February 09, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0)
February 05, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Batteries are never included with the Gift of Laughter. Furthermore, there are many small parts in the Gift of Laughter that maybe hazardous for children and present a risk of choking. It is rare and expensive, too, as any gift worth giving always is. In fact, these days you often have to special order the Gift of Laughter from obscure corners of the globe. Thank God for the internet!
Your toothless aunt in Tallahassee may have given you a Gift of Laughter for Christmas last year, but, although she means well, it was the wrong kind. Obviously your mother needs to be more specific when describing the Gift of Laughter over the phone to senile relatives. Surely even she knows that any cartoon book featuring an overweight tortoise called Herb who wears a baseball cap and greasy dungerees is certainly not what you asked for. This Gift of Laughter is a gift you will definitely want to re-gift, possibly as a tax-deductible donation to your local lunatic asylum's library. Here it can be enjoyed by chronic depressives as they wander along the endless, sterile corridors in their dressing gowns and slippers, smirking mysteriously to themselves.
Indeed, any paperback book marked "humor" is more a gift of desperation than a Gift of Laughter. This is because the Gift of Laughter in printed form is now regarded as "literature," much like music is now called "classical music."
February 03, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0)
"LOL LOL LOL, what's going on 'ere, then?"
(this post obviously belongs on Twitter)
February 02, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0)
February 02, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0)
I found my old typewriter at the bottom of a basement closet, ribbonless, buried beneath a box full of other obsolete electronics: a desktop adding machine; an elephantine rotary phone; some sort of portable tape recorder thing stuffed with a plastic cassette labeled "party mix." The archeology of home-office life at the termination of the twentieth century, except that any self-respecting museum would have tossed these worthless relics long ago.
So cumbersome and heavy it all seemed, and what complicated and convoluted mechanisms were involved, almost as if were a collection of the most eccentric and byzantine of Rube Goldberg contraptions, especially when compared to the slimline design, multitasking digital technology nestling in my trouser pocket.
Did I really do my taxes using that ridiculous calculator? How on Earth did I conduct coherent conversations while tethered to the wall by that telephone cord? And more mysteriously, what the Hell party did I ever throw that apparently required such a variety of music to be played? But ultimately it was the typewriter I was interested in.
Many years ago I'd painstakingly tapped out the first draft of Feelin' Positively Existential on this beast. Where was that now? I'd also slaved over a spirited college essay defending the cinema of Ken Russell, much to the neo-realist disgust of my puritan professor: B-minus, I recall, with some degree of bitterness.
I never did learn to type with more than a single finger, so I suppose there is a little continuity from my Smith-Corona to my iPhone: they both only require one-touch operation. At least this was the joke I made with the man who came from Craigslist, and he smiled politely while handing over the five dollars it was selling for.
January 27, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0)
January 24, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0)
January 21, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0)
January 20, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0)
"In American they have the Republicans who are the equivalent of our Conservative Party; and then they have the Democrats ... who are the equivalent of our Conservative Party."
So joked Beyond the Fringe over forty years ago, but the same logic still applies to the political egg-and-spoon race currently being run in Massachusetts between Martha Coakley and Scott Brown, both of whom are modern-day equivalents of Jonathan Swift's Tub-thumpers: platitude-spouting representatives of shibboleth-specific issues and causes, shaking their fists at the country's problems without ever achieving anything, except mangling the hopes and ideals they inherited from the framers of our Constitution. My many dogmatic friends tell me that I "absolutely must" vote for one to prevent the other getting elected; but what kind of democracy is that? I might as well vote for a baboon or a parrot for all the difference it will make.
Of course, there is a third candidate, the unfortunately named Joe Kennedy (no relation), but you have to Google the man and then skip to page seven of the results and scroll down to find out any information about him. I have not seen one single television advertisement for Kennedy, yet this morning's broadcasts were stuffed with promotional spots for the terrible twins, Coakley and Brown. Even the furniture discounters with their giveaway 42-inch HDTV's couldn't get a look in on WHDH.
So I don't know about you, but for me change I can believe in will only happen when there is a candidate I can believe in. And I don't believe that is going to happen anytime soon.
January 18, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (2)
President Mouthwash stood there in his purple socks, staring idly through the White House windows while wiping his nose on a velvet drape. I held out a handful of wooden teeth for his inspection.
