Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Thoughts
2. I'm glad Courtney Love exists. I am amused by her antics and her fashion.
3. I think Tinky-Winky the Teletubby may have had an unsuccessful partial lobotomy/trepanning operation, and the coat hanger is still sticking out of his head.
4. Amiannoying.com says, and I tend to agree, "Mariah Carey may be annoying because she has a screechy voice and uses it to speak nonsense."
5. My co-worker Bob is the cousin of Nuno Bettencourt, the perfect-coiffed guitarist for Extreme. Bob doesn't like beer, cheese, soup, cooked fruit, or breads made from fruit or vegetables.
6. G tried out for the Apprentice a couple of years ago. I think they found him abrasive. I'm not sure why. If he had danced for them, it would be a different story. I'm sure he would have gotten along famously with The Donald.
7. The VP of Operations at the first company I worked for looked JUST like Bernie in "Weekend at Bernie's."
8. Screw all these recent remakes of classics. I would like to see a remake of "Plan 9 From Outer Space" or "Planet of Vampires." Kept true to script.
9. I would only truly be shocked by Paris Hilton if she actually moved into a convent to become a nun, and all news regarding her ceased. For about five seconds. Then I would rejoice.
10. Same thing if Bai Ling showed up at an awards show (why does she go to those things, anyway?) wearing a long-sleeved turtleneck and full prairie-style skirt.
11. How effective is the Crane pose in intimidating someone? Does it follow the natural law that if it LOOKS bigger than you there's no way you can eat it, and it will probably eat YOU so get the hell away?
12. George Clinton's a bad mo-fo.
13. I wish my gym's pool had a diving board.
14. I think most celebrities are here to be mocked by us, but somehow a few people got it turned around and think they're here for us to admire.
15. Most people who would never dream of eating food with their mouths open chew gum that way.
16. It's fun to reminisce about stuff you did when you were a kid. Like the other day, my sister and I had a good time discussing how we used to choreograph dances to French synthesizer music (Jean Michel Jarre) and "She's Like the Wind" from Dirty Dancing. We were always pretty theatrical.
17. My dad looks and acts like Alan Alda.
18. I hate when my socks are uneven and my pants are too short.
19. I also hate when you go hunting for Morels and only find the stems of mushrooms others have already picked.
20. Kids today don't know how to breakdance. It's a crying shame.
21. When is the suffix -ery NOT appropriate? My brother and I saw a sign that read "Creative Cakery" the other day. It does not sound right. It's like, you can call it a bakery or "Creative Cakes" but CAKERY? You don't see a lot of "Window Tinteries" or "Bagelries" around, for good reason. It's a load of CROCKERY. Wait...
22. If you're going to captain an arctic expedition, you should probably make friends with your crew. Especially don't make a sworn enemy of the ship's doctor, like Charles Francis Hall did. He wound up poisoned by arsenic.
23. On my travels in Guadalajara, I discovered a storm drain situated at the crest of a hill. It's fun to watch water stream down both sides of the hill while the storm drain only catches the stuff that falls directly into it.
24. It would be profoundly disgusting if Steven Tyler performed "Ragdoll" in honor of his daughter Liv.
25. G says he used to think "I Wanna be Sedated" by the Ramones was "I Wanna be a Civilian" and referred to the draft.
26. Britney Spears once said "I enjoy going to overseas places like Canada." I think she should have stopped shaving her head when she had achieved mullet status. And boy, what a trainwreck these days! I almost feel sorry for her. Almost. A perfect song for her life: "Jenny I Read" by Concrete Blonde. Really sums it up.
27. In Goble, Oregon, on the way to the coast, there is a vacant building, the marquee of which used to read "TOPLESS." It now says "TO.BLESS." I am considering changing it to "JOBLESS" as that seems to be most fitting and would only really require a tail on the "T."
28. Ting!
29. Gotta go!
Friday, September 28, 2007
Nice Rack
Perhaps I am the only one who thinks it’s odd. A woman’s body with prominent chest, but a male deer head? Nice rack? I know it’s a pun, but it’s a bad pun and shouldn’t be propagated. It gives me the impression that in a pinch, a sheep will do for the guy who buys this. That he may paste animal heads onto all the women in his stack of porn. Or maybe women’s breasts on all the animals in his stack of hunting magazines. Not a pretty picture, especially when you finally pass the guy on the road and get a gander at his grizzled visage.
Thursday, September 27, 2007
The adventures of V
When he first went through the security line, V was told that he couldn’t bring the pens in, due to a problem they were having with graffiti. Rather than admit defeat, leave the pens, and buy a ticket, V threw a little hissy and stalked outside with pens in tow. G and I just looked at each other, shrugged, and went to buy tickets.
But soon, V was back, with a very pronounced limp. Quite, and I mean quite suspiciously, he hobbled back through the security line, brushing past the guards who had just moments before told him to lose the pens, with nary a word said to him. Once he was fifteen feet past the gate, he slipped his foot out of his shoe and withdrew six of the pens. V for Victory! They must have known what he was doing, it was soooo obvious, but perhaps they were as entertained as I was.
Quickly he procured someone’s hand for a view, announced that he’d got it, and ushered us into the bar for a quick drink and some pirating. The next hilarity ensued: one out of the six pens actually worked, and this one barely. V took it to do my stamp, proclaiming himself “really good at this.” Maybe it was the bad pen, because I saw no evidence of his skill. Instead, it looked like a five-year-old had scribbled “Hey Stamp Out of It” on the back of my hand.
I decided I was going to decline the whole thing and go buy a twenty dollar ticket, and rubbed some spit on my hand to get rid of the evidence while V set to work on G’s hand. Almost absent-mindedly, Vicodin withdrew from his pocket an intact ticket. “I found this on the floor, you can use it.”
