Sunday, May 8, 2011
"How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb"
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Apartment 3-G
Today's victim: Apartment 3-G.
Tuesday, April 5, 2011
Easily Arranged
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Line Up
It’s 3 A.M. here in Cleveland, Ohio, and I’m waiting for the train to New York. I’ve been here since about 11:30 last night—I walked here from the Greyhound Terminal downtown. I don’t have anywhere else to go: I’m too cheap for a hotel room and too bashful to try and couch surf. Instead, I’m homeless for a night in Cleveland, fulfilling an obscure Kerouac-esque fantasy in the seventh most violent city in the United States.
Here at the train station, Amtrak has an intriguing system-wide policy: uniformed military gets to skip to the head of the ticket line. For some reason, at three in the morning, this is the most bizarrely unfair policy I have yet heard. I respect and support our troops as much as any red-blooded American might. Joining the military is an act to be respected, certainly, but it is far from pure selflessness. There is danger, certainly, and hardship. Still, the military, as we know it in this country today, is an organization one voluntarily commits oneself to—a job, as it were.
A couple hours ago, in Columbus, I bought a bag of Fritos for a man who said he was going to West Virginia. He cornered me outside the bus station. A black man with a crop of graying hair, he smiled and assured me that he wouldn’t shoot. He was a practiced panhandler, opening soft and finishing hard, asking me about what was going on around town—he’d seen crowds, congregating outside hotels and in front of bars. I told him that there was a Lil’ Wayne concert tonight at an arena somewhere. His eyes lit up and he smiled a little bit.
“Where you going? You just wandering around?”
Clearly, I was from out of town. Maybe he was too, but he was the sort of guy who was good at hiding his origins for the benefit of soliciting charity.
“I’m going to get something to eat,” I told him. This was a mistake. It opened the door to all sorts of begging. Without missing a beat, he seized the opportunity and made it clear he was asking for food, not money. He didn’t need any money—just a bag of chips or something small like that, just enough to get hold him over until he got himself to West Virginia.
“Will you be here when I get back?” I asked.
“Well, I mean, I’ll try…” he told me. “I could just get something here, you know?”
He gestured vaguely at the little restaurant inside the Greyhound Station. I didn’t have any cash to give him and I didn’t feel like taking him out for dinner.
Instead, I went to a CVS down the street and bought food. Lots of food, enough for my bus ride and train ride, enough to last me the thousand miles to New York. I bought chips and Oreo cookies and Powerade and pudding and pretzels filled with peanut butter and macaroni I could microwave—if I encountered a microwave between Columbus and New York. I bought a bag of Fritos, for 99 cents.
Back at the station, I handed over the bag of chips and didn’t ask for his name. I didn’t want to know it. I didn’t want to know where he was going exactly or why—I didn’t want to hear his stories or be pressed into giving more. He smiled and thanked me and I told him to have a nice day. And that was it, that was all we wanted from each other—a neat, clean transaction. He wanted a free snack and I wanted to pay the price for being the rich boy in a bus station full of poor people. In Columbus, that price is set just shy of a dollar. Affordable, certainly.
Up the road a bit, in Cleveland, uniformed military skips to the front of the line. I imagine myself in uniform, and try to picture myself skipping the line. Would the lady at the ticket window with the scratchy deep voice facilitate this, or would I have to initiate the process myself? Would other patrons usher me to front?
About a decade ago, after 9/11 and Afghanistan and Iraq, we decided to canonize our military. In so doing, we laid ourselves prone. The more we uphold our military, from the generals down, as infallible paragons moral rectitude, the more we open ourselves up to abuse. Whenever our right to ask questions is made a societal taboo, shit hits the fan.
I’m not suggesting that we shouldn’t support our military—we absolutely should. But our support must be respect always and worship never. Soldiers and sailors and airmen—like firefighters and police officers—have achieved something remarkable, an achievement of will and fortitude which provides for our safety and betters our fortunes. But their achievement is foremost a personal accomplishment, to be respected but not made holy. To worship the military is to declare ourselves unworthy of walking amongst them, to transfer, unwittingly, a little bit of their accomplishment over to our shoulders as we struggle to measure up. We steal a difficultly forged identity from hardworking Americans and subsequently allow another sort of people—our military leaders, no less—to be made superior to us—the very definition of an anti-American sentiment. Patriotism is not a yellow ribbon on our bumper or a box of goodies mailed to anonymous soldiers overseas. These acts are acts of compassion inspired by a love and respect for those among us who do the things we ourselves cannot. Patriotism, on the other hand, is something else, something more vexingly complicated, something not so easily scaled to fit a bumper sticker.
