GROCERY STORE 2020!!

Grocery Store 2020!

The new Celebrity Game Show where contestants must fill out a randomly generated grocery list and prepare a meal!

Can they find the items they need? Or will they have to substitute for ingredients?

Or will they have to take The Big Gamble and make something else with what they were able to find?! What will the celebrity chefs think? And, how will they grade the contestants?

Will the store have flour? Or maybe you know how to substitute Echinacea flour?

Can you fill out the list and successfully execute the random recipe, or will one or more of the contestants have to “turn on a dime”, and take “The Big Gamble”…A way to either win big…or lose big.

So tune in! Friday night at 9! Will they have hamburger? Will they have eggs? Or TP? Who knows?! Suddenly it’s as though we’re living in some war-torn country, where you can only come out during the cease-fires to get food and still must worry about the errant sniper.

But our snipers only use words! (Cue Snippet of Gordon Ramsay here: “That’s not bloody F-ing cooked, you turnip! It’s so overcooked you could use it to patch a roof!!”)

That’s “Grocery Store 2020”! New this fall, on NBS! “Must see TV”!

About Zaslow Crane

Zaslow Crane wrote his first Science fiction story when he was 11 This was after an uncle had given him a Charmin case full of sci fi paperbacks- all the old masters: A.E.Van Vogt, Cordwainer Smith, Heinlen, Bradbury, and dozens more. After that, he never looked back. Zaslow Crane has contributed to numerous magazines and newspapers over many years, and has been a contributing editor for a national magazine. He has been published a couple hundred times for non fiction. Regarding fiction, he writes primarily SciFi and was one of the creative talents behind Smoke and Mirrors, a parsec nominated podcast that "re-imagined" the Twilight Zone and, which ran for 2 1/2 years. He has written over two hundred short stories, 7 or 8 novellas and two novels, one of which "explains" a great many advancements in human technology. He likes mindless sort of work, because it frees that other part of his brain to work on story ideas, so if you see him, say, digging a ditch, you'll know that he’s really writing. He lives in a tiny house on a hill in Central California. His home overlooks the ocean - IF you're willing to stand on tip toes and crane your neck. Just a bit.