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RANDOM FUNNY POSTS


9/18/02
Want to feel a weird feeling?

Try eating matzo ball soup while reading a book about the guy who kept Einstein's brain in a jar of formaldahyde for several years. G'head.



12/8/02
Just got a call from the local radio station. They're giving away their "Best of 2002" awards, and it seems I've won "Funniest Song" (for "Pushing Cheerleaders Down the Stairs") and "Most Unique Style."

However, I refused to accept the awards as a protest for the fact that I was not nominated for "best looking." What gives?

2/13/03
Perhaps you all heard about Laura Bush cancelling a poetry symposium when she head that some of the poets would be reading anti-war works. Yesterday, I ream a poem called " 'Kids nowadays,' muttered Hoover" at a symposium that was held in response and, when the mic wouldn't work, I cracked that "Laura Bush is probably hiding behind the tree, holding some vital piece of the mic and laughing." I didn't know that the media was present. This, of course, was the quote they ran with.


4/8/03
I have decided that, henceforth, the term "yo" will be considered incorrect. The correct word is "yohm."

4/12/03
I don't remember whether I already posted this, but I have a great idea for a new TV show. It would be on right after Meet the Press, and would be called "Meet the Weirdos." We'd take whoever was on "Meet the Press," and sit 'em down with a bunch of weirdos to talk for an hour or so about whatever the weirdos have on their minds. I'd watch it.

4/16/03
I have a plan for a new business!



We will design and sell things that seem amusing to drunks. Toasters with built-in flashlights. Can openers with a radio attatched. Shiney things. Corkscrews with a compass in the end. Screwdrivers with flashing lights on the end.

We'll have catalogs (laminated) in every bar in the world.

We'll call "Things You'd Better Not Forget To Buy Before You Go Home Or Your Wife Will Kill You."

Credit card orders are accepted 24 hours a day.

Got the idea from Skymall, of course.



7/9/03
Know what's weird?

Watching the "call to arms" speeches from Henry V on one channel, then changing channels and watching the big battle scene at the end of Ernest Goes to Camp.



7/17/03
One should have a "theme" when redecorating one's bathroom. Like "Mediterranean" or "New York City." Since it's important to keep one's budget in mind, one shouldn't go for anything too fancy if one's budget is less than $15. That's why I picked "New Jersey" as the theme for my bathroom.

Seriously, though, it's decorated with pictures from Weird NJ magazine in dollar store frames. One whole wall is covered with old artwork featuring depictions of The Jersey Devil. It's really quite a cool bathroom now.




7/27/03
My first exposure to punk was in 1986. My family was in Minneapolis visiting relatives, and one night we took a trip downtown. At least part of the reason we were going was "to see the punks." I'd never even heard of a "punk" before.

I was the first to spot one. Upon seeing a guy with a large green spiked mohawk, I pointed and shouted "There's one!" I remember the guy grinning at me as my parents quickly rushed me away, telling me that they didn't like to be stared at. Nowadays, I know that I probably made that guy's day.

Over the rest of the evening, we saw an awful lot of groups of punks walking around downtown. Every time some of them would approach, my parents would whisper that I was not to stare at them, point at them, or say anything to or about them. It was very similar to what I was told at the zoo next day when we approached anything dangerous.

It wasn't until much later that I actually heard any punk; for years, my only impression of the whole genre was seeing people with brightly colored hair wandering around downtown Minneapolis. All I knew of the punk scene was that it was like Halloween every day. It's a wonder that I didn't grow up to be a hardcore punk myself.



9/07/03
I found myself with a strange craving for gummi worms tonight.

So, sometime after dark, I found myself down at FoodMax, buying gummi worms and the Weekly World News (in rare form this week, the cover story is that an alien is in jail following a fist fight with Bill Clinton over Hilary. I couldn't pass that up. The speakers overhead very softly blasted Springsteen's "Backstreets" followed by Olivia Newton John doing "Midnight At The Oasis." I'm not making this up.

