Famous Rhinocerouses I Have Known

One day when my daughters were young I took them to the Toronto Zoo and tried to trade them in for a couple of chimpanzees but the zoo had a strict “no exchanging children for chimpanzees” policy at that time so I was forced to keep them.

Anyway, as we checked out the various exhibits we chatted, and at one point the conversation turned to fame.

Part of my job as a Dad is to provide fatherly advice, so, I said, “Girls, it’s better to be respected than famous. Take a look at that rhinoceros, for instance. Everybody comes here to look at it. They all want a glimpse of that rhinoceros. In a way, that rhinoceros epitimizes fame. Everybody knows the rhino, and in return, the rhinoceros has little or no privacy. Of course, it’s worse when you’re a rhinoceros. It’s not like you’re gonna get the best seats at the restaurant when you’re a rhinoceros, or get to drive a Porsche. You just have people gawking at you all the time. But without good seats and Porsches it’s the same general idea.” 

I asked my daughters if they understood.

One said, “What does epitomize mean?”

The other said, “Dad, that’s a hippopotamus, not a rhinoceros.”

And anyway (they went on to say) we don’t really want to be famous; we want to own a pet store. 

I was pleased with their responses. Now I didn’t have to worry about them becoming famous, and I was pretty certain that if they did become pet store owners* and wanted to sell rhinoceroses and hippopotamuses they would be able to tell them apart.

**They are grown now and did not become pet store owners, at least not yet

Joe Mahoney

Joe Mahoney is an author/publisher/broadcaster, recently retired from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, where, for over more than three decades, he worked in several roles including recording engineer, producer, and several operational management roles. He currently runs Donovan Street Press Inc., an indie press based in Riverview, New Brunswick.

Joe is the author of the SF novel A Time and a Place and the memoir Adventures in the Radio Trade. He's written and produced several radio shows on science fiction for CBC Radio, and has worked as a story editor on multiple radio, television and film projects including CBC Radio's Steve the First and Steve the Second, both seasons of Canadia: 2056, Canadian author and filmmaker Susan Rodger's feature film Still the Water, and more.

https://www.joemahoney.ca
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