I’m not sure if he did find it on the floor or what, but it appeared to be the real thing, so pacified, I sat back down.
G and V breezed through the entrance with their “hand stamps” but I, with my legitimate (if possibly stolen) ticket in hand, got noticed for the botched stamp job on my hand. “Looks like someone already got you,” the usher said as he went to stamp my hand. I could only nod in shame and say stoutly “yes, unfortunately.”
Sigh.
Packrats
Why did Langly have booby traps set up, especially if his brother was blind and could've stumbled into one unawares? Maybe it was a ploy to get rid of Homer, but backfired.
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
Two things for today:
~AND~
My brother and I once expended an entire tube of fake blood all over ourselves, and went to lay under a parked car for the afternoon. Later, we scratched our heads in wonderment as to why no one had stopped, or even paused. Perhaps it was because the car we'd selected had two flat tires and weeds growing out from under it, and hadn't moved in years.
Monday, September 24, 2007
Some Quotes
General John Sedgewick (in the moments before he was hit and killed by enemy fire): "They couldn't hit an elephant at this distance."
John Hay: "Hectic! Spinach! Life is too short for such madness."
Yogi Berra: "When you come to a fork in the road ... Take it."
Groucho Marx: "From the moment I picked your book up until I laid it down I was convulsed with laughter. Someday I intend reading it."
Steven Spielberg: "Why pay a dollar for a bookmark? Why not use the dollar for a bookmark?"
Kelly Tolman: "I'm not going to kill you. I might tase you a little bit..."
Winston Churchill: "I am ready to meet my Maker. Whether my Maker is prepared for the ordeal of meeting me is another matter."
George Burns: "Actually, it only takes one drink to get me loaded. Trouble is, I can't remember if it's the thirteenth or fourteenth."
W.C. Fields (on Mae West): "A plumber's idea of Cleopatra."
Paul Beatty: "If all the world's a stage, I want to operate the trap door."
Marty Feldman: "I won't eat anything that has intelligent life, but I'd gladly eat a network executive or a politician."
Howard Hughes: "I'm not a paranoid deranged millionaire. Goddamnit, I'm a billionaire."
Did they meet at a spelling bee??
"OUR TWO HEARTS HAVE MEAT"
"SOAL MIGHTS"
The hearts of these soal mights may have meat, but I sure hope they don't have kids.
Friday, September 21, 2007
Farts, Santa Claus, and Old Women
Finally another elderly lady turned her eyes away from watching the 700 Club and said "I'm sure not gonna worry about you, so shut the hell up!"
I love old women. Like this one: http://www.poetv.com/video.php?vid=10449
Thursday, September 20, 2007
Wellington Koooooooooo
In the mid-twentieth century, an American diplomat found himself seated next to a Chinese man at a banquet. At a loss as to how to start a conversation with this gentleman, the American ventured with "Likee Soupee?" The Chinese man said nothing, only smiled and nodded in a polite manner. Nothing more was exchanged, and soon the Chinese man was called up to speak. After delivering an eloquent speech in impeccable English, the Chinese diplomat sat back down to a great round of applause, turned to the American (whose mouth was agape I'm sure), and said, "Likee Speechee?"
The Chinese guy was the preeminent and well-educated Chinese Ambassador Vi Kyuin Wellington Koo. He was the first Chinese representative in the newly formed League of Nations, and was one of the founding members of the United Nations. After retireing from the Chinese diplomatic service in 1956, he became a judge, and later moved to NYC, where he died in 1985.
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Deaths in the Navy
Two accidentally ejected from their aircraft into the ocean, never to be found.
One died in a storage room in the bowels of the ship by asphyxiation - apparently there was a buildup of carbon monoxide or dioxide down there, and generally men went there in pairs because they could get "sleepy."
One officer nobody liked turned up missing, and they never found him. Jerry thinks someone pushed him overboard.
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
Coal for Christmas
Are They Joking?
The first was called Dry Sack, and the second was called Cockburn's. Are they trying to tell us something?
Cockburns swears that you should pronounce their name COburn's, but who are they trying to kid? It's very clearly spelled COCKburn's.
And as for Dry Sack, there just aren't words.
Monday, September 17, 2007
Ages of Me
When I was two: My parents stuck me in my crib when there was company over and I could hear them all laughing out in the living room, so I screamed my lungs out.
When I was three: I thought the packets of flower seeds at the nursery looked nice, so I started stuffing them into my pockets. My mom caught me.
When I was four: I thought on the morning of my birthday that because I was now four, I had magically grown tall enough to see over the kitchen counter.
When I was five: My kindergarten class ordered those plates where the kids drew pictures on a piece of tissue paper, then the papers would be sent in to the company, which would laminate them to plastic plates. I was the only kid in the class whose parents declined to buy one, so I had to return to my seat with a flimsy tissue paper drawing of my family and tears in my eyes while all the other kids were showing off their plates.
When I was six: I went to a Catholic school until this age. My mom transferred me into public school after this time because I and this kid from England named Justin made loud pig noises during mass and our teacher kicked us out of the Our Lady of Saints parade. My mom's view was, "My daughter would never make pig noises during mass. If my daughter can't be in the parade, then she doesn't have to go to this school anymore."
When I was seven: I was hanging out with my dad in a pizza joint called Shakey’s. Westworld was on the TV monitor, and the part when Yul Brynner’s face melted scared the crap outta me.
When I was eight: I punched my best friend Josh repeatedly in the side at recess, perfecting the kidney punch, as I called it. I also embezzled money from the class treasury and got caught. It’s kind of a wonder I don’t have a record today, what with the stuff I did before I was ten!