I don’t know if my friend from the bus station ever knew military service. Perhaps he did, serving in some forgotten corner of the world, discharged without notice and set out upon the streets in the crudest of fashions. It is more likely, however, he did not serve. Instead, I am quicker to picture him living a useless and destitute life, drifting between bus stations and bars and little apartments he can barely afford, scamming food from guilty white people, scraping together enough money from odd jobs to get himself to his brother’s house in West Virginia where a job is waiting for him—maybe.
Regardless, my bus station friend deserves to be neither a patron of our national compassion nor an example of our modern collective patriotism. He is rather an example of what we have all become. His eyes reflected to me a uniquely American sort of hunger and desperation, a potpourri of fear and wanting and paper-thin confidence. He was, in short, the living embodiment of our new culture—a culture designed to mitigate our guilt. We feel guilty that he might be hungry, that he might be discriminated against, that we might go without doing something we could easily have done. We pity him and buy him corn chips with the same sort of guilty vigor that inspires us slap yellow ribbons on our fenders without stopping to ask why. If I’d done it again, I’d buy him corn chips, certainly. But I’d make him earn it. I’d make him convince me he deserved it, I’d make him tell me his name and his story and what was waiting for him in West Virginia.
Patriotism is like this, asking questions of ourselves to validate our confidence, not our guilt. Had I gotten to known my bus station friend, had I taken the time to hear his story, I would’ve become just a little bit more American. I would’ve known more about who we both were, about where we were going and about why any of it really mattered anyway.
I’d like to think that we all accomplish something in the course of life, even if that one thing which we do accomplish has no ultimate effect on the world. Nobody goes to the Greyhound Station solely for the purpose of going to West Virginia—something is waiting for us at the end of line, otherwise we wouldn’t bother riding. We’re all out to make a change, however slight, on the fabric of the world.
At the moment, I go to college in New York, where I pay a lot of money to sit in a room with an aging absurdist playwright and learn the craft of writing screenplays. On the scale of useless pursuits, my expensive private school education ranks near the top of the spectrum. But I do what I do because I love doing it—and because a part of me believes that somehow, if I write enough and make enough movies, the world will change and be a little bit different when my time comes to leave it all behind. This is my little bit of change, my little struggle to be a patriotic American.
Someday, a sign will inform patrons of the Cleveland Amtrak that screenwriters are welcome to step to the front of the line. An adjacent sign will ask that hustlers with free corn chips be allowed to pass to the head of the same line. Indeed, an infinite multitude of signs will crowd the wall, one on top of the other, each one calling for a different strata of the national collective to step forward and claim their rightful place of respect at the front of the ticket line. It’ll be a mess, for sure, everybody jostling and arguing for their right to be at the front of the line. But it’ll be okay. It’ll be okay because, for the very first time, we’ll each know—and have a little bit of respect for—just what we’re good for: whatever the hell we want.
Thursday, February 24, 2011
More Love Advice From Feudal Lord
My girlfriend recently told me she thinks we should take a break and start seeing other people. We had something great going—where did this come from? I just don’t understand why she’s doing this.
How do I get her to reconsider? She’s coming over this weekend—she says she wants her Tupperware back.
Help!
—Big Problems in Big Horn, WY
##
Dear Lord Big Horn—
Lo! What a quandary! What vexing tribulation yonder!
Disavow yourself, say I, from this maid. She seems daffy in the cerebellum, if you must have my opinion, a most disagreeable sounding wench indeed. The fact that she has not heeded your wishes to continue in union is cause enough for abandoning her in favor of a more agreeable female. Time to move on to that little vixen of mistress you have been entertaining on the side!
Our Father Almighty gave unto thee testicles, dear Lord Big Horn. Use them!
