"I said, `Oh my God, don't shoot the banana,"
This is a real funny event that just happened in my somewhat lost rural/kinda urban backyard. I'm going to record the Daily Show all week, cause it's a story that is tailor made for the fine investigative reporting of Stewart and crew.
Sorry about the pic quality, but that's the best I can find outside of the paper right now. The picture to find, and it's gotta get out there, is his mug shot. He was actually photographed in the banana suit. I kid you not.
http://www.tetongravity.com/usergall...rpics/bboy.jpg
Faux fight leaves Banana Boy and his bunch busted by police
December 9, 2005, 2:18 PM EST
HUDSON FALLS, N.Y. -- Banana Boy's superpowers weren't enough to help him and the rest of his bunch give police the slip.
The local television character, who goes by the name Chris Phelps when he's not donning his superhero's large yellow banana crime-fighting costume, was arrested Thursday at gunpoint along with two others when police mistook their skit for a real-life knife fight.
It all began in a Main Street parking lot in this Washington County village 45 miles north of Albany, where the 20-year-old Phelps, his brother Jonathan and friend Luke Van Scoy were filming their television show "The Ravacon," which chronicles the adventures of Banana Boy.
During the skit, Banana Boy was attacked by Van Scoy with a prop knife just as Washington County Sheriff's Deputy Shawn Lovelace was driving down the street.
"He's stabbing him," bystanders yelled as Lovelace got out of his patrol car.
Unaware the melee was staged, Lovelace drew his handgun and ordered Banana Boy and his colleagues to the ground. They complied _ quickly.
"I saw they were fighting ... and saw one of them had a knife," Lovelace told The Post-Star of Glens Falls.
Police said Banana Boy and the others, all of whom are from nearby South Glens Falls, were charged with disorderly conduct for snarling traffic and not informing police they were going to be filming. Hudson Falls Police Sgt. Todd Lemery said Van Scoy's knife turned out to be a spring-loaded switchblade replica.
"I said, `Oh my God, don't shoot the banana,"' said Steven Wilson, who was watching the skit being filmed when Lovelace came upon the scene with his gun drawn. "It was the funniest thing I've ever seen."
"The Ravacon" is broadcast Saturdays on Glen Falls television station WNCE at 11 p.m. Station co-owner Jesse Jackson said he would discuss the matter with Banana Boy and his crew, whom he called very talented.
"I've been in TV for a lot of years and I've never seen anything like them," Jackson told the newspaper.
Banana Boy, who was still in costume when he was picked up by his father at the police station Thursday, said he believes the entire incident with police was caught on tape by his brother, adding the show will be aired Saturday. Meanwhile, the trio is expected back in Hudson Falls Village Court on Dec. 15.
"We do a lot of our stuff in South Glens Falls," said Van Scoy. "The police know us there."