Tuesday, May 19, 2026

THE NIGHT "DEAL OR NO DEAL" NEARLY BECAME A VERY BIG DEAL

 

Lately I’ve been watching all of the daily reruns of the old game show “Deal or No Deal,” which premiered on NBC back in 2005 and starred Howie Mandel as the host (not to be confused with the game show “Let’s Make a Deal,” which premiered right about the time Columbus discovered America and was hosted by Monty Hall).

For those of you who aren’t familiar with Deal or No Deal, here is a brief summary: The show features 26 gorgeous female models, each one carrying a numbered briefcase that contains a cash amount (anywhere from $.01 to $1,000,000 dollars). Then the contestant, by eliminating all of the other cases one by one, attempts to figure out which case holds the million dollars, to win that amount. But at any time throughout the game, the contestant can opt to quit trying to find the million-dollar case and accept a much lower cash offer from the show's resident villain, The Banker, instead.   

The game is more complicated than I just described it, but that’s the gist of it anyway.

I’m realizing now that my behavior hasn’t changed much at all since I first watched the show over 20 years ago. I’m still not thrilled about seeing 26 shapely models with perfect hair, perfect makeup and gleaming white smiles every morning while I’m sitting here in my holey sweatpants with my thinning hair in a sloppy bun, my partial denture lying on a coaster on the end table, and dark circles under my eyes that make me look as if I’m a descendent of Rocket Raccoon from Guardians of the Galaxy.

I also still shout in frustration at the contestants, “Pick case number (enter any number from 1-26), you fool!”

I clearly remember, back when the program first aired, how enthralled my husband and I were to see a game show that was so elaborate, so unique…and so visually  captivating with its wall-to-wall sea of cleavage. Millions of other people also must have been as equally enthralled because Deal of No Deal instantly became a huge success. I suspect, however, it may have been (as it was in my late husband’s case) due more to the models than a love of the game itself.

Still, for whichever reason, the show grew so popular, NBC decided to take advantage of it and began to air it three nights per week…Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Also, to further entice viewers, they added an opportunity for the people at home to select one of six briefcases in a special Lucky Case Game each night and compete to win $10,000. Viewers were instructed to enter their case-number guess via a text message or email prior to the end of the show. All of the correct answers then were grouped together and a lucky home-viewer was selected at random to win the prize

So every night the show aired, both my husband and I faithfully submitted our guesses.

“Which briefcase do you think is holding the $10,000 tonight?” I’d ask him.

“Number four.”

“My gut is telling me it’s in number three,” I’d say and then enter each of our numbers.

Of course, the winning case always turned out to be any case other than the ones we chose. So my gut obviously was a lousy predictor. 

But one Wednesday night as we faithfully prepared to enter yet again, I suddenly experienced an overwhelming feeling the $10,000 was in case number one. It was like a psychic message from above or maybe divine intervention. In fact, the feeling was so strong, when my husband told me to submit his entry for case number five, I entered number one for both of us.

At about 8:45 each night, the show would announce that the contest was over and no more entries would be accepted. Then the winning briefcase number would be revealed. The name of the winner, however, never was announced until the very end of the show.

“You know,” I said to my husband that night as we sat waiting to hear the briefcase number, “when you enter the contest, they ask you for only your name and phone number. Yet when they announce the winner, they always say what city and state they are from. How do they know that?”

“They probably call the winner and get the information during the commercial break just before they announce that person’s name on the air,” he said.

Howie Mandel’s voice interrupted our discussion. “And tonight’s winning case is number one!”

“Yessssss!” I squealed, clapping my hands. “Now I can confess! I put both of our entries on number one tonight!”

“You mean one of us actually could win the $10,000?” My husband’s eyebrows rose.   

“Well, we’ll know for sure any minute now,” I said, “especially if our phone rings during this commercial.”

As if on cue, the phone rang at that precise moment. My husband and I gasped in unison and froze, staring wide-eyed at each other. Finally, I jumped up and dashed to the phone.

“Good evening. May I please speak to Sally Breslin?” a professional-sounding male voice asked.

“Speaking!” I managed to choke out before I suffered from what I was certain was an impending heart attack.

By then, my husband was up from his chair, his eyes riveted on me.

“I’m calling from Chase Manhattan Bank with a special credit-card offer for you!” the man said.

Never have I wanted to commit murder more than I wanted to commit it at that moment.

“It’s nearly nine o’clock at night!” I shouted at him. “Don’t you guys ever sleep?”  I slammed the phone and then took a deep breath in an effort to calm my racing heart, which still was somewhere up around my tonsils.

My husband, his mouth forming a tight line, said, “Um, I think I can assume that wasn’t the TV show calling?”