The cashier was a young fellow named Webster. Looked as though he may have been young enough to have been born AFTER the Webster TV show, which would indicate that his parents were very cruel people.



9/18/03
Lesson Number 1: Never wear a "West Wing" t-shirt to a class in the business building. This is a dead giveaway that you're from "the other building." They don't care much for that building.

"You aren't a business major, are you?" they asked, upon seeing my shirt.

"Nope. Creative writing," I said.

"Has anyone who ever majored in creative writing ever actually made any money?" someone asked.

"You'll be dead by the time you're forty. Most writers are," said another.

"All I know," said still another, "is that most writers turn out to be gay."

Sure, business majors are more likely than I to go on to become rich. But at what cost?



11/13/03
Appetite for Deconstruction
Okay, that article I linked earlier interested me so much that I went looking for similar stuff, and I came upon a thing about the story "The Golden Arm." This story always bugged me.

You've probably heard this basic ghost story: a woman with a golden arm dies and asks to be buried with it. Her husband steals it before she can be buried, and is haunted by her voice saying "who's got my golden arm" over and over, closer and closer, until it's right at his bed and she shouts "you got it!" Mark Twain used to tell it a lot. I heard him. (And if you say that I'm too young to have heard him, well, you remind me a lot of my oldest daughter).

How this woman came to need a golden arm, and how she came to die, never seem to come up. But I'll bet she lost her arm doing something stupid and she probably deserved to die. What kind of person gets a golden arm? It would be expensive as all get out, and likely useless as a prosthetic device. Also, it would probably be really heavy. Maybe she died from having her spine twisted all out of wack.

Then, in light of the expense, asking to be buried with it, when her husband could surely use the money, is just plain greedy. Here we have a woman who was probably all for abolishing the estate tax! Why does a dead person need an expensive prosthetic device? Would it make her the envy of all the other ghosts?

Still, this story scared me when I was a kid, and I'm not ashamed. If you ask Bloody Mary to come out of the mirror, you just get what you ask for. But the sort of woman who would buy a golden arm and then demand to be buried with it is certainly the kind of person of whom one should be afraid. Very afraid.



11/21/03
Ever Meet a Burger That Could Take a Bite Outta You?
My car broke down today near a field in the middle of nowhere. Again. I stepped out, made the necessary cell phone calls, and sat back to wait.

Then the cows arrived.

At first there were just a couple, far off in the field. Then, in a moment, there was a whole herd of them.

"Moo!" I called, since I was bored. I soon came to realize that this was not the best idea I ever had, as they all took notice of me and began to proceed towards the barbed wire fence that separated the road from the field.

I grew up in Iowa, where statues of cows (some of which are made of butter) are not uncommon. But seeing a whole herd of cows (I stopped counting at 40) lumbering towards you can be quite unnerving.

Soon they were right at the fence, five feet away from me, like a group of fans at a ropeline clamoring for an autograph. I tried to remember my Iowa days.

"Hmm..." I thought. "Cows aren't....vicious...are they?"

I looked at them, forty or more along the fence, some poking their heads through and staring right at me. They were drooling obscenely, snarling, stinking, and, in some cases, peeing noisily. They had thick ropes of snot coming out of their noses. They certainly LOOKED vicious.

Thinking of all of the hamburgers I've eaten over the years, I decided I'd better make friends with them.

"Hello, ladies," I called. "My car is broken down. Some sort of electrical problem."

"Moo," said one of them.

"Moo," the rest chimed in. I hoped that 'moo' was cow talk for "sounds like the alternator," and not "you look tasty."

"Um..." I continued..."anybody here from out of town?"

This went on for about fifteen minutes before the farmer came and drove them away.

"These things aren't vicious, are they?" I asked.

"Sure are," he said with a nod.

"Well, I don't think they know anything about cars," I said. "They haven't been very helpful at all."

He nodded and, with his four wheeler, drove them away from the fence and out of sight. I was in a much better mood for the rest of the time I spent waiting for help on the car to arrive. Surviving an encounter with 40 enormous animals is a real pick me up.