When I was nine: I got surgery in my mouth to correct a receding gum-line, by way of grafting skin from the top of my mouth onto the gums along the bottom front. They used a weird chewing gum-like substance to cover the stitches on my hard palate. In my sleep, I swallowed the substance, commencing bleeding in my mouth. When I woke up, I couldn’t even speak because of a giant clot of blood in the back of my throat.
When I was ten: I ate a lot of Burger King onion rings with my sister. Later that evening, we sat in our room farting and laughing at the stench. Our mom came in to say good night, and physically reacted to the entity that was our farts, unable to cross the threshold of the room.
When I was eleven: my next best friend Krystal, her brother, and I entered this abandoned house nearby, reputed to be the illicit dwelling of this kid we went to school with’s family. There were what seemed like seventeen television sets and tons of porn. I think this part is my imagination, but I recall a scary looking guy with Graves disease lingering in the house when we were. We ran.
When I was twelve: Treating your bangs with a curling iron and shellacking them with AquaNet was quite popular. I sculpted my hair in such a manner and thought it was such perfection that I maintained it for like three days, liberally spraying it whenever it seemed like it would wilt (fat chance of that, I should have bought stock in AquaNet). My older cousin came to visit, and after much proselytizing, convinced me to wash it all out.
When I was thirteen: I had a crush on this kid named Brian, who I heard had a crush on me. Our crushes consisted of ignoring each other throughout the school year except to team up to surreptitiously throw staples in our classmates’ hair.
When I was fourteen: It was a hot summer day. My brother Zucchini, who was eight, and I were picking blackberries in the elementary school field near our house, while our sister Melon Head (eleven) was practicing soccer in the junior high field, also nearby. When we had had our fill of picking, we decided to go see what Melon Head was up to. When we arrived, we showed her Zucchini’s purple-stained hands, and in my best stricken voice, I said, “He can’t feel his hands!”
She took one look and flipped out. “You could have frostbite!” Never mind that it was eighty-plus degrees out in the middle of summer. We couldn’t take it any more, and started snickering. “This is not a laughing matter!” She continued, “you need to go home and show mom right NOW!” Finally, amidst our by this time very apparent giggles, she realized we had our picked blackberries with us, and that it was August.
When I was fifteen: I started taking ballet. I still occasionally choreograph dances in my apartment.
When I was sixteen: I started an underground magazine (later called the Back Wall after the favorite pop quiz torture instrument of our Current Events teacher) that by my senior year grew to include about thirty subscribers (including above teacher), a staff of writers, and regular features. I even got called into the counselor’s office to debate my freedom of speech. It’s fun to look through the old photo-copied issues now.
When I was seventeen: Sherri and I became obsessed with the ouija board my mom used to have when she was a kid. We started holding séances, replete with candles and a steady stream of teenagers climbing in and out my bedroom window at all hours. My parents were tolerant, to say the least.
When I was eighteen: On my last day of high school (before the graduation ceremony), my dad and I took the canoe out for a paddle around Lacamas Lake. We talked about life after school (which I had been somewhat afraid of), and what I wanted to do with my life. It was such a pleasant day, and my dad is phenomenal!
When I was nineteen: My bosses told me i had to start wearing a bra to work. I guess I'd finally hit puberty!!
When I was twenty: I lived in like three separate apartments all over southwest Washington that year. A bit of a whirlwind!
When I was twenty-one: I got married to the wrong person, only to divorce six years later.
When I was twenty-two: I learned how to ski. One of my co-workers was VERY patient.
When I was twenty-three: My sister gave me a tiny striped kitten someone had snuck into her car while she was at work. This kitten lived in a bird cage for a while at Ellen's friend's house, also, before she came to me. She never grew very big, so her name, Little Cat (which I used to yell at her as she played all over my while I tried to sleep), is very fitting. She is the best cat I have ever had.
When I was twenty-four: Sherri and I were driving around, going shopping for the day. We had just left this herb store in Beaverton (the stoner manning the cash register had announced to us, "hi ladies, I'm wearing pheromones today" which I think defeats the whole sneaky purpose of wearing the pheromones in the first place, and anyway, they didn't work as far as we were concerned.) and I was in my car already by the time Sherri started to get in. Suddenly this loud ripping sound filled the air. Sherri's pants had split! Dying of laughter, I unwisely started to pull the car out of the parking space, and promptly hit the rear quarter panel of the stoner's car. I have a nice little dent now, and his rear light cover fell to the ground. I wasn't too concerned about it though, because it was taped on, and also, he's a stoner who wears pheromones. I love chain reactions!
When I was twenty-five: I joined this crazy Wiccan coven and met several of the friends I have now. I still have the indelible image of our Appalachian, extremely obese “little high priestess” falling into the hole dug for the may pole and flashing us her very nasty bits.
When I was twenty-six: I took up Yoga. Unfortunately I have since ceased to do it, but am thinking of getting started again. I'd never been more fit in my life!
When I was twenty-seven: I divorced, and began dating G, my best friend! I also got an apartment by myself for the first time in my entire life, and love it!
When I was twenty-eight: I went to Peru with G. This was my first (and so far only) trip to South America. We took a bus to this town called Ica (it is very close to Pisco, which the recent earthquake decimated). In Peru, vendors sell foodstuffs on the long bus rides. It is not a matter of discretely selecting a sandwich from a basket at the back and getting on with your day, it is a woman who paces the aisle for more than an hour, mumbling "pollo pollo pollo…pollo sand-weech? Pollo pollo pollo…" while the large and heavy hook filled with bags of chips, nuts, pretzels, etc, slides up and down the rail at mach speeds every time the bus lurches to a halt or gets going again. This would only be a minor annoyance, if the bottom bags weren't at head level and didn't speedily slide directly into passengers' heads. Amusingly, Peruvian passengers let this happen, and some will finally decide they want a sandwich after forty-five minutes of in-your-face "pollo-ing."