Even though we got over the excitement of that brief feeling of being winners, we never got over the lingering feeling of being losers. Still, gluttons for punishment that we were, we continued to play the at-home briefcase game and even guessed the correct number twice. But we never won a thing. 

My feelings of resentment toward the show, however, were eased one night when the producers decided to replace the 26 sexy female models with 26 muscular, bare-chested, hunky firefighters…for one episode.

And that possibly might be the reason why I’m currently watching all of the reruns…


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Sally Breslin is an award-winning syndicated humor columnist who has written regularly for newspapers and magazines all of her adult life. She is the author of several novels in a variety of genres, from humor and romance to science-fiction. Contact her at: sillysally@att.net.










 



Monday, May 11, 2026

ARE KIDNEY-STONE PAINS WORSE THAN LABOR PAINS? DON'T ASK A GUY!

 

A friend of mine, who’s in his 80s, recently called to tell me he’d just passed a kidney stone.

“Worst pain I’ve ever had,” he said. “I’m not sure, but I think it must be easier and less painful for women to pass them…considering the male anatomy.”

I had to disagree with him. I remembered when my former boss, Marge, had a kidney stone and said that up until then, she’d thought labor pains were the worst agony she ever would be forced to endure.

My friend’s call also made me think back to the time when my husband suffered with kidney-stone pain…and was determined to hide it from me.

It all began one day when I happened to notice he was walking slightly bent over.

“Backache,” he explained when I questioned him about it. “I must have pulled a muscle or something.”

“Doing what?” I couldn’t help but ask. “Adjusting the position of your recliner?”

As the days passed, however, his posture grew even worse, until he bore a striking resemblance to Quasimado. I then began to take his pain more seriously.

“Maybe you should see a doctor…or a chiropractor,” I suggested, even though past experience had taught me I probably would have had a bigger response if I’d have suggested it to my Rottweiler.

“No, I’m fine,” he said, forcing what only could have been described as a constipated smile. “It’s nothing…really!”

The next night, I woke up to discover I was alone in bed and the house was completely dark and silent. I was just about to get up and search for my missing husband when I heard faint moaning coming from the living room.

“Honey, is that you?” I called out. “Are you OK?”

“I’m fine!” his voice responded, almost too brightly. “I couldn’t sleep and didn’t want to disturb you with all of my tossing and turning. You go back to sleep. I’ll be there in a few minutes.”

“But I thought I heard you moaning,” I said.

“Me? Moaning?  Don’t be silly!” He forced a laugh. “I had the TV on for a few minutes. You probably heard that.”

Sighing, I rolled over, closed my eyes and tried to get back to sleep. Just as I was about to doze off, I heard a much louder groan, followed by another. I sat up. 

“Shhhh!” I could hear my husband’s hushed voice scolding himself out in the living room. “Stop groaning or Sally will hear you and make you go to the doctor’s!  Why are you groaning anyway, you idiot?  It’s not helping anything!”  

No sooner had he finished saying the words, did an unmistakable cry of pain slip out.

“Are you sure you’re OK?” I called out to him. Not waiting for an answer, I got up and tiptoed out to the living room. There, kneeling on the floor with his arms wrapped around the footrest of his recliner and his head resting on the seat, was my perspiration-covered husband.

“I’m fine, honestly!” he was shouting, still thinking I was in the bedroom. “You go back to sleep now!”

I cleared my throat. “Having a secret affair with your recliner?” I asked.

His head snapped up, his eyes as wide as saucers. “Uh, this must look pretty weird, huh?” he said. He wiped his damp forehead with the back of his hand.

“That does it!  I’m calling the ambulance!” I headed for the phone.

“Nooo!” he cried, struggling to his feet. He tried to block my path, but took only one step and doubled over in pain. He sank to his knees and hugged the recliner again.

“This will go away,” he said, his voice muffled by the seat cushion. “I’ll be fine by tomorrow. No need for a hospital…no need at all.”

A half-hour later (only because I threatened him with divorce) we were on our way to the emergency room. A half-hour after that, he was admitted to the hospital.

A slew of tests and x-rays followed, then the doctor entered the room. “I have bad news and good news,” he said. “The bad news, Mr. Breslin, is you have a kidney stone that’s causing nearly a complete blockage. The good news is I’m pretty sure we can go up and get it rather than have to make an incision.”

“Go Up? Up where?” my husband squeaked. “And with what?”

It’s a pity cell phones with cameras weren’t available back then because I’d have loved to have captured a photo of his expression at the precise moment the doctor answered his questions. 

But if I thought that expression was camera-worthy, his next expression far surpassed it.