NOTE: while I was standing there, a passing motorist was so amused by the sight of me trying to persuade 40+ cows that were lined up at the fence not to break through and trample me that she stopped to take pictures. If she makes good on her promise to send me one, I'll surely post it here. (ed - she never did)



11/30/03
Here in Georgia, it's illegal to sell alcohol on Sundays.

This morning, I had trouble buying a jar of "Emeril's Vodka Sauce," which I found in the spaghetti sauce section.

"Is there vodka in this?" asked the cashier.

"It's not a drink," I told her.

"Still," she said, checking the ingredients and, I'm sure, imagining me sitting on a bench in the parking lot chugging tomato sauce straight out of the jar. Absolut Spaghetti?



12/22/03
'm talking with an old friend about the old days, back before there was internet porn. I wish to point out that middle school kids nowadays have it made.

They have never....

- talked an adult into letting them rent "Revenge of the Nerds" for the fifth time, all the while staying ready to explain "you know, the plot is so complicated..." if need be.

- forced themselves to stay up until 4, convinced that, at some unholy hour, USA is allowed to show nudity.

- bribed a schoolmate to get them a subscription card to Playboy and plotted to subscribe using a post office box and praying the mailmen wouldn't know what was up. And going on long, long late night walks to work out all of the details of the scheme.

- dug through the artistic photography section or drawing section at Waldenbooks, having heard rumors of all sorts of nude goings-on.

- had to hide what few naked pictures they could acquire in hidden spots in the attic, behind shelves, etc.

- paid good money to see "Milk Money," possibly the worst movie ever, just because it MIGHT have a butt shot (it doesn't).

- been very, very excited by the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue.

Nope. Kids today have no reason to have done any of them, since they can see all of this just by opening their e-mail. Think of the time they must save! If I had that kind of time opened up for me when I was a kid, and put it to good use, I could've invented something, learned another language... I could've been a contender!

I've never done any of them either, of course. I'm just saying, hypothetically, is all. I just want to make sure we're clear on this.



3/9/04
From theidea department: caffeinated donuts.

From the even better ideas that no one else seems to like department: Viking-style maps Manhatten that say "here there be monsters" where New Jersey is.



4/06/04
Nothing brightens a slow day like telling Mastercard that your roommate can't come to the phone right now because she's in Yemen working for Halliburton. How said roommate and I kept a straight face while I went through a good long conversation detailing her job overseas I'll never know.



4/8/04
Here's something most of you don't know about me: I'm an award-winning opera singer.

It's true. In my sixth grade music class, we did a unit on opera, and, in small groups, we had to act out (if not sing) scenes from "Amahl and the Night Visitors." I sang my part, and, though there were no awards scheduled, the teacher actually gave me an award for my portrayal of "mother."

She told one of the other classes that I was the best mother she ever had.



7/6/04
It has been pointed out many times, and I agree with said pointing, that "retard" is really, really not a nice thing to call some one.

Hence, last night a new term was coined - "Repug." (pronounced REE-pug, emphasis on the first syllable). A repug is "one who is repugnant."

As in:

"You have mustard all over your face. You look like a total repug."

"My boss has been acting like a complete repug lately."

"Boy, how about that Dick Cheney? What a repug!"



10/19/04
So, for my "interview" today, I was to spend a day shadowing a senior employee to see what my job would be. It took me about five minutes to figure out that it was a pyramid scheme, but, by that time, I was on the road to Elk Grove Village, and had no choice but to spend 8 hours watching a slick asshole from whom I would NOT take a chocolate covered pretzel go door to door to give me an incredible offer.

Tomorrow, I will go back to the office. I spent a whole day, and, the way I see it, they owe me money. Also, I'd like to blackmail them. And I have the stuff with which to do it.

The message to slick assholes with Flock of Seagulls Comb-Overs is clear: don't waste my time.



10/20/04
So I called up the office of the company that insisted it was not a pyramid scheme.