When I was twenty-nine: We went to Maui and bought a van to live in for $900. After three weeks, we sold it for $1000. So, we had a set of wheels and a place to sleep, and received $100 for it. In Maui, if you leave your car overnight in any semi-vacant location (backs of stores count), in the morning you will find the axles resting on rocks or coconuts (or anything handy), and everything of importance stripped from the poor vehicle. Unless your van has made the circuit, been blessed by Princess Liluokalani of Kanaha Village, and spent four days in the broken down stall of the only U-Wash Car Wash on the island, having its nasty carpet ripped out much to the amusement of the locals. Then, they leave it alone – it's a local vehicle and not a Haole one. Yessirree, we travel in class! (But, I'd rather meet all the interesting, crazy, and/or homeless people wherever I go rather than who the resorts WANT us to see).
When I was thirty: G took me to Mexico for my birthday. We flew in to GDL for a few days, then drove to Puerto Vallarta. On the way there, we saw a guy sleeping on the storage box in the back of a glass truck. He slept through several winding corners that tossed him from side to side, and lots of screeching halts. Amazing. On the way back, I got the trots and spent time on the side of the road about every half hour. I have especially fond memories of the truckers flashing their brights on me.
Friday, September 14, 2007
It's like a fortune cookie of sorts...
Forget the Virgin Mary in the Toast...
Thursday, September 13, 2007
Movie Dreams
The first movie dream involved Kathleen Turner and Michael Douglas (I think this may have been influenced by the fact that I had watched Jewel of the Nile recently) as a couple who lived in an idealistic house in the woods. Somehow Michael Douglas got to thinking that Kathleen was responsible for all these killings that had been taking place around the town they lived near, so he killed her and buried her in a ravine near the house.
Well, of course, the murders kept happening, so Michael started to get paranoid and delusional. Every time someone new was killed, he had to go back to the ravine and dig her up to make sure she was still there and 'behaving' herself. What was really disturbing was that every time he'd uncover her face, her eyes would snap open and stare at him. They were starting to be that gross milky cataract white dead people's eyes are in the movies. And her eyes would move to wherever he went, staring accusingly at him. Pretty creepy! Finally I was able to wake up, but not before I got the impression that he had been killing people all along, as an alternate personality, and that he was now lonely and haunted by having killed his wife.
The next dream involved Jennifer Aniston and Bruce Willis. Well, Bruce was there in the second half. The first half involved Jennifer running around my parents' neighborhood trying to get away from zombies, until she finally was able to steal a car to get away. For some reason, she went to Portland, where she met up with Bruce, with whom she had had a previous relationship (in Friends, of course), as well as a toddler daughter from that relationship that was in his custody.
There were zombies in Portland too, so the three of them raced around trying to avoid getting killed and all that, and ended up at OHSU, where they believed the zombies hadn't infiltrated yet. This was apparent because all the doctors and nurses were bustling around, going about their day, as if they had never even heard of zombies. But wait, it turns out that ALL of the people Jennifer Aniston thought were normal were in fact very fresh and well-acted zombies, including Bruce Willis, who intended to turn her into a zombie as well so they could raise their daughter to teenage hood before turning her into a zombie too. But Jennifer got away, and made it to some other city that had no zombies. The end of the dream consisted of somewhat-rotted Bruce talking to his (few years older but still alive) daughter, telling her they were going to meet Mommy now, and Jennifer showing up in the doorway finally dead now too.
The last dream involved two characters from a story I have been writing off and on for several years. In the story, they are a forensic pathologist and a detective from Australia who have been working a serial killer case together and happen to have fallen in love. In my dream, however, they are young new parents who have somehow been blamed for some serious crime activity, like robbing a bank or something (of course they didn't do it though!).
So in the dream, the crime had already happened, and now they were on the run from the law, trying to be parents to their infant, and trying to survive (they now had no home, no money, no family to take them in, etc). They went to a pawnshop to pawn what items of value they did still have (their rings and some silverware, don't ask me); Dominic the father taking their daughter around to look at stuff in the pawnshop while Scarlett made the transaction. Unfortunately, the pawnbroker watches television and recognized them, and called the police when he went into the back room for a moment. The police showed up, and Scarlett had to get to the car while Dominic had to carefully get their baby to safety and meet her later. I woke up before finishing this dream, so who knows how it went.
Interesting, huh? I don't know what my problem is, or if I even have one.
Catfight Tonight
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Longshoremen
Our first surprise was that the movie was free - when we inquired, the girl at the ticket counter said, "it's a longshoremen deal, the longshoremen got it." We looked at each other, shrugged, and went on in.
The place was more packed than I'd ever seen it - I swear we were the only non-longshoremen there. I still wasn't sure what the movie would be about, or even what the longshoremen were really about, but my interest was piqued.
The thing was a documentary on the history of the longshoremen, and also the 2002 ILWU contract struggle and PMA lockout. Quite interesting indeed. The most interesting part was that every person featured in the film, as well as every member in the audience, had an almost overwhelming pride in their jobs, their union, and their brethren. It was amazing to watch they cheering their on-screen friends and heroes, and booing their perceived enemies (large corporations, President Short Bus, etc).
