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  • 20
    Sep
    2012
    11:22am, EDT

    Woman yelling 'I'm Jack Sparrow!' hijacks ferry

    Peter Mountain / AP file

    Johnny Depp as Captain Jack Sparrow.

    By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

    Jack Sparrow, as played so memorably by Johnny Depp in the "Pirates of the Caribbean" movie series, might be a pirate, but we kind of doubt he'd steal a passenger ferry and randomly crash it into other boats.

    But that's just what a drunk British woman did last fall, according to the U.K. Telegraph, and she was claiming to be Jack Sparrow when she did it.

    The newspaper reports that Alison Whelan, from Devon, England, climbed onto a moored double-decker ferry, unmoored it, and smashed it into a number of other vessels as she drifted away. But the best part? Whelan was reportedly yelling "I'm Jack Sparrow!" and "I'm a pirate!" as she stole the boat.


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    The article says Whelan had been "drinking Lambrini (an alcoholic beverage made from pears) and eating poisonous hallucinogenic plants" before boarding the ferry.

    She reportedly also taunted the police from the water, saying ""What are you going to do now?" and "I believe this is out of your jurisdiction."

    The BBC reports it took authorities an hour to catch the free-floating ferry.

    Whelan later pled guilty to "aggravated vehicle taking" and was sentenced on Wednesday to 112 days in prison. Apparently walking the plank is not a punishment for would-be pirates in Britain.

    Slideshow: Faces of Depp

    Ian Gavan / Getty Images

    Launch slideshow

    What do you think of the would-be pirate? Tell us on Facebook.

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    Explore related topics: johnny-depp, pirates-of-the-caribbean, featured, jack-sparrow
  • 18
    May
    2012
    6:32am, EDT

    Japan mayor: I wouldn't hire tattooed stars Johnny Depp, Lady Gaga

    Miguel Villagran / Getty Images, file

    Lady Gaga shows off her tattoo of a Rilke poem in Braunschweig, Germany, on November 7, 2009.

    By Arata Yamamoto, NBC News

    TOKYO -- Even Hollywood stars Johnny Depp and Lady Gaga would not be welcome to work for the Japanese city of Osaka because of their tattoos, its mayor said amid a backlash over his stance against body art.

    Mayor Toru Hashimoto this week said that public employees "should go to the private sector" if they want to keep their tattoos.


    City authorities carried out a survey of their staff to ask whether they had any, whether they were normally concealed by clothing or not. More than 100 sanitation, public transport and other workers admitted they had tattoos.

    However, Sayuri Ohashi, a lawyer who represents Osaka workers, defended the right of people to decorate their bodies.

    "Whether one has a tattoo or not has nothing to do with their competence or skills," Ohashi said.

    "There are different types of tattoos, there are those that are indeed linked to organized crime and others who have etchings on their bodies as mementos, such as for their lost child," she added.

    'Breach of labor law'
    She added that getting employees to reveal information about their body was "a complete infringement of their rights."

    "And if they try to pressure them into quitting by transferring them to another work, that's a breach of the labor law," Ohashi said.

    Slideshow: Tattoo you: Celebrity ink

    Bryan Bedder / Getty Images

    Movie stars, rockers and reality wannabes are among those who've made a permanent mark.

    Launch slideshow

    The controversy started earlier this year when a city employee at a childcare facility was accused of intimidating a child by revealing his tattoo.

    Tattoos still carry a strong cultural association with the Japanese underworld and the yakuza crime gangs.

    City workers in Japan to be fired for having tattoos?

    Slideshow: Reformed skinhead removes tattoos

    Jae C. Hong / AP

    Trying to erase his past and start a new life, Bryon Widner underwent 25 painful surgeries to remove hate tattoos on his face, neck and hands.

    Launch slideshow

    Japan's aversion to tattoos can be found at swimming pools and public bath houses where there are often signs banning those with them.

    Hashimoto insisted being a public employee meant making some sacrifices.

    "Before I became governor, I had my hair dyed brown," he said. "I don't mean to be self-righteous … However, when you become governor or mayor you have to change it back to black. You're a public servant."

    Thousands gather at a temple in Thailand to honor a tattoo master and have their body art recharged by monks. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Asked by a reporter about Hollywood stars with tattoos, the mayor responded, "If Johnny Depp or Lady Gaga asked to become Osaka city employees, I would just say 'no'.”

    At the moment the city is not considering firing workers with tattoos, but Hiroshi Kotawa, from the city's personnel section, said they would be asked to cover them. "And if they still refuse, then we will consider transferring them to other jobs which will not require interaction with the public."

    A previous version of this article referred to Sayuri Ohashi, a female lawyer, as "he" due to an editing error.

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    187 comments

    I don't work people with tattoos on the face or neck myself. You want a job, don't get a tatto unless it on your rear in and I can't see it. It's my rules.....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, workers, johnny-depp, featured, osaka, tattoos, lady-gaga, arata-yamamoto

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Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

Gael Cooper is the movies editor for TODAY.com and a pop-culture junkie. She is the co-author of "Whatever Happened to Pudding Pops?" and "The Totally Sweet '90s."

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