The manager and I had a little conversation. I said I should be paid for the training I went through yesterday, he brought up that I had signed a contract stating I was only an unpaid observer. I brought up reasons that the contract was invalid, and how they had made it invalid, and then brought up the Better Business Bureau and the Fair Labor Act of 1957 (it really pays to know about that one).

So we had a little battle. I mentioned that I was a writer who named names. And haircuts. He said I was threatening him, I said I was just asking for profit-sharing (which is what they call how they pay their salesmen). I also said that if you want to get into "what this is like," I can say that what they did yesterday wasn't that far removed from locking me in a trunk and trying to get me to join a cult.

Anyway, I'm getting paid for yesterday.



11/24/04
One thought on being fired from retail work:

I may have drawn her name, but if my boss thinks for one minute that I'm still going to be her "Secret Santa," she's got another thing coming.



12/7/04
At my current job (as a merchandiser for Mattel), I spend a lot of time prowling the back of K-Mart (an disorganized mess - you could have an Indiana Jones movie in there), Wal-Mart (same mess, more shit; one could die back there of any number of causes and they'd have your clothes on the clearance rack the next day), and Target (well organized, spacious, and altogether a very nice setup, as these things go).

Words of wisdom from my boss:

"Every now then, you hear a really good fight in the back of a K-mart."

I wish this job lasted til after Xmas.



12/8/04
I remember one day in pre-school when some kid's mom had milk and cookies with us. The cookies that day were large care bears, decorated as such with about five pounds of frosting. We went around the table and told which Care Bear we were eating.

"I have Cheer Bear," someone said.

"I have Tender Heart," I said, happy to get the bear that I actually owned in plush form.

Then came the bombshell:

"I have Halloween Bear," said the kid's mother.

"There's no Halloween Bear!" we all retorted.

"Oh," she said, "They probably have Halloween Bear, and Christmas Bear, and Easter Bear..."

I was shocked and apalled - there were no seasonal Care Bears! Where would they go the rest of the year - cold storage? This was a grown-up, and she didn't know that there were only so many Care Bears? It was like saying that the Berenstain Bears had a third cub during the summer. How could an ADULT not know this basic biological fact?

Now, Care Bears are back in stores, after a fifteen-year-or-so disappearance. Most of the originals are back, but, in my time in the toy departments, I've seen several bears that were not known to science in my day. Harmony Bear, Do-Your-Best Bear...where did these bears come from? The year after my pre-school encounter, another tribe of Care Bears, the Care Bear Cousins (which were not really bears, but other assorted animals), was discovered, but how other Bears came to join the usual tribe is probably shrouded in secrecy.

Another concern is that Grumpy Bear, who acted as a cynical counterweight to the saccharine other bears, seems to have vanished. Perhaps the poor old grouch died, perhaps he was seduced by whatever the dark side was in the Care Bear universe. There was probably a time when I knew this - but now I'm a grown-up myself. And I've forgotten my biology, too. (ed - he was still around, just hard to find)



12/11/04
Just walked down to the Jazz Showcase (bout 10 blocks away) and got a the front row center table to see Mose Allison play two sets. For those unfamiliar, Mose is has been a jazz pianist/songwriter for over 50 years, looks like Obi Wan Kenobi, and, with lines like "ever since the world ended, I face the future with a smile," paved the road for future smart-ass songwriters like me. Quite possibly the very walking definition of "cool." He played a total of 40 songs.

Made friends with all the people sitting near me; had some fine conversations before and between sets. I love this city to bits.



12/13/04
If I were a pirate, my pirate name would be Land Ho.

Yep.

Land Ho Calrissian.


(sorry, I needed some tomatoes. Start throwing).


12/16/04
After playing a set that I don't mind saying wasn't half bad, I was approached just outside the door by a guy who attempted to sell me a vinyl copy of the soundtrack to Mary Poppins. "C'mon," I said. "Like I don't already know all of those songs." And I wasn't lying. I've long said that some goth band could simply rip on "Feed the Birds." It takes a strange kind of man to think that selling Mary Poppins gear will support his drg habit. If there's one thing at which I excel, it's meeting the weirdoes.