“We’re going to start prepping you for the procedure,” the nurse said to him after the doctor left. “I’ll be right back with the Fleet.”

Once my husband and I were alone, he looked at me and asked. “She’s coming back with a fleet? What does the navy have to with any of this? Are they sending in a group of volunteer medics from a ship or something?”

Never before had I struggled so hard to hold back my laughter.

“Um…Fleet is a brand of enema,” I felt obligated to warn him.

My husband did just fine with the preparation and the procedure and later was presented with the stone, which was much smaller than I’d imagined for causing so much pain. But it had sharp, jagged edges that made it kind of resemble a star. And because of those sharp points, the star caused some scratching and bleeding during its maiden voyage through the ureter.

For that problem, the nurse kindly provided my husband with a thick, bulky sanitary-napkin.

The first time he got up out of his hospital bed, he walked as if he’d just ridden a horse cross-country.

“How can you women stand wearing these things every month?” he muttered.

While he was recovering at home afterwards, I made the mistake of mentioning Marge’s comment about kidney-stone pain being even worse than labor pains. Little did I know my words would create a monster.

For weeks after that, my husband talked about how “bravely” he had suffered for nearly two weeks with excruciating kidney pain before going to the hospital. And even then, he said, he wouldn’t have given in if I hadn’t forced him to.

“Women are always saying that if men had to give birth, there wouldn’t be any kids, because men are such sissies about pain,” he said. “Well, I guess I just proved that theory wrong, didn’t I!”

By then, I’d had just about enough of “Super Kidney-Stone Man” and his tales of courage and endurance.

“You know that tiny little stone they removed from you?” I asked him. “Well, imagine that it weighed at least seven pounds and was about 20 inches long when they dragged it out of you. That’s what labor feels like!”

Funny, but after that, he never mentioned it again.

 

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Sally Breslin is an award-winning syndicated humor columnist who has written regularly for newspapers and magazines all of her adult life. She is the author of several novels in a variety of genres, from humor and romance to science-fiction. Contact her at: sillysally@att.net.




 

                                                       

                                

 

 


Monday, May 4, 2026

MAY THE FOURTH BE WITH YOU!


Considering I’m writing this on May 4th, which has been proclaimed as Star Wars Day, along with all of the recent hoopla surrounding the upcoming new Star Wars movie, The Mandalorian and Grogu, scheduled to be released on May 22nd, I can’t help but think back to the very first Star Wars movie I saw nearly 50 years ago.

At the time, my husband and I eagerly had been looking forward to seeing the film, mainly because of its enticing description: “A technologically advanced science-fiction movie with never-before-seen special effects!”  So on a Tuesday night during the first week it was playing in Concord, we headed to the theater…and found a line of people that stretched across the entire length of the parking lot.

“I hate waiting in lines,” my husband complained in a tone that told me he was ready to turn the car around and make a beeline for home. “I had enough of it when I was in the military.”

“Well, we’re here now,” I said. “And I really want to see the movie, don't you?”

So we joined the line. When we finally got to the point where only five people were ahead of us, an employee announced that all of the tickets had been sold out and the next showing would be in three hours. 

The look on my husband’s face was easy to read. The only movie we’d be watching in three hours would be on our portable TV in the bedroom.

Unfortunately, back then no one had home computers or smartphones, so tickets couldn’t be purchased in advance. Therefore, we had to keep returning to the theater and waiting in line. And every time we did and failed to get a ticket, my husband became less and less enthusiastic about seeing the movie.

“Want to try again tonight to go see Star Wars?” I asked him one Thursday morning, a few days after our third attempt had resulted in yet another dismal failure.

Had I just told him I'd purchased two tickets to the opera, he couldn’t have looked less enthusiastic.

“I would rather have an appendectomy… performed with a potato peeler,” he muttered.

“I promise this will be the last time,” I said. “If we don’t get in tonight, we won’t try again until at least a month from now, when the crowds will be a lot smaller.”

He rolled his eyes. Finally, he said, “OK, but this is it. I’m not standing in any more lines. I don’t care if the cast promises to show up in person and reenact the entire movie live, onstage. This is the last time I’m going to waste a night standing in the movie theater’s parking lot. I think I’ve memorized every bump, crack and pot hole in it.”

So back to the theater we went, and took our places at the end of yet another seemingly endless line.

“Time to spend another hour looking at the backs of people’s heads,” my husband said, frowning. "What do you want to bet these people all got out of work at noon today and camped out here all afternoon?"

When the line dwindled until there was only one person left in front of us, I felt a sudden pang of hope as my heart raced.

