Difference between revisions of "Paul Bunyan"
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== History == | == History == | ||
− | A statue of Paul Bunyan had been converted into a statue of [[Shiva]] outside of the [[Taj Meatball].<ref>"[[Adventures in Baby-Getting]]"</ref> | + | A statue of Paul Bunyan had been converted into a statue of [[Shiva]] outside of the [[Taj Meatball]].<ref>"[[Adventures in Baby-Getting]]"</ref> |
== Non-canon == | == Non-canon == |
Revision as of 17:46, November 5, 2012
Paul Bunyan
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Character Information
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Paul Bunyan is a is a mythological lumberjack who is usually described as a giant as well as a lumberjack of unusual skill.
Contents
History
A statue of Paul Bunyan had been converted into a statue of Shiva outside of the Taj Meatball.[1]
Non-canon
The contents of this article or section are considered to be non-canon and therefore may not have actually happened or existed. |
Homer is Paul Bunyan, a giant lumberjack. He birth some a giant man and are after a time to an adult and works some a lumberjack. But he is a great burden on local townspeople, as he crushes their houses and consumes all their food (along with anyone near it at the time). Eventually, the townspeople drug him and drag him out of their town. Out of loneliness, he carves a block of stone from the mountains into a blue ox that he calls Babe, who is rendered alive by an electric shock, similar to lightning, which apparently originated from the northern lights. Homer meets a woman, and though she is initially frightened of him, the two fall in love. When a meteor is soon to hit the town, the townspeople call Paul back to help them. Paul obliges and throws the meteor towards Chicago, starting the Great Fire there, but not before it hits him in the backside. After the hobo has told this story, Lisa points out that Paul's size kept varying throughout the story, the hobo shrugs her off.[2]