1/5/05
Friends, I've just had the DAMNEDEST shopping experience. I've discovered a land untouched by modern merchandising trends that have shaped shopping for the past half century, where one will under no circumstances fine a motivational phrase on the wall, hear an announcer talk about sales, or be offered a discount card.

Since my desk chair collapsed, I decided to brave a walk in the snow to the nearby thrift store, where I found nothing under $40. On the walk home, however, I noticed an old building with a neon sign reading "OFFICE FU," and decided to walk in. It was an old, three story brick building, and looked as though some time had passed since the inside was last renovated.

After telling the friendly fellow at the front desk what I needed, I was directed to a somewhat stern woman (one who reminded me of my old algebra teacher) who led me behind a couple layers of curtains to a freight elevator. Now, this was not the sort of freight elevator you see in the back of department stores - it was the rickety wooden kind, in a narrow, droopy brick shaft. The kind you always see in gangster movies. I half expected the third floor to be a speakeasy, or, at the very least, a card game.

However, it was, in fact, a veritable graveyard of desk chairs - it was entirely possible that there WAS a card game hidden someplace among it. The walls were bare brick, and there was no particular order to the merchandise. The woman led me around, pointing out various models and saying "this one's 15...this one'll run you 35..." until I noticed just the model for me hiding underneath a couple of other chairs. It was small, with orange cushions. I may not be much of a shopper, but I do know that I like orange, harvest gold, and avocado green in my decor whenever possible.

"How much is this one?" I asked, seeing that it conformed to my ass perfectly when I sat in it.

"That one? That's five dollars," she said.

So I happily took the freight elevator back down, paid, and carried it home.

All shopping should be this exciting.



1/28/05
Here is a survey. Fill in the blank.

"Be careful what you wish for; you just might get ___________"

Possible answers include: "A ticket to Cleveland," "a hernia," "it," "a mint-condition copy of The Amazing Spider-Man #365," "eaten first," "herpes," "a cactus," "to eat a bag of hell," "shingles," "arrested," "a great deal on these tires," "drunk," "a surprise visit from Christopher Marlowe: Gay Atheist Spy."



2/18/05
I applied online for a job as an online "appointment setter." This would be a telecommuting job. In response, they asked me to answer the following stupid questions. Here is what I'd LIKE to say:

1. Do you consider yourself a team leader or a team player? Why?

In most situations, I feel forced to take the lead, because if I don't, we're likely to be lead by some jerk who talks about "leadership skills" a lot. I'm sick and tired of hearing jerks talking about "leadership skills." Also, the leader might start calling me a "team member" or a "partner," and insist that I always, always refer to customers as "guests." I simply cannot abide by that. I don't have any problems with being politically correct; hell, I think people who complain about it are usually just assholes looking for victim status. But I draw the line at management-speak. Someone has to step in and make sure that doesn't happen, and it's likely to be up to me.

2. What would you consider your most significant accomplishment?

Making money off a pyramid scheme by threatening to write an article about the company naming names and making fun of the manager's haircut (a "flock of seagulls combover") if he didn't send me a check. A copy of the check is framed above my computer.

3. What are your career goals? Where do you see yourself in 3-5 years?

I hope to become an appointment setter. In five years, I want to be right here, sitting on my ass, still setting appointments for eight bucks an hour. On the side, I hope to make Zig Ziglar cry. I don't know how I'm going to do it, but I know it can be done.

4. Would you rather be a business owner or an employee? Why?

I'd rather be an employee. If I were in the ruling class, I'd be trembling about the upcoming communist revolution. Down with the bourgeousie!

5. As a leader, how would you motivate others?

Oh, hell, you can't motivate people who are working for eight bucks an hour. Why should they be motivated? They can work their butts off for you, and they'll still just be making eight bucks an hour - better to do it without getting sore. Of course, if you insist that I motivate them, I can always whip the hell out of them. That always gets results. If you're the fainty-dainty type of company, though, I can always resort to motivational "successories" posters: if they fail to work, I'll make them look at them.