The only thing I got indignant about was that whenever a longshoreman from another country, with a funny name, accent, or language, spoke about the same things these guys cared about, the guys in the audience would make fun of them. I was angered by their ignorance and/or racism. I mean really, Bjorn Borg was exactly like them, but he got made fun of simply because he wasn't American. Another example was this Spanish guy who was speaking eloquently of the cause and the fight to maintain, but all the guys in the audience were doing was saying things like "Andale, arriba, arriba." It was ridiculous, and pissed me off.
I left the theatre with improved knowledge of these workers the common consumer doesn't even think about, which was part of the filmmaker's intent. I also came away with a very good quote from one of the old-timers who'd been around the block a time or two, but unfortunately I didn't catch his name.
His quote goes thusly: "You gotta take a big bite and hold on. Because you're gonna be hungry down the road...we gotta keep our teeth sharp, that's for damn sure."
Crab on Face, Crab in Eye
The first story involves the husband, Jerry, who used to be in the Navy. For a time he was stationed somewhere in Southeast Asia. I'm not exactly sure where, or when. All I remember is that the prostitutes used to say "Love you no shit Joe."
So anyway, he was out with his buddies on leave once, and this one friend of his met up with this extra-skanky hooker. The other guys were telling him they didn't think it was a good idea but of course he got drunk and left with her anyway.
The next day when he showed back up all nice and sober, he tried to deny that anything had happened. Which may have worked, except they all saw a crab crawling in his moustache.
Next, Jerry's wife was out with the girls at some male strip club somewhere (I think it was the Viewpoint). They were in the front row, enjoying the fact that some strange man was thrusting his package at them repetitively (I like going to female strip clubs with G, but can't imagine myself not laughing at male strippers, I'm sorry). Then, suddenly, Jerry's wife (I believe it was her, anyway, but it could have been her friends, and anyway, does it really matter, Sarah?) feels this sharp burning pain in her eye. This pain lasted through the night and the next day her eye was red and swollen, like she had conjunctivitis. Of course she went to the doctor, who found a...you bet...CRAB in her eye!!!!
Jerry also related several stories of freak deaths on the aircraft carrier he was on, I will relate these at a later date.
Monday, September 10, 2007
Crabs, pro-ball players, and disposable glasses.
G and I took the jet ski around Netarts Bay while the others were crabbing, taking occasional trips to the ocean, and around to the boats of our friends. The real fun began, though, when we decided to take the jet ski up inland, and got the intake grate of the ski so choked with weeds, G had to sink in up to his knees in muck to pry about eight dense handfuls of the crap out. Otherwise the motor would burn up, and we were four miles away from the boat ramp at this time. An earlier version of me would have gotten freaked out, but after two-and-a-half years with G, who has this kind of stuff happen all the time with great results, I just sat back and watched, my heart maintaining an even beat.
G’s friend Gaffi is generally a pretty mellow guy, a great cook, but prone to tumbling to the ground when he’s had a bit. This weekend, he fell twice, I heard: once out of the car onto the pavement, and then onto the carpeted floor on his way to bed. He got some pretty nasty rugburns all over his face, and all this happened before three p.m. He was down for the count that night.
Stretch, Mike’s older brother is 6’6”, and has a blow job story for every occasion. By the frequency of his stories, I am really surprised that I haven’t actually seen a girl do a face-plant into his lap and go to town. This weekend, he related the story of his guy friend from childhood trying to get in on the action. And also, during the crabbing portion of the day, there were four boats with guys on them – and only three crabs caught, or so we thought at the time. Stretch and his boating partners disappeared just before the rental boats were due back, and showed up hours later with seventeen more crabs. There’s sure to be a great blow job joke in there, but I’ll save it for another time.
A guy named Covington started the day out amicable and downright pleasant, but he turned out to be an Angry Steve. After a few drinks, he took to insulting everyone in his presence with what he thought were real zingers. For instance, the slight he directed at me was the simple, yet rancorous “teacup,” because I happened to be drinking out of one. Real scathing, folks. Apparently he used to be a pro ball player, though dubiously he was unable or unwilling to tell us what team he’d been on. A google search when I got back into the office turned up – you guessed it, nothing. After he fought with pretty much everyone in the house, Bureson finally slapped him, then punched him in the face, facilitating his departure.
Mike got pissed at everything, as I hear he usually does. During the crabbing jaunt in the bay G splashed him pretty good with the jet ski (he was actually trying to get Gaffi, but hey, Mike was in front of Gaffi). He was none too happy about that, understandably. But what I don’t understand follows - in the early stages of the party, when everyone was getting along and having a good time, he was wandering around in a state of irritability. Usually spending time with his brother culminates in the two of them beating the crap out of each other, but fortunately they both walked away still on speaking terms…this time.
G offered to give Mike’s mom, Francine, a back-cracking, which sent her into a prolonged fit of gasping and holding her back in pain.
Bureson and Malcolm were both attempting to catch the eye of Mike’s eighteen-year-old step-sister, and I think B won…though I’m not sure if he actually won, because by eight o’clock she was kneeling on the bathroom floor taking solace in the coolness of the toilet bowl.
Randy, Mike’s handyman at his home in Tumalo, showed up inexplicably and regaled us with his simple country boy comments. My favorite was this: He was in the kitchen with Francine
when she discovered that one of her expensive glasses had been broken. “You should throw it away,” he suggested.
“But it’s a hundred-dollar glass,” she said, dismayed.
“I wish I had a hundred dollars to throw away,” was his reply. So do I, Randy, so do I.
Barflies
To wit:
Barnacle Bob - a drunken, preferably older gentleman who showers unwanted attention (usually by way of buying drinks) on girls much younger than he is and way out of his league. Always sits in the same spot and is looked upon good-naturedly by the rest of the regulars. A good character to know if you are a broke young girl.