Salutations and Godspeed,
—Feudal Lord
Where To Woo Women Like A Gentleman
Cooper Union Library – The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art is many things—a world renowned art school, a highly selective architecture and engineering institution with a reputation for turning out some of the most talented artists and designers of our generation—a living testament to the very best artists this country has yet produced. What Cooper is not, however, is a conservatory for the socially well-adjusted. Simple social graces—opening doors for ladies, saying thank you—are lost on many an awkward engineering prodigy. If you happen to be lucky enough to be a member of one of the fine educational institutions represented by the Research Library Association of South Manhattan, Cooper is the place to be.
Dog Runs – Many Manhattan parks have ‘dog runs’—that is, runs for the dog. In other words, a patch of dirt where dogs can run around and poop. Be careful to avoid coming off as a creep, however—do your best to appear legitimate. Make sure that your dog really does belong to you and that he really does have to poop. Nothing is more off-putting to a dog-owning sex goddess than a guy with a bored looking stolen dog. Remember, you’ve got to love the dog more than her. Otherwise you’re just an asshole.
Staten Island Ferry – Classy, damn classy.
Burning buildings – Men who rush into burning buildings are, simply put, sex magnets. What’s more, Manhattan has an above-average concentration of flammable buildings. The key? Getting there before the fire department. As soon as those FDNY guys show up, all bets are off. For one thing, they’ve got a big shiny red truck and you don’t. (Also, studies have shown that the average FDNY firefighter has a larger penis than you do.)
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Stranded On A Desert Island With A Cell Phone
A: yo, you there?
B: wassup?
A: i’m on an island.
B: wtf man, where are you? you need to be here right now.
A: i’m on an island.
B: no, seriously.
A: i am serious. the plane crashed.
B: dude, you need to be here right NOW. TWINS.
A: baseball? this isn’t the time for that.
B: haha. not minn twins, idiot. i’m at amanda’s party and her roommate has her sister over and theyre TWINS.
A: that’s cool, I’m stranded on a fucking island.
B: i call the blonde one. her tits are AH-MAZING.
A: hey, could you shutup for a second and call my mom and tell her where I am?? she isn’t picking up her phone…
B: ahahah. yeah, sure, if i knew where u were…
A: i’m on an island.
B: like a metaphorical island? i told you to stop reading kierkegaard.
A: no, like an actual motherfucking island.
B: kewl.
A: shutup, i’m serious. I need helpppp!!!
B: you know whats gonna suck for you?
A: what?
B: when you run out of battery. i mean, seriously, that will SUCK.
A: funny, find my mom.
B: wait… if you run out of battery, i’m not going to be able to tell you about banging amanda’s roommates twin sister. shit.
A: i wouldn’t want to hear about that even if I wasn’t stranded on an island.
B: yeah, because your so devoted to Stephanie....
A: screw you.
B: she broke up with you, time to fuck other bitches.
A: we’re taking a break, it’s not breaking up.
B: taking a break, breaking up, same dif.
A: no, its not the same. so just shutup and call my mother.
B: steph basically told Amanda she’s sleeping with kyle.
A: who’s kyle?
B: he’s a senior. financial accounting. lol.
A: that asshole? fuckkk.
B: ANYWAY… you could be banging a TWIN right now. fyi.
A: but instead i’m on an island… FML
B: fml indeed, my friend.
A: hey, how do you eat a coconut?
B: crack it open with a machete.
A: i dont have a machete.
B: i guess ur fucked then.
A: i guess so…
B: so seriously, where are you? lol.
Newfoundland Is Full of Weirdos
Newfoundland is an island off the coast of Canada. Part of the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador, Newfoundland (the island) is home to 94% of the province’s 509,200 residents.
The island was visited first by the Icelandic Viking Leif Eriksson in the 11th Century. It was all downhill from there. The island was next visited by an Italian, Giovanni Caboto (also known by his porn name John Cabot), who was working under contract for the English. Newfoundland was later claimed officially for England by Sir Humphrey Gilbert in 1583. This is widely cited as the beginning of the British Empire. Newfoundland, it seems, was the spark that ignited a nearly four hundred year run of British dickheads planting their flags on various landmasses around the world.