6. Why should we work with you?

Because if you don't, I will write an article about your company and make fun of your haircuts. No one will be spared, biatch. UPDATE, AN HOUR LATER:
Oops. Accidentally mailed that in. Clumsy me!



3/19/05
Did Mattel work today - acted as "bodyguard" at a "meet Barbie" event. The model was dressed as "Fairytopia" Barbie - the kind with fairy wings, blue eyeliner, etc. She looked, frankly, a bit terrifying. If I were a kid, I would have been afraid that she was going to sacrifice me to a strange god. Then again, I thought that about lots of people. The playground monitor probably actually was. My playground monitor was not a pleasant person - Miss Finster from "Recess" has nothing on her.



5/9/05
Lots of people ask me for advice on songwriting. Well, the main rule for writing songs is that you should write what you feel like. I do have some other suggestions, though. Here're some:

1. Rhyme scheme, meter, and structure can be jumped up and down on if you know what you're doing, but if you ignore them, you'll just end up with a messy song that will not be nearly as artsy as you think it is.

2. Be very careful with the terms "my pain" and "my tears." And watch what you say about your soul. Questioning the nature or purpose of "this life" (in those terms) will get old fast.

3. When in doubt, say something about the moon. You can't go wrong with a good moon line.

4. When writing a protest song, don't use the term "land of the free" ironically. It seems like a good idea, but it isn't.

5. If you're writing a parody, heed these words: Start, heart, part, be, me, free, see, and other words that are so, so easily turned into "fart" and "pee" are the enemies of the smart writer.

6. You can use cuss words just for the sake of using cuss words, but there's a good way and a bad way to do this. If you think the way you're cussing in a song will amuse people (Ben Folds is good at this), you're probably doing it the good way. If you think you're going to shock anyone, you're doing it the bad way.

7. If you write about your life or people you know, you're asking for trouble.

8. Don't just say "the street" or "the town" if you can help it - be specific about which street or town you mean.

9. You can be writing a song about a town a thousand miles from any body of water, and it still probably won't hurt much to put a sailor in the song in most cases.

10. On the other hand, clowns almost never work. Especially sad ones.

11. If you aren't prepared to show up for gigs dressed like an elf, it's usually not advisable to use terms like "hath," "thou," "runneth," "thee," etc. Some people can get away with talking like they're in a movie about knights. Most people can't.

12. The quality of a song is not measured by how hard it is to play. Don't worry if your song is only two chords. Also, all the minor augmented ninth chords in the world won't make a bad song good.

13. Changing the perspective of a song from third to first person, or the other way around, can improve it greatly. Experiment with your pronouns.

14. Cake left out in the rain is not a great metaphor for a failed relationship, especially if you refer to said cake as a park. Seriously.

All of these, of course, can be broken in the right situation. Maybe even #14 (though I doubt it).



6/2/05
Comment card from three girls, slightly younger than I, after a few margaritas.




7/1/05
Songs are like buried treasure. Sometimes your metal detector goes off and it's right beneath the sand; you have the whole thing in a couple of minutes. Other times you have to dig awhile, and before you get to the song you find a tin can, a car part, a candy bar wrapper and a dirty diaper. Sometimes that's all you find. I may be in for some digging.

I had a great chorus of a new song written earlier today and I was determined to finish up a draft of it and get to the Gallery after work. Unfortunately, I had to close, which kept me there til 12:45 in the morning (and my whole section was redneck city, and if there's one thing life in Georgia taught me, it's that rednecks don't tip worth a damn, but that's another story), and I kept singing that chorus in my head the whole time. It's a good one; the soaring, majestic kind that I don't manage to do very often. I even hobbled together two verses and a bridge.

When I finally got off I changed into a decent t-shirt, got a cab to Clark and Lake (the cabbie was doing 60 in the Loop - quite a ride) then hopped the blue line train and, in the end, made it from Navy Pier to Bucktown in just over fifteen minutes. This is no mean feat. It gave me just enough time to grab a beer and get onstage to try the new song, which went over VERY well, though I'm not really satisfied with the verses or the bridge yet. It was just a good chorus and whatever lines would stick.