Wanda or Dee - a woman approximately forty-five years old with stock in Avon. She generally wears a purple tube top with either a leather mini skirt or stretch pants. There is ALWAYS a lit cigarette dangling from her lips. She has a voice made gravelly from years of straight bourbon and chain-smoking, bitches about her teenage kids who are always getting into trouble, and never goes home before closing time.
The Dancer - This guy (or girl) loves to dance, and when you get a couple of drinks into him, he's ready to put on a show. Usually he has the body type and dance moves of Mick Jagger and dances to songs like "Free Bird", "Jukebox Hero" and "Back in Black" with the same tempo and intensity. Very rarely interacts with anyone else; in fact, he sometimes appears to believe he is the only person in the bar. However, if there is a mirror, he will dance with his own reflection.
Angry Steve - Wrath is one of the seven deadly sins, and is embodied by our good friend Steve here. It doesn't matter what you are doing. Steve will be pissed at you. Perhaps that day his girl left him, or his truck (or Camaro) got a flat. You're minding your own business - haven't even noticed him. He glares at you for a long while from across the smoky room, nursing his beer. When the time is right, he will be in your face, his voice raised, the veins standing out on his neck. Most of the time you can't make sense of what he is saying. It won't matter what you say back to him, the result will be the same. If you encounter this guy, make sure your reflexes are honed, you may have to duck.
This list is for entertainment purposes only. If you feel you are similar to Bob, Dee, the Dancer, or Steve, any and all similarities are purely coincidental.
Thursday, September 6, 2007
Chocolate Rain
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EwTZ2xpQwpA
I vote that "Chocolate Rain" is like standing under a leaky sewage pipe, or the diarrhea resulting from last night's Indian food.
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
Labor Day Shenanigans
G returned from the Philippines a week ago with a nasty case of Bird Flu (or something similar, anyway), so all week he has been sleeping a lot and hacking up loogies the size of baseballs. Finally on Saturday I asked him gingerly if he wanted to go for a drive, just to get out of the house. Luckily he said yes, because this was the start of a wonderfully active weekend!
We drove out to Mosier in the gorge, which is about an hour east of Portland, and decided to go for a hike in the Twin Tunnels. One of the tunnels used to be part of the Historic Columbia River Gorge Highway, but due to the road being narrow and a lack of funds to upkeep it, they turned sections into easy day hikes. Some of the highway is still in use, but kind of peters out once you pass Cascade Locks.
The hike is 4.5 miles, and for the most part is pretty flat, with a very nice paved path which used to be the highway. So it was easy going. The important thing to note is that we started out at about six p.m., and dusk falls around eight. Also, the tunnels have a gate on them.
So we’re walking along, and it’s starting to get dark, but we keep on. With about a mile to go, we meet up with what G originally mistook for a deer or some other animal, because all we saw was this brown thing moving in the bushes. As we neared, we saw it was a woman with a huge gypsy skirt on. She had two small children with her, and appeared to be climbing into the bushes. There was a loud crashing in the bushes (there is a pretty steep embankment covered with trees), then a guy came out onto the road carrying a jogging stroller. I asked, “Did you just climb up?” and they shook their heads; apparently one of the children had decided to pilot the stroller over the edge and down the embankment. Luckily his brother wasn’t riding shotgun.
After exchanging pleasantries, we continued on, reaching the other end of the trail at nautical twilight (the twilight where the sky and the sea look the same, if you didn’t know). It had taken us an hour and a half to walk 4.5 miles, so yep, you guessed it, it got pitch dark as we were walking back. About three miles in, we entertained the very scary thought that perhaps the tunnel gate would be locked. I said I was probably going to sit down and cry for a few minutes at the gate if that was the case (I like to warn G of these things in advance), because my feet were beginning to feel like they had when we’d hiked 11 miles into Haleakala on Maui last year. Fortunately, it wasn’t locked. And it was pleasant seeing the Milky Way, a nice bonus.
We made it back to the car finally, after thinking every leaf falling in the dark forest was a cougar, and promptly went out to eat and then for drinks once we got back to Portland.
On Sunday, we went shooting up near Banks with three of G’s friends, Memo, Nick, and Gaffi. Memo and I both have Romanian-made AK47s, and Nick and Gaffi both have AR15s. G has a shotgun that I got him for Christmas.
So we pulled up to this disused rock quarry that is set aside specifically for shooting in this place called Brown’s Camp, which seems to be a haven for AVers and Meth heads alike (sometimes a little of both). We rolled up in two SUVs and came out with assault rifles, and started plugging away on clay pigeons, feeling like hot shit because the other people there only had .22s and pellet guns.
We weren’t hot shit for long, though, because soon rolls up a caravan of Mexican immigrants. Their duds were nice and their vehicles were top of the line, and I’m not saying anything, but you kind of got the feeling they might have been illegal drug traffickers, if you know what I mean (even their women looked like stereotypical drug hoochies). Not to say that all or very many Mexicans are into that, or are illegal aliens (I have known lots of upstanding Mexicans). But these felt like a crime operation. Especially since they had AKs and such too – but these were fully automatic. It’s easy to modify your AK to make it automatic, I’ve heard, but it’s also prison time. Add this to the fact that these were at best recent citizens of the US and you can imagine it’s a little interesting that they have automatic weapons. So we were very nice to them.
The sheriffs finally caught on to the fact that they were hearing spurts of firings, and quickly camped out at the shooting range. They didn’t mess with the Mexicans, who left totally outgunned them, and who left shortly thereafter. Memo took a picture of me with my AK, so as soon as he sends it, I’ll post it.
We once again ended up having drinks, then crashing out at my house with the cats and a bottle of wine.