These belonged to George Washington, I told him. We've matched the wood grain with the former president's dental records and the lab says it's definitely cherry tree coated with Auld Crown varnish.
How the hell did you get in here? Mouthwash demanded. I gave strict instructions that I was only to be disturbed when the big hand was pointing at the twelve and the little hand was whizzing around really fast.
I came disguised as a SpongeBob SquarePants kiss-o-gram, I replied, but apparently your personal security seemed to think I was the restless ghost of Ted Kennedy and they all ran off screaming.
This brought a grim laugh from Mouthwash. I know what you mean, he said, finally letting the velvet drape drop and turned around to face me. Bunch of pussies. I've seen better men than that at a Barbara Bush look-a-like contest. So. How much do you want for the teeth?
This isn't about money, I explained. It's a matter of principle. It's about affordable dental coverage for everyone, establishing free floss distribution centers for the homeless and raising awareness about the high rate of gum disease amongst illegal aliens.
I was about to list the worst plaque-forming foods in an average American's diet, too, but Mouthwash interrupted me with a signal from the palm of his hand. "For a minute there I was worried," he gargled. "I thought you were a messenger from the powerful Whitening Lobby. But it turns out you're just another bleeding-heart tooth fairy. "
January 14, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (5)
January 12, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (4)
We closed on our vacation place on the moon last year; a charming glass-domed pod on stilts in one of the shallow craters. It may be on the unfashionable "dark side," but at least we're miles away from the all the golf tournaments, rock concerts and shuttle landings. Plus it's very convenient for nipping over to the Milky Way Mall when Cyrus needs new gravity boots.
Now I know they acted all smug at first, but I do feel sorry for people like the Robinson's who bought on the supposed "beach star" Alpha Sol. It must have been terrible for them to plan their dream home only to find out that the plot they purchased is actually ninety-eight percent gas and on the edge of a load of anti-matter. They can't even build a mini oxygen-chamber never mind a full laser patio. What a shame it would have been for them to travel all that way at light-speed only to get sucked into a black hole. Thank God for deep space probes, that's what I say.
January 11, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0)
The ancient art of perfumery has fascinated me for many years, even though I maintain no great or inextinguishable enthusiasm for manufactured fragrances. Neither, I hasten to add, do I harbor any shameful and secret fetish for genie-shaped bottle architecture. Indeed, to tell the absolute truth, I care not one olfactory nerve about expensive scent, whether it be pour homme, femme or even a particularly specific it. Baking soda deodorant and an occasional sprinkling of sport talc are my eaux de cologne of choice. It's just that I think concocting vast vats of lucrative smells called "Ganymede," "Tonto" or "Tiger Bay" would be a relatively easy business: a bit of elderberry mixed with passion flower, a pinch of spicey stuff from faraway, perhaps a little rose hip, a hodgepodge of Oriental herbs, alcohol base and I'm done. Alas, however, since I'm not already hyper-famous for a glittering catwalk of other fashionable and fabulous activities, my fragrances have got absolutely no chance of being stocked on department store shelves or airport duty-free shops. Still, there's always the automobile air freshener market, I suppose. Drivers only demand quality, not celebrity.
January 05, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (2)
I once believed that our continual operation of worldwide subway systems disproved the existence of any secret subterranean civilizations of wild men, giant sewer squids, or roaming packs of mutant rat-pigs that might thrive underground. Surely serious confrontations would have been forced by now between rattling commuter trains and whatever underground urban alligator colonies that might thrive beneath the city streets.
January 04, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (1)
Snow, the white mud. Jack Frost is laying wall-to-wall carpet in his living room. Or is this snow really God's dandruff, drifting to Earth as he combs his intergalactic hair?
Walking along, a slow trudge is followed by a sudden slip and slide into frozen curbside fjords where subterranean ice-floes flood your supposedly waterproof boots.
Itinerant snowmen appear, the smug gnomes of winter, and we stagger by, hoping for the sun to wipe the smiles off their faces. Happy new year.
January 02, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Why do I only ever visit Manhattan in December? New York is an eternal city of ice and snow for me, somewhat like Stalingrad in that respect, but with NoHo-ites instead of Nazis and A-trains instead of T34 tanks; yet the perpetual threat of complete encirclement does still persist, if only by heaps of unruly garbage and frozen dog turds rather than Soviet battle groups.