Now it's time to keep digging through all the versions that are going to come up before I get the right one - this one seems to be buried deeper than most.. I imagine that there'll be a version based on Great Expectations, one the sounds like an answer to "rainy days and mondays" by the carpenters, and maybe one that sounds like the beach boys. Right now it the best line actually rhymes "building" with "morning," but I'm not sure I'm gutsy enough to try that. But one of these versions is going to work out - I'll get this song done sooner than later, and when it's right, I'll know. I wish I had a piano around here.
(ed - the song became "I Don't Believe In Summer")



9/13/05
My agent got an e-mail from a company called BookByte - they make little promo films for author's books. In the ad, they said they were going to do for authors what music videos did for musicians. One of my agent's other clients pointed out that that wasn't likely.

My response:

You're right, Luc. BookTV will start out showing nothing but Book-Bytes, but pretty soon it'll just be showing clips of them in the morning, intercut with endless shots of teenage girls shouting "Rushdie 4-evah! I wanna give a shout-out Ahsley and Jen-Jen back in Dayton. Whooo!"

Then, of course, it'll soon be all original programming:

"Pimp My Typewriter"

"Falstaff and Guildenstern" (a crudely animated piece of crude humor)

"BookTV Sports" (Speed typing competitions and clips of people snowboarding)

"Newlyweds" (the antics of Jonathan Safron Foer and Nicole Krauss)

"The Easton Ellises"

"Unprompted" (popular authors read unedited versions of their works)

"Yo! BookTV Poetry"

"Horrorwriter's Ball"

"Jackass!" (members of The Rock Bottom Remainders (Stephen King, Amy Tan, Dave Barry, etc) hit themselves with shovels, staple things to their bodies, and ride bikes off cliffs)

"The Dave Eggers Don't-You-Wish-You'd-Put-Me-On-The-Real-World-NOW Show"



11/6/05
In the post Halloween aftermath, I got to thinking of the age-old question: what is Count Chocula's first name?

Here are some suggestions:

Don
Steve
Dave
Lawrence
Todd
Bradley
George
Doug
Norman

note: this ended up on McSweeneys.



11/20/05
Y'know, I'm not much of an alarmist or conspiracy theorist. I see a lot of over-the-top blog postings, message board reviews of movies, etc that seem to be not so much a review as the author's desperate attempt to either show off their own superiority/hipness or to make others say "whoa, that guy's harsh. What'll he say next?" You know. The shock jock types that turn up in every forum. They really bug me. And the conspiracy theorists are even worse than the negative-reviewers.

That said, however:

AlPHA-BITS WITHOUT ANY SUGAR? WHAT THE GODDAMN HELL ARE THEY TRYING TO GODDAMN PULL? DO THEY THINK I WANT TO EAT CARDBOARD? BECAUSE I CAN BUY MY OWN DAMNED CARDBOARD FOR A LOT LESS THAN FOUR BUCKS A BOX. WHAT'S NEXT - FROSTED FLAKES THAT AREN'T FROSTED? THIS IS IT, FOLKS, THIS IS THE SCREAMING END. WHEN I CAN'T TRUST MY BREAKFAST CEREAL, WHOM CAN I TRUST? AND THIS ISN'T SOME CRAPPY OFF-BRAND, IT'S POST ALPHA-BITS, ONLY THEY TASTE LIKE FAKE CHEERIOS, WHICH, UNLIKE FAKE CORN FLAKES, SUGAR CRISP, FROSTED FLAKES or RICE KRISPIES ARE ALWAYS CRAP AND NOT AT ALL LIKE THE ORIGINAL. NOPE. NO TOASTED OATS OR OAT LOOPS FOR FOR ME - I LIKE MY CHEERIOES TO BE FOR REAL. AND THESE SUGAR FREE ALPHA-BITS ARE LIKE SOME KIND OF CONSPIRACY TO GET ME TO EAT SOMETHING THAT TASTES LIKE THE FAKE CRAP. It's all enough to make me refuse to learn my letters. I could swear they were spelling out "SCREW YOU, SUCKER" at me for not reading the label more carefully. And do they even come with a prize inside? Hell no, they don't! I guess the prize is that you'll get more fiber and be more regular, which, in the long run, is symbolic of just what I think of this shit. And the back of the box is just "The ABCs of Nutrition" and some instructions for dumb games you can play with your alpha-bits to help you learn to recognize letters and sound them out. Sheesh. If I'M not mature enough to see the benefits of eating plain, sugar-free alpha-bits, then foisting it on your kids is just plain mean. It's a dirty, tricky world in which we live, folks. They're out to get us, I tell ya. Is nothing sacred anymore? I swear on the name of Count Doug Chocula, those punks at Post haven't heard the last of me!