On Sunday all the togetherness was taking its toll, but we gamely went to OMSI to see the BodyWorlds exhibit (the one where they have plasticized human cadavers arranged in interesting and artistic shapes, most of them skinless), then went driving around SE Portland. I finally saw Ladd’s Addition, a wonderful neighborhood, and we stopped at Tennessee Red’s for some southern BBQ. Then, the weekend ended on a mellow note with us sitting on the couch side by side using our laptops.
Where's Grandma?
He lives in Guadalajara, and if you've ever been there, chaos reigns in some parts (though the Minerva Fountain area is quite nice). Like many traditional Mexican families, his mom, grandma, and sisters have lived together for ages. Julio himself lived with them until he married, and now lives blissfully I'm sure without all the riff-raff hanging about breathing down his neck, and that of Viviana.
Anyhoo, one day, his grandmother wasn't at home anymore. One of the sisters saw her leave the house to go on an errand, and, well, she just never returned. For a week (A WEEK!) the entire family combed the dusty streets of Guadalajara - which is Mexico's second largest city - to no avail. Of course, you can imagine the thoughts running through their heads. Is grandma in a ditch somewhere? Did she get kidnapped and sold in Tijuana to a guy that specializes in geriatric donkey shows? Is she hungry? Speaking of hungry, whos going to make the posole now?
Finally they found her. She had grown tired of living with them and had checked herself into a retirement home without mentioning it to anyone. Now that's a woman who knows how to get things done!
Chicken Pie
"Sweetie Pie," came the reply.
"Chicken Pie?" the guy responded incredulously, screwing up his face in confusion. I about died, and earnestly began to think of how I could incorporate that exchange into the real world, so as to spread the amusement around.
I got my chance only a short time later. One night at the Green Room on Thurman, I had about three too many Jamesons on the rocks (for those of you who don't know, Jameson is a CATHOLIC whiskey, and Bushmills is a PROTESTANT one. Now, I consider myself pretty non-partisan generally, but I was raised Catholic, so goddamn it, if I am going to drink whiskey it's going to be the Catholic stuff. Though, if I had to take a taste test I probably wouldn't know the difference). I (with the help of G, who was similarly three sheets to the wind) began asking random strangers if they had a dog. Upon the affirmative reply, the stranger would be asked what said dog's name was. Regardless of the true answer, we responded with just the same inflection as the guy in the store, "Chicken Pie? What kind of name is that?" To which, the more lucid ones would say, "Sure, whatever." But the drunken ones would launch into a conversation straight out of an Abbot and Costello act. "No, it's Panzer." After more "yeah, Chicken Pie, that's really weird, I must say", they would begin to argue. "I said Panzer, not Chicken Pie!" We would nod knowingly and maybe get one more comment in before they simply turned away in disgust.
Hours of entertainment, let me tell you. It's those simple pleasures.
Friday, August 31, 2007
Neo vs. Ted Theodore Logan
My coworker (a boy by the way) feels that Neo is by far the most awesome of all Keanu’s characters due to his godlike qualities.
But what about Ted Theodore Logan, I inquired?
How is he godlike, you might ask?
Well, Neo of course overcame a simulated computer world, there’s no disputing that. But assuming that Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure took place in the real world, and not a simulated computer world, I feel that Ted Theodore Logan exhibited far more godlike qualities than Neo.
For instance: Ted (with Bill) was able to go back in time and round up a fair-sized group of historical people, carting them around in a phone booth. Neo didn’t seem to know how to time travel.
And, an entire race of futuristic people, including MF’in George Carlin considered Ted a god. Most people that knew Neo doubted that he was the one (much like Jesus; the Wachowskis pretty much threw a pie in our faces to get that point across). I didn’t see George Carlin even in the movie, let alone bowing his head to Mr. Anderson.
"Whoa!" Ted is undoubtedly saying.
(Still from Bill & Ted's Excellent adventure, © 1989 Orion Pictures)
A bit more subtly, Neo seems to be going for the same expression, showing Keanu's awesome range.
(Still from The Matrix, © 1999 Warner Bros.)
It's an interesting side note that Larry Wachowski is now living as a woman (per several internet reports) named Lara, Laurenca, or Linda (depending on what you read).
Bird Woman of Alcatraz
On Tuesday, while I was visiting with my mom, she remarked that the robins outside had been screeching all day due to her enterprising cats waiting at the bottom of the trees for the fledglings that were sporadically dropping down. Eager to see a fledgling, I took a peek outside just in time to see a baby robin pretty much fall into her latest adopted monster Diesel s mouth. Quickly I shooed the cat away and picked up the failed flier. It was very scared but seemed to be unhurt. I decided to put it in the tree that contained its screeching parents. Within minutes, the adults had knocked it out of the tree and were dive bombing it on the ground.
Having had enough of that, I scooped up the little thing with the intent on taking it home for the night, then sending it off to the Audubon Society in the morning. Mom helped me assemble a cardboard box and gave me a half dozen worms that my brother had to feed his single piranha. He also has one scorpion and one black widow dont ask me. I stopped by the pet store and got a small cage and some baby bird food. By the time I got it home, the little bird had come out of its shock and was chirping industriously inside the box.
In the morning, precisely when the sun rose, the bird began chirping. I called my boss to say I would be in late and explained the situation. Then I went into the bathroom to see if it wanted to eat yet. It lightly clicked its beak at me, then opened up for some worms. This was a very cute bonding moment, because for the next couple of hours as it got hungry again, it would see me and click its beak, and I would feed it again. VERY CUTE. The inside of its beak was a bright yellow, and its red feathers were just coming in.
