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  • Welcome to Storyline Online, brought to you by the SAG-AFTRA Foundation.

  • I'm Justin Theroux, and today I will be reading Here Comes the Garbage Barge!

  • Written by Jonah Winter and illustrated by Red Nose Studio.

  • Garbage. Big, heaping, stinking mounds of garbage.

  • Big bags of garbage on the sidewalk. Garbage trucks overflowing with garbage.

  • Landfills reaching up to the heavens with more and more garbage, garbage, garbage!

  • Did you know that the average American makes about four pounds of garbage every day?

  • Well, a while back, in the town of Islip, the average person made seven pounds of garbage every day.

  • Islip is a little town on Long Island, right near New York City, and Islip had a problem: garbage!

  • To be exact: 3,168 tons of garbage. And nowhere to put it.

  • Enter the Garbage Barge!

  • See, this guy in the garbage business named Gino Stroffolino came up with a brilliant plan.

  • A garbage barge would carry the Long Island garbage down to North Carolina.

  • Mr. Stroffolino had a friend there, Joey LaMotta.

  • "Everything is arranged," Joey'd told him. "You bring me dat garbage-- I'll take care of it."

  • Some poor farmers would be paid to take the garbage and bury it on their farms. Clever, huh?

  • So on March 22, 1987, all 3,168 tons of garbage was loaded up.

  • Then a little tugboat named the Break of Dawn began its long journey south, tugging the rusty old Garbage Barge behind it.

  • The Break of Dawn was a happy little tugboat. Her captain and crew was Cap'm Duffy St. Pierre, a crusty old sailor.

  • Together they tugged the Garbage Barge down the East Coast of America.

  • "Toot toot," said the tugboat as it entered the harbor at Morehead City, North Carolina.

  • North Carolina. Land of sand dunes and pine trees, of Bar-B-Que and mountains and basketball...

  • Smelling something strange, two old sisters who lived on the beach ran out and got their binoculars.

  • "Look!" said Miss Alma McTiver. "It's garbage!"

  • "In our beautiful harbor?" said Miss Ida McTiver. "What the hairy heck? That ain't right! Call the law!"

  • So a police boat went out to greet the Garbage Barge. It wasn't a friendly greeting.

  • "You can't park that garbage in our harbor!"

  • "I've got orders to dock here and I'm gonna follow 'em!" cried Cap'm Duffy.

  • "I'm afraid you can't do that," said the policeman.

  • "Well, blow me down..." said Cap'm Duffy, scratching his whiskers. And he radioed his boss.

  • "They don't want our garbage," Cap'm Duffy said to Gino Stroffolino. "Where's that fella who was supposed to meet me?"

  • "Joey had a little accident," said Mr. Stroffolino. "Just stay put while I make a coupla calls."

  • But the minutes turned into hours turned into days-- just Cap'm Duffy with a barge full of garbage. It wasn't much company.

  • Finally, Mr. Stroffolino's voice came through on the radio. "Bring dat garbage down to New Orleans," he said.

  • "I know dis guy-- Tony Cafone. He'll take it."

  • "Well, let those saints go marchin' in!" shouted Cap'm Duffy. See, New Orleans was his hometown.

  • Surely folks back home would be happy to see him and his big load of garbage.

  • "Ahoy!" he called as they came within view of the city. "Hard a-starboard! Thar she blows!"

  • New Orleans. Birthplace of jazz, home of blackened redfish and streets filled with music, friendly faces, streetcars, garbage...

  • The mayor could see the Garbage Barge way off on the horizon. News of the wandering garbage had already reached him.

  • "We've got enough of our own trash," he told his staff. "Call the coast guard!"

  • The coast guard arrived just in time to stop the Garbage Barge from making its way up the mighty Mississippi.

  • "Shiver me timbers," moaned Cap'm Duffy. "You can't do this to a hometown boy!"

  • "Oh, yes we can," cried the coast guard. What could Cap'm Duffy say?

  • "All righty then. Full speed backwards!" he ordered himself. "Aye-aye, Cap'm," he answered.

  • And, at dusk, the Break of Dawn and the tired old Garbage Barge began their sad journey back out to sea.

  • There they were-- floating out in the middle of the Gulf of Mexico. This was getting ridiculous.

  • Would no one take this garbage (which, by the way, was really starting to stink)?

  • Cap'm Duffy radioed his boss.

  • "Okay," said Gino Stroffolino. "Dere's dis guy down in Mexico-- he owes me a favor. Goes by da name of John Smith. I'll tell him you're coming."