“Do you think we’ll actually make it this time?”  I whispered to my husband, reaching for his hand and clasping it in a death grip.

“Don’t be silly,” he answered. “You know what kind of luck we have. Prepare to have the ticket window slammed shut in our faces.”

But to our shock, we each ended up clenching a ticket in our sweaty little palms. I didn’t know whether to use my ticket to get into the theater…or to have it bronzed.

After the movie, my husband and I, wide-eyed with awe, both agreed it had been worth all of the time and trouble we’d gone through to see it.

And on that night, two Star Wars fanatics were born.

The next day, we, as if we were two young kids, headed to Toys R Us and bought several small Star Wars action figures and a huge model of the Millennium Falcon, Han Solo’s ship.

And as time passed and the sequels were released, our Star Wars buying continued to escalate…into an obsession.  We accumulated so much stuff, we ran out of space and had to rent a storage unit for all of it. And far too often, we’d spend so much money shopping for additions to our collection, we’d end up living on peanut-butter sandwiches for a week.

But it was worth it to sleep on Star Wars sheets and brush our teeth with Star Wars toothbrushes.

Finally, my mother sat me down one day and said, “Look, this Star Wars habit of yours has got to stop. You’re just throwing your money away on all of this... junk!  Be smart and put it into a CD or a money-market account instead of wasting it on some cheaply made toys.”

But my husband and I were too hooked on collecting to stop. Our Saturday nights no longer were spent going out for pizza and a movie. Instead we spent them roaming through the aisles in Toys R Us and tossing Star Wars items into our cart, and then heading over to Bradlees or K-Mart to do the same thing.

By the time we finally decided to take a breather from collecting, we’d spent over $2,000. Considering the fact that the average price of a new car back then was about $4,000, our Star Wars spending was no small matter.

And once again, my mother was more than eager to remind us of that.

“You’re both supposed to be grown adults!” she said when she came to visit and noticed bags of Star Wars toys on the kitchen table, before we’d had the chance to take them to the storage unit and hide them. “Mark my words, the day will come when you’ll regret not depositing your money in the bank and having a nice nest- egg instead of just a bunch of worthless Dark Vader dolls!”

“It’s Darth Vader, not Dark Vader, Mom,” I said, impressed she even knew that much about the movie.

“I don’t care what his name is!” she said. “I just hope he’ll pay your rent when you end up broke and homeless!”

Years later, in 1998, I bought a collectors’ price guide for Star Wars toys and painstakingly looked up the value of each item in our collection. Many of the little 3.5-inch action figures, which had cost $1.99 each, were listed as worth between $100 and $300 each. The 12-inch action figures, which we’d paid $11.95 each for at K-Mart, were worth up to $500 each, depending on the character. All in all, the grand total for our original $2,000 collection, according the guide, turned out to be about $70,000 at that time.

With a smug sense of victory, I couldn’t wait to show the guide and my calculations to my mother. Her expression couldn’t have looked more shocked if I had shown her a photo of her mailman delivering mail...in the nude.

“Are you serious?” she asked. “All of those toys you bought are actually worth that much money?”

I nodded. “Much more than any money-market account would have earned, don't you think?”

So after that, whenever birthdays or Christmas rolled around, my mom would gift us with Star War toys. We were excited we finally had won her over from the Dark Side.

When I was wandering through Walmart the other day, I happened to spot a huge display of Star Wars toys featuring characters and vehicles from the upcoming new film. I felt myself being drawn to it, the same way I’d been drawn to the original displays back in 1977.

I struggled to resist the sudden urge to run down the aisle and wildly fling toys into my cart.

But what stopped me was I knew if I bought a few Star Wars toys, I’d have to hitchhike home with them because I wouldn’t be able to buy any gas for my car, which already was running on fumes (mainly because I’d been waiting to win the lottery so I could afford to purchase some fuel).

Alas, old habits die hard. I yielded to temptation and bought just one new Star Wars toy…a small Lego set featuring the Mandalorian and Grogu on their speeder bike…for under $10.

And last night on a collectors’ show on TV, in honor of May the 4th, they showed a man who’s been collecting Star Wars figures since he was a child.

One of the figures he owns – a rocket-firing Boba Fett, of which fewer than 100 were produced before the company realized that maybe a toy that fired small projectiles at children wasn’t such a hot idea – was appraised at $10 million.

The remainder of his collection was appraised at an additional $2 million.

I’m seriously thinking about hitchhiking back to Walmart.


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Sally Breslin is an award-winning syndicated humor columnist who has written regularly for newspapers and magazines all of her adult life. She is the author of several novels in a variety of genres, from humor and romance to science-fiction. Contact her at: sillysally@att.net.