about his heroic actions; I found the story doing a Google search on him.
The camera swings back to Paulie and Mike.
Mike is hooting and pumping his fist because his Skee-Ball machine just spewed out another long strip of raffle tickets.
“Screw this,” says Paulie. He scoops up a bunch of wooden balls and cradles them against his chest. He hops up onto the machine so he can march up the ramp toward the scoring holes.
“Yo,” says Mike. “What you doin’?”
“Beating you, bro!” Paulie starts stuffing balls down the 50 hole. The scoreboard dings and dongs. Digital numbers flips like crazy. “Yo, Soozy. Toss me some more balls!”
Soozy K giggles and jiggles. The girl, who probably wore a bikini top to her high school prom, has lots to jiggle. Some of it, I’m sure, is the original equipment; the rest looks like a pair of inflatable water wings sewn in under her skin.
“Who’s BLEEPING winning now, BLEEP?” Paulie screams as Soozy tosses balls up to him. He slam-dunks like a maniac.
“Yo,” says Mike. “That’s cheating!”
“This is Skee-Ball, BLEEP. There are no BLEEPING rules!”
Ceepak is off camera, but I figure he’s crinkling his eyes down into narrow slits when Paulie says that, because John Ceepak lives his life in strict compliance with the West Point honor code: he will not lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do.
“BLEEP you,” says Mike as he climbs up on
“Omigod,” gasps Soozy. “He’s BLEEPING bleeding!”
A camera zooms in on Mike as he sits in his Skee-Ball lane, holding the back of his head.
“He’s BLEEPING bleeding!” Soozy shouts again. Then she burps.
“Who gives a BLEEP?” says Paulie, who discovers he can just jam his arm in and out of the fifty hole to ring up more points.
That’s when Ceepak enters the frame. The camera is behind him, so you can’t see his face, just his buzz cut. First, he pulls a sterile gauze pack out of the hip pocket of his cargo pants and tosses it to Mike Tomasino.
“Apply that to your head wound, sir.”
Next he whips out his SHPD badge and calls out to Paulie.
“Sir?”
Paulie, who has his back to Ceepak, totally ignores him. Keeps pumping his fist in and out of the fifty hole. Bells ring. Whistles whoop.
“Sir?” Ceepak raises his voice. “Sea Haven Police.”
“Where?” Finally, the drunken muscleman swirls around. One last wooden ball is gripped in his right fist.
“Please climb down off the Skee-Ball machine.”
“Why?”
“You are drunk, sir.”
“So? It’s the Jersey Shore. Everybody’s BLEEPING drunk.”
“I’m not, I assure you,” says Ceepak.
“Aw, BLEEP you, you BLEEPING BLEEP wipe.”
“Please step down from the Skee-Ball machine, sir.”
Believe it or not, instead of doing as officially instructed, Paulie tugs up his T-shirt again. Points at his rippling man breasts. “Yo? You see this? I am The Thing you wish you could be.”
“No, sir. You are not. You are drunk and disorderly. You are also in direct violation of several municipal codes, not to mention the rules of fair Skee-Ball competition.”
In the background, I hear police sirens racing toward the boardwalk. I’m guessing Rita, Ceepak’s wife, had dialed 9-1-1 while Ceepak marched over to deal with The Real Idiots Of New Jersey.
Ceepak turns to Mike Tomasino, who is moaning and groaning, pressing the patch of gauze to the back of his head, trying not to ruin his up-do.
“Keep applying pressure to the wound, sir,” says Ceepak. “Paramedics are on the way.”
More bells ding and dong. Somebody has hit a jackpot.
Ceepak and the camera swing back to Paulie’s lane. He is, once again, jamming his arm in and out of the fifty hole.
“Sir?”
“What?”
“Cease and desist.”
Paulie spins around.
“BEEP you, jarhead!”
And he chucks that wooden ball straight at Ceepak’s head.
2
Reflexes?
Ceepak’s got ’em.
He makes this incredible Mr. Miyagi,
Boom!
Without flinching, he snags the hard wooden ball in midair, two inches away from his eye.
Clutching it with a very firm grip, he addresses Paulie Braciole: “Now we need to add assaulting a police officer to your list of infractions.”
“BLEEP you, you BLEEPING BLEEP,” says Paulie, reciting what I like to call the New Jersey state motto, even though he’s from Staten Island, which is in New York even if it wishes it could be in Jersey.
“You’re not a police officer!” screams Soozy K, rallying to her muscleman’s defense. She plucks at Ceepak’s polo shirt. “This isn’t a police uniform. My dad’s a cop.” Only when she says it, it comes out “My dashahop” because she’s been mixing her vodka and beer again. She did it on Episode Two, too. Fell face-first into some kid’s sand castle. Took out two towers, crushed the moat. Ended up with a bright yellow plastic sand shovel stuck between her boobs.
This is when the cops working the Tuesday night shift show up. Dylan and Jeremy, the Murray brothers, storm into the Coin Castle. Jen Forbus and Nikki Bonanni are right behind them. They all got their pictures in the
“Leave me the BLEEP alone, your BLEEPING po-po!” Paulie screamed as he thrashed between the two Murrays. It took both of them to haul his chiseled butt out of the arcade. Dylan told me later that the guy was in such a rage, it felt like they were wrestling with Dr. Bruce Banner in the middle of morphing into the Incredible Hulk.
Jen and Nikki dealt with Suzy K, who went ballistic when one of the female cops dared touch the top of her bullet-shaped hair to help her scrunch down into the back of their cop car. Apparently, her Conehead hair bubble is her trademark.
“You guys make good TV,” says Marty Mandrake, head of Prickly Pear Productions and the brains (I use that term loosely) behind
It’s Friday afternoon, August 6. We’re in the chief’s office at police headquarters, watching the raw footage of The Thing and Soozy K being taken into custody on a TV monitor built into the chief’s manly mahogany bookcase.
“We’re gonna open next week’s episode with this next shot,” says Mandrake. “Wait for it.”