Today, of course, Newfoundland is a dynamic part of Canada, a great big country known for snow, ice hockey, and Justin Beiber—an impressive legacy indeed. Still, because Newfoundland was not made a part of the Canadian confederacy until 1948, Newfoundlanders maintain a rich sense of identity, with 72% identifying themselves as being Newfoundlanders first, and Canadians second. This statistic suggests that Newfoundlanders are smarter then the average bear, knowing just enough to keep their distance from the embarrassing shenanigans of the general Canadian populace.
Still, Newfoundland, is just as weird as the rest of Canada. Their time zone, for example, is weird. The Newfoundland Standard Time Zone (NT) is anything but standard—establishing Newfoundland time as UTC-3:30, a very weird arrangement indeed. While most normal time zones are calculated by modifying Universal Coordinated Time (UTC) in whole hour increments (Eastern Standard Time, for example, subtracts 5 hours), NT subtracts 3½ hours. Nobody really knows why.
As if this wasn’t complicated enough, most of the rest of the province uses another time zone, Atlantic Standard Time (AST). They aren’t supposed to (the entire province is supposed to follow NT) but they do anyway. Again, nobody knows why.
In any case, being an hour and a half ahead of Central Canada creates some interesting (and weird) time quirks. Television and radio broadcasts, for example, get all confuddled by Newfoundland. National broadcasts are aired in Newfoundland according to AST, the neighboring time zone. Local Newfoundland programming, meanwhile, is broadcast on NT. Since only Newfoundland and parts of Southeastern Labrador use NT, Newfoundland broadcasters have to say something ridiculous to help time-challenged Newfoundlanders out—“coming up at six-thirty, six o’clock in most of Labrador.”
Newfoundland also got all the Harry Potter books before the rest of Canada, something that shouldn’t really matter—but does, somehow.
Friday, February 18, 2011
Love Advice From Feudal Lord
Dear Feudal Lord,
Forget seduction—I’m having trouble even meeting girls. Like, I can’t even get to the launch pad. Liftoff? Please, I should be so lucky.
Thing is, I see girls everywhere. Seems I can’t swing a dead cat around here without hitting one of them. I just can’t talk to them.
Got any hot tips? I need a pick-up line—or at least a way to break the ice. As it is, I can barely stand to form a complete sentence around a girl I find moderately attractive.
Help Me!
—Trouble in Tinseltown
##
My Dearest Lord Tinseltown:
Be not afraid, rogue, of yonder loose women or common consort! Rather, thee must muster ye wits about thee and tally-ho! Difficult it may sound, easy may it be wrought, if thee gives thee enough time to gestate.
I recollect back to my time in the service of my father, thy lord of yesteryear. He commanded that I lay siege to a Lord in county yonder. Lest I prove the coward, I mounted my horse and led my men forth, leading many a great Knight and common soldier along the solemn warpath that blooms skyward from the roots of manly passion. ‘Twas but a small village, modest in people and economie and all manner of useful resource, but nonetheless I feared death and was soon shaking in my pantaloons.
But yonder ho! A most beautiful maiden! I spied her over distant screen, bathing in a tub of warm water, clear as crystal. Her gargantuan bazoombas glistened in the light of the gentle forenoon and I felt myself to be made most aroused. I covered my sausage-piece with my scabbard, lest my pantaloons give the true intention of my lustful loins away. It was then that I was endowed with a certain courage. In steady swoops of attack, I besieged and defeated the enemie, nearly albeit single-handed.
I took my maiden away into the smoldering ruins of a peasant house and made sweet love to her, releasing my loins upon her, the sweat of battle and the sweat of passion fusing as one. Lo, what victory! What tremendous release of lust!
Do as I did, tender Tinseltown—besiege with scabbard and heavy club and tally-ho! For thou art young and thy loins be yet not caressed by tender woman-flesh!
Salutations and Godspeed,
—Feudal Lord
Things That Flew That Shouldn't
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Different Kinds of Holes
(Hole-in-the-Ground, OR: Crater Lake for the aqua-phobic)
With the release of the entrancing new picture Sanctum 3D, many moviegoers are beginning to wonder about the mysterious world beneath their feet. In an increasingly interconnected society, opportunities to glance upon the unknown are becoming more and more scarce. For this reason, we have James Cameron.