12/6/05
My favorite place to eat in my neighborhood is called Pie Eyed Pizza. It's right by the blue line train stop, and is open til midnight (all night on weekends) serving slices. The deep dish is fantastic, but I normally just go in for the slices, which are thin, but among the best in town. It's nice to go in in the middle of the night for cheap, world-class pizza and, usually, interesting conversation with the other nighthawks.

Today, I noticed that they'd installed a new, three level thing to house the slices, which freed up several feet of space on the counter.

"What'll you do with all the extra space?" I asked.

"We're expanding the menu," said the owner, "to have hot dogs and stuff."

"Are they going to be proper hot dogs?" I asked.

"Oh, yeah," he replied. "Chicago style."

"Without the..." I began.

"Oh, no ketchup," he said, knowing where I was going. "We'll have it in the store,but we won't put it on for you. If people want it, they'll have to put it on themselves."

Folks, I was in heaven. This is just the way it's supposed to be. The Chicago hot dog is a delicacy, believe it or not - a bright red dog with a bit of snap and spice to it on a poppy seed bun, topped with mustard, onions, tomato wedges, bright green relish, a couple of sport peppers, a pickle spear and celery salt. Ketchup is considered a condiment for kids. Making the customer add it themselves - or just not having it at all - is the hallmark of a proper Chicago hot dog joint, and is a sure sign that when Pie Eyed adds hot dogs, they're going to do it right.

Man, I love my neighborhood.



12/24/05
GLUMPY THE POOR ELF - A CHRISTMAS CAROL

The highlight of my family's holiday is usually the tacky gift exchange. Whilst digging through the Dollar Tree for my entry, I came upon a little statue of a drunk-looking elf doing some sawing. I broke the rules a bit, using a dremel and some paint to make it tackier, but here're the results:

GLUMPY!
The Elf Who Got Drunk And Sawed His Leg Off

Image hosted by Photobucket.com And, for good measure, here's the Glumpy Carol, which whoever gets him will have to sing:

GLUMPY THE POOR ELF
Tune of Frosty the Snow Man
by Adam Selzer (all rights reserved, ASCAP)

Glumpy, the poor elf
hit the bottle once again
and he stumbled 'round through the streets in town
puking every now and then

"I don't have a problem!"
is what Glumpy always said
but the elves would watch as he guzzled scotch
and they'd frown and shake their heads

There must have been some hard stuff in the bottle he just quaffed
for as he worked there at his bench, he sawed his leg right off!

Glumpy, the poor elf
has to hop, not walk, today
though he's known to hope, like a drunken dope
that it might grow back some day

Gluggety glug glug, gluggety glub glug, look at Glumpy go!
Gluggety glug glug, gluggety glug glug, hobbling through the snow!



12/26/05
During tonight's trivial pursuit game, it became useful to me, at last, to know that China was under martial law in 1989. I knew this because the imposition of martial law in Beijing was immediately followed by the rock n roll and cola wars, after which Billy Joel declared that he could no longer take it.



All material copyright 2002-2005 by Adam Selzer, all rights reserved.