practical question concerning cloture, what’s the endgame?

If the government shuts down and the Trump administration gets the right to furlough all the Federal workers (and trust me he wasn’t about to close national parks like Obama did) that he wanted to what is the endgame? What do Democrats do next? Unlike the republican who like the idea of a smaller government Dems love big government.

What was the plan? Was there a plan? Was there a way out?

Nobody on the left seems to have an answer to this question and none of the people screaming for King Chuckie’s head seem to have one either.


Finally while the left keeps running to court to try to slow Donald Trump advance through the government he runs nobody seems to be asking the single most obvious question concerning this tactic.

Right now left is judge shopping trying to curtail the power of the president in the knowledge that they will have to face a Supreme Court which only has 3 secure Democrat votes, perhaps 4 with John Roberts.

What happens in 4 to 12 years when the Democrats come back to power and the GOP decides to judge shop to stop them? What happens when those cases go to a Supreme Court that Donald Trump and/or JD Vance had 4-12 years naming members to?

Nobody seems to want to answer that question.

I don’t know if the left considers that a bug or a feature.

I can’t speak for leftists but given that the United States is one of the most heavily armed country in the world in terms of citizens I can’t think it’s all that bright to provoke such folks.

Then again Tesla owners were primaraly leftist so perhaps they figure they’re unarmed.

My exact question to Grok was this:

Based on Rush Limbaugh’s style and content create a Rush Limbaugh opening monologue in which he describes the Continuing Resolution fight in the House and Senate cumulating in Chuck Schumer folding and voting closure on the GOP resolution

Here is what it produced:

Alright, folks, here we go—Rush Limbaugh, your guiding light through the chaos of Washington, D.C., coming at you with all the bombast and brilliance you’ve come to expect. Talent on loan from God, right here, ready to break down the latest circus in the swamp. And oh, what a spectacle we’ve got today—the Continuing Resolution fight in the House and Senate, a knockdown, drag-out brawl that ended with none other than Chuck Schumer, the grand poobah of the Democrat Party, folding like a cheap lawn chair on a windy day. That’s right, folks, Schumer waved the white flag, voting for cloture on the GOP resolution, and I’ve got the details to prove it. Buckle up, because this is gonna be a wild ride.

Picture this: it’s March 2025, and the government’s on the brink of another shutdown—same old song and dance, right? The House Republicans, led by that stalwart Mike Johnson, ram through a six-month Continuing Resolution—217 to 213, a squeaker of a vote, with just one lonely Democrat crossing the aisle. This isn’t some namby-pamby “clean CR” the liberals love to prattle about; no, this is a red-meat, partisan beast—boosting defense spending, slashing non-defense fluff, and giving the left a collective case of the vapors. Over in the Senate, the GOP’s got the majority, but they need 60 votes to break a filibuster, and with Rand Paul playing his usual libertarian contrarian card, they’re short. Enter the Democrats, led by Chuck Schumer, who’s been strutting around like he’s got all the leverage in the world. “Oh, we’re unified!” he crows on March 12th. “Republicans don’t have the votes! We want a clean CR through April 11th!” Yeah, right, Chuck—sounds like a man who’s ready to dig in and fight to the bitter end.

But here’s where it gets good, folks. The clock’s ticking—Friday, March 14th, midnight deadline looming—and the pressure’s mounting. Schumer’s caucus is a mess: you’ve got the hard-left whiners like Tim Kaine and Jeff Merkley screaming about a 30-day stopgap, while others like John Fetterman—God bless him—are saying, “Just pass the dang thing and quit the theater!” Meanwhile, the GOP’s holding firm—John Thune’s out there telling Schumer to fish or cut bait, and Trump’s looming over it all, ready to blame the Dems if the government shuts down. Schumer’s got a choice: stick to his guns and risk a shutdown that’ll make Democrats look like the bad guys, or swallow his pride and give the Republicans a win. And what does he do? On March 13th, he takes to the Senate floor with a speech so full of hand-wringing it could’ve been a soap opera script. “Oh, this bill’s terrible! It’s partisan! It’s a poison pill! But a shutdown would give Trump too much power, and that’s worse!” Cue the violins, folks—Chuck Schumer, the tough-talking New Yorker, caves like a house of cards in a hurricane.

That’s right—he votes for cloture, opening the door for enough Democrats to join the GOP and push this thing over the finish line. The man who swore he’d block it, who said the Republicans didn’t have the votes, who tried to guilt-trip America into thinking a shutdown was the end of the world—he blinked. And why? Because deep down, Schumer knows the game’s changed. The Republicans have the House, the Senate, and the White House, and Trump’s got the bully pulpit. Schumer’s little tantrum about a “clean CR” was just noise—hot air from a guy who’s spent years pretending he’s some master strategist, when really, he’s just a pawn in the bigger chess match. The GOP resolution’s headed for passage, folks, and Schumer’s out there eating crow while the conservatives chalk up a win.

Now, let’s step back and look at this with the clarity only your old pal Rush can provide. This isn’t just about funding the government—this is about power, pure and simple. The Democrats wanted to flex, to show they could still call the shots even as the minority. But when push came to shove, Schumer realized a shutdown would’ve handed Trump a golden opportunity to paint them as the obstructionists, the party of chaos. So he folded, proving once again that when the going gets tough, the liberals get going—straight to the exit. Meanwhile, the GOP’s playing hardball, and they’re winning. This Continuing Resolution isn’t perfect—Rand Paul’s right to hate the spending—but it’s a signal: the Republicans are in charge, and they’re not afraid to shove it in the Democrats’ faces.

So there you have it, folks—the Continuing Resolution rumble, culminating in Chuck Schumer’s surrender. It’s a beautiful thing to watch, isn’t it? The left’s sanctimonious bluster crumbling under the weight of reality. Stick with me, because we’ve got plenty more to unpack—three hours of undeniable truth, right here on the EIB Network. Let’s roll!

Not bad, not bad at all.

Updated: Added Rush Cartoon