- Hole-in-the-Ground, OR - A stunningly intact maar, Hole-in-the-Ground is just that--a hole in the ground. For those not up on the latest craterology lingo, a maar is a volcanic creater caused by a phreatomagmatic eruption. That is, water comes in contact with super hot lava or magma and explodes, sometimes leaving a tremendously exciting hole in the ground.
- Manhole - Entire worlds are hidden underneath many an anonymous manhole cover. The sewer, for example, is a tremendously exciting world of wonder and, even better, tremendously accessible! Just duck down a manhole and unlock an entire universe previously unknown to the common passerby. Be careful, however! While manholes may look fun, they are meant for men. If they were meant for women, they'd be call genderneutralholes. Therefore, if you're a woman, find another hole.
- Subway - A subway is like a manhole, except its bigger and it costs money to get into. Also, there are women. The subway isn't all that great.
- Pothole - These little wonders spring up in the street and make people angry. Nothing is more frustrating, it would seem, then driving over a five-inch hole in the street with a 2.5 ton car. While a pothole doesn't offer much to explore, some might be big enough for you to stick your head inside. In certain cases, it may be possible to enlarge a pothole to allow for both head and neck. Remember, potholes are funholes!
Societal Constructs and the Working Man
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
OK! Magazine: A Critical Approach
- Celebrity, if accepted as a transitory concept of identification, inherently renders publications such as OK! without a firm foundation of being. Therefore, OK! does not exist.
- Trust, when considered in light of a post-modern paradigm, can be nothing less than a societal construct. The implications of this assessment are wide-ranging. Clothing, for example, would become optional.
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Things People Do In Rhode Island
- Leave Rhode Island - Any visit to Rhode Island would not be complete without leaving. What's more, because of its size, leaving the state can become an activity in and of itself. Come up with some creative ways to leave Rhode Island, like riding a bike or walking or tripping over something.
- Befriend a Rhode Islander - Do your part to foster interstate friendship! Befriending a Rhode Islander can be a rewarding experience. Or it could just be lame. Remember, the guys from Dumb & Dumber were from Providence.
- Admire the Official State Name - Rhode Island is known officially as the "State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations". While the average American may be tempted to relate the name "Providence Plantation" with the institution of slavery, this is apparently not so in Rhode Island. The real reason is much more boring. In any case, be sure to admire the longest official name of any state in the union (35 letters!).
- Go to the Seashore - Wherever land ends (which is, in Rhode Island, everywhere) the sea begins! Fun things to do at the seashore include building a sand castle, poking mollusks, and discovering dead bodies dumped into the ocean by gangsters. Fun!
Monday, February 7, 2011
How To Love Like A Frenchman
Frenchmen are known the world over for their delicate passion and steamy romance. Their techniques are subtle, yet effective, and many have attempted to emulate the exploits of these legendary lovers. Indeed, there are few women walking the streets able to resist the smoldering stare of a Frenchman in heat.
- Mustache - If you are able, grow a mustache. A simple pencil-thin tickler on the upper lip adds much to your mystique. While many may be fond of a more comprehensive style of facial hair, the lightly curled mustache is a staple of the French lover, a powerful symbol of romantic intent. If worn properly, the mustache can speak in entire sentences, perhaps even paragraphs. A simple twitch on the right side of the mustache, for example, communicates a single, clear message: "Put down the baguette and take off the brassiere."
- Accent - Almost as important as the mustache, a proper French accent signals your intentions as a lover of the highest caliber. One must be careful, however, to cultivate the proper form of the French accent. There is a fine line between speaking French, speaking French-accented English, and being a French-Canadian. French is the language of love, a swooping song of desire laced with candlelight and cheese. French-accented English suggests a more casual, flirty take on the standard French, suggesting that one might be French, but also down to party. The French-Canadian accent suggests nothing romantic at all. Instead of inspiring feelings of unfettered lust, the French-Canadian accent suggests to your beloved that you have spent many months previous in the wilderness with other men, trapping beaver. And while trapping beaver may very well be your aim, the French-Canadian accent is not the accent to get you there. Wrong kind of beaver.
- Cheese - Also, candles. Fine wine. A red-and-white checkered picnic blanket. A barn. The key here is atmosphere and good judgement. By atmosphere, I mean creating an environment in which every feature is unmistakably designed to further the aims of romance. By good judgement, I mean not burning down the barn with the candle.