The lady at the Audubon said if it wasnt hurt, and was a fledgling, it would be better off if I placed it in a box in a tree rather than bring it to them. So that is what I did. All Wednesday I felt anxious for the bird, but toward the end of the day I kind of hoped it would still be there in the box waiting for more worms.
Alas, it was not to be, as the little bird was no where in sight. I am optimistic that it finally flew away and would soon become an adult robin, but it was still a little sad not to see it again. Regardless, I am going to keep my eyes open for robins in my area, just in case one of them is MY robin.
Thursday, August 30, 2007
Blood and Bullets
I don’t know Ricky’s real last name, but Bullit works well. His other band members appear to be: Joe Perry from Aerosmith, the drummer from the Spin Doctors, and a zombie with bad posture. They have another publicity shot with their logo a bit larger and their slogan, which is “The gun sight is set on LA. Let the bullets fly in ‘95” or some other nonsense. A google search for “Blood and Bullets” ensures that LA didn’t suffer too much from the hail of protein pack these four guys flung on it. I’m guessing the zombie carved out a niche for himself stocking the Halloween section of Party Factory, the drummer from Spin Doctors is now an accountant, and Ricky huffs gold paint on Hollywood Boulevard when he isn’t weeping bitterly (over what could have been) next to Motley Crue’s star on the walk of fame. And we all know what Joe’s been doing. That’s right, he’s been recording terribly pussy ballads with Mick Jagger’s mouthier brother.
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
Salad Tongs
Check out Salad Tongs if you're looking for something to eat, and like your recipes to be mildly amusing reads. http://www.chattes-salad-tongs.blogspot.com/
Emperor of the United States
I have the entire DC comics Sandman collection (yes, I know, I'm a geek) and in one of the issues there is a storyline referencing a man called Joshua Norton, the first and only emperor of the united states. I had never paid much attention to the story as there were many more interesting ones to be read, until I read the foreword or afterword to the collection, in which Neil Gaiman stated that the story was in fact true and there had actually been an emperor Norton I of the United States.
So I looked him up. Turns out, ol' Josh Norton lived in San Francisco in the mid eighteen hundreds. After suffering a huge financial blow involving a rice shortage, the poor guy (who had lost everything) decided to take matters into his own hands and declare himself emperor of the US. He sent out a letter to several San Francisco newspapers, stating thusly:
"At the peremptory request and desire of a large majority of the citizens of these United States, I, Joshua Norton, formerly of Algoa Bay, Cape of Good Hope, and now for the last 9 years and 10 months past of S. F., Cal., declare and proclaim myself Emperor of these U. S.; and in virtue of the authority thereby in me vested, do hereby order and direct the representatives of the different States of the Union to assemble in Musical Hall, of this city, on the 1st day of Feb. next, then and there to make such alterations in the existing laws of the Union as may ameliorate the evils under which the country is laboring, and thereby cause confidence to exist, both at home and abroad, in our stability and integrity.
NORTON I, Emperor of the United States."
The people of San Francisco, always amused by eccentricity, received this first emperor of the US. Still penniless, Norton I received regal attire (including a top hat with peacock feathers stuck in the band) from the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, and his specially drafted bank notes were widely accepted as legal tender by restaurants and businesses. Citizens of his chosen imperial city saluted him on the streets as he performed his regal duties of checking that the sidewalks were not cracked and making sure that no one called his beloved city "Frisco," an offense punishable by a small fine. Mark Twain was his friend, even so much as to write the epitaph on the tombstone of one of Norton's dogs. The census of 1870 even recorded a Joshua Norton living at his address and listed his occupation as "Emperor."
When a police officer arrested him in order to have him committed, the public was outraged, and a judge dropped all charges, decreeing that "he had shed no blood; robbed no one; and despoiled no country; which is more than can be said of his fellows in that line." Norton, the benevolent ruler that he was, granted the errant police officer a full pardon.
Throughout his reign, he argued that the city should build a bridge between it and Oakland, which of course happened, albiet after his death. There's a petition to rename that bridge after him currently. He exchanged correspondence with other rulers such as Queen Victoria, Tzar Alexander of Russia, and Emperor Pedro II of Brazil.
He, like any mortal ruler, passed away in 1880, dying on the street, still penniless, still shabbily dressed in his top hat with the peacock feathers wilting in the rain. The newspapers published the announcement of his passing with the headline "le roi est mort," "the king is dead." 30,000 people attended his funeral. His tombstone reads "NORTON I, Emperor of the United States and Protector of Mexico" and can be seen in the Woodlawn Cemetery, in Colma. The day after his funeral was marked by a total eclipse of the sun.
Isn't that a romantic story? He's as much a part of US history as any president we've had, yet not many know of him. For twenty-one years in the mid to late eighteen hundreds, the United States DID have an emperor, our only one, if only in the mind of one man and those of the good people that humored him. He's all over the internet as well. Wikipedia has a good article on him, as do many other sites.
So there's your forgotten history lesson for the day, girls and boys. Hope you enjoyed it!
1994
I'm not sure how many licks it takes to get to the center of a grape Tootsie Roll pop, but what I AM sure about is that hair pretty much delays (or stops altogether) the licking process.
Please note the multi-layers so popular in the nineties - the raggy long-john top and the ill-fitting second-hand tye-dye, accentuated by a handmade necklace that may or may not have hemp in it. Ahh, those were the days. Just be happy I am not wearing a trenchcoat and army helmet in this picture. (And yes, I dressed like this before I ever did drugs.) No wonder my mother occasionally confused me for a transient.
Looking at this, I'm thankful that I got contacts - I look like a forty-five-year-old spinster sixth grade teacher who enjoys arranging her collection of cast off garter snake skins and reading bodice rippers on the toilet.