  • "All righty, then," Cap'm Duffy grumbled. "Southward ho."

  • Mexico. Land of enchantment, of enchiladas and folk art, of swaying palm trees and moonlit beaches...

  • News of the floating garbage barge had arrived before Cap'm Duffy.

  • As the Garbage Barge approached Telchac Puerto, it was surrounded by the Mexican Navy.

  • "¡Váyase!" came a voice through a loudspeaker. "¡Rápido!" (That means "Get moving fast!" in Spanish.)

  • These guys had guns. Cap'm Duffy had no choice. He turned his little tugboat around and, schlumped across the wheel, he headed back out to sea.

  • "Where next?" the captain asked Mr. Stroffolino.

  • "Belize," said Mr. Stroffolino. "It's a country. Next to Mexico. I know dis guy-- Rico D'Amico."

  • Belize. Land of bananas, of beautiful coral reefs, tropical flowers, and colorful birds...

  • Pictures of the garbage barge had been on the local news. Cap'm Duffy had almost reached the dock when he saw a line of soliders waving their arms.

  • "Kungo!" they shouted. (Roughly translated, that means "Fuhgeddaboudit!")

  • Six weeks had passed since the Garbage Barge had set out, and the garbage was getting really funky.

  • Nobody wanted it. And of course they didn't! It was somebody else's six-week-old garbage!

  • Cap'm Duffy radioed Mr. Stroffolino once again. "I can't take it anymore! I quit!"

  • "Okay, okay," said Mr. Stroffolino. "Take da garbage back to Long Island. But I gotta coupla places you could try along da way."

  • Texas. The Lone Star State, home of cowbodys, cacti, cadillacs, and oil-- black gold, they call it...

  • The Garbage Barge arrived in the harbor near Houston only to find some Texas Rangers in speedboats shaking their heads "No!"

  • Next stop, Florida.

  • The Sunshine State. Home of alligators, beautiful beaches, oranges, and grandparents...

  • The Garbage Barge was not welcome.

  • By now, the Garbage Barge was famous. It had been on TV and in the headlines of all the papers. Comedians even told jokes about it.

  • But as Cap'm Duffy and the Break of Dawn tugged it into New York Harbor, they were a sad sight.

  • Cap'm Duffy's mouth hung open. The little tugboat forgot to toot.

  • And the Garbage Barge looked the saddest-- and smelled the smelliest-- of all.

  • "Well, me mateys, here we are, back where we began," Cap'm Duffy sighed as his two boats finally pulled into Islip's harbor.

  • But guess what? Islip had seen this coming. They refused to take the garbage.

  • And the garbage was not welcome anywhere on Long Island or in New Jersey or in New York City, either.

  • For a whole summer, Cap'm Duffy and his little tugboat tugged the garbage around New York. What else could they do?

  • "Look mom!" kids would say. "Here comes the Garbage Barge!"

  • As the summer days got hotter, the garbage grew beyond stinky. Someone had to take it-- they just had to.

  • Then, at last... "Good news!" said Gino Stroffolino when he radioed the tired old captain.

  • "Here's da deal: Brooklyn's gonna take dat garbage and burn it. A judge told 'em dey had to. See, dey got dis 'incinerator.'"

  • "Aye-aye," mumbled Cap'm Duffy.

  • And on September 1, 1987, 162 days after the Garbage Barge had first set out, it reached its final harbor.

  • Brooklyn. Former home of the Dodgers, current home of synagogues and mosques and greasy diners with breakfast specials...

  • 3,168 tons of garbage was unloaded by cranes, put onto trucks, and hauled to the incinerator.

  • It burned for hours, and when it was done, it only weighed 430 tons.

  • Then it was hauled off and buried in a landfill in Islip. The town had been forced by the judge to take back what was left of its stinking garbage.

  • Justice!

  • The Break of Dawn and Cap'm Duffy were free to go back to New Orleans. As they steered out to sea, people waved and took pictures.

  • "It's a fair wind and open sea, me hearties!" the crusty old captain shouted, and he patted the tugboat on its wheel.

  • Together they had traveled over 6,000 miles, tugging the unloved Garbage Barge. It was time to go home.

  • The end.

  • So the moral of the story is don't make so much garbage, guys.

  • And if you do make garbage, don't try and get other people to clean it up for you.

  • 'Cause all that garbage has to go somewhere.

  • Thank you for watching Storyline Online. Make sure to check out all of our stories.

  • Keep watching and keep reading.

Welcome to Storyline Online, brought to you by the SAG-AFTRA Foundation.

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