Anyway, for what it's worth, here are a few "cold" snaps of New York hot spots captured during my most recent trip, beginning with SoHo streets deluged with yellow cabs and freezing rain
A moment with Claude Monet's water lilies at the Museum of Modern Art
An accidental image taken while lugging luggage along the lighted staircase at the SoHo Grand Hotel
And finally, abstract winter weather through the car window on our way up the Hudson Valley to Rhinebeck
December 30, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (4)
Santa in Greeneland
Cue Zither ...."I never knew the old Main Street Mall before the Holiday Season, with its normal music, ample parking and single-level Pottery Barn (CostCo suited
me better). I really got to know it in that classic period of the last shopping days before Christmas.
We could sell anything anything, if people were desperate enough and had a credit card to pay with. Now, the Mall was divided into four zones: the familiar-sounding-designer-name-perfume-in-a-damaged-box zone; the gift-card-amount-entered-incorrectly zone; the won't-operate-properly-until-you-bring-it-back-to-the-store zone; and the anything-to-do-with-pirates-or-Harry-Potter zone. Each of these zones was responsible for ruining somebody's Christmas. Anyway, there was this fellow by the name of Claus, Santa Claus, just about the worst racketeer this Mall has ever seen. There wasn't one lousy scam or phony layaway scheme that he wasn't mixed up in ..."
December 22, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (4)
December 20, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (4)
You are now following A_Star
BethlehemInn All rooms completely booked tonight - w00t! from Web
KingOfOrient1 Word to the wise guys: Flash Mob this evening at lowly cattle shed from Tweetdeck
KingOfOrient2 RT @KingOfOrient1 Me and @KingOfOrient3 will be there. The myrrh the merrier! from Tweetdeck
KingOfOrient1 RT @KingOfOrient2 LOL! from Tweetdeck
LittleDrummerBoy Invited to live-blog the Virgin Birth tonight at http://blogspot.com/parumpumpumpum Will be first with pix of newborn king from Tweetie
StephenFry Oh Lordy Lord! Roll me up in excelsis and call me a Christmas tree! from BigTwit
Herald_Angel How did he get in here? from Trumpet
December 18, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)
As a Christmas-loving post-modern Marxist, the concept of Jesus as either "Lord" or "King of Israel" is completely anathema to all my ideas and principles. I much prefer to think of him as Brother Jesus of the Carpentry and General Woodworker's Union, an ordinary blue-collar messiah whose birthday just happens to be celebrated by strike action at Heathrow Airport and other important British Airways hubs.
So let us hope that more wise men will also let themselves be led by a Red Star and instruct their members to further disrupt the holiday schedule with lengthy industrial protests over unmet Herald Angel wage demands and long shepherding hours.
You think there's going to be a silent night soon? Not while this Voice of the People has a megaphone, I can assure you of that.
December 14, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)
December 10, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (2)
December 07, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (1)
Today, of course, most experts accept that the "yonder star" followed by the Three Wise Men was in reality a UFO, probably a mothership from planet Saeltag in the Merchandize Nebula, and that our modern concept of Christmas actually celebrates "first contact," not with any so-called Christ child, but with a Saeltaggian representative bringing their message of peace, goodwill and sensational bargains from Star Malls beyond our solar system. The Virgin Mary was obviously the name of some sort of interstellar landing craft that he arrived in, and Joseph the booster rocket.
"Buy one get one," he would have announced in his strange, unearthly Saeltaggian tongue, and it is interesting to note that at least one of the wise men was able to purchase a Wii 'Slaughter the Innocents' game and still get change from half a bag of frankincense.
But apparently the general public is not yet ready for the sight of a little green alien in a manger surrounded by discount astral shopping seekers, and so the International Carol Singing Conspiracy continues. The truth is out there, it is just hidden by a US Government backed winter wonderland window display.
December 06, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)
I was probably approaching five years of age when I dispatched my last Christmas list to Santa Claus. There was only item on it. I merely asked the great man for a postcard from the North Pole proving that he existed. Unfortunately I received no such communication, and consequently I endured that holiday season with a sort of steely, childish detachment bordering on the pathologically misanthropic. Not even a new bicycle, deluxe Ludo game, some sort of rubber thing, three cotton sweaters, several mandarin oranges and assorted nuts could console me for the absence of signed and stamped proof that my former friend Roger Eccles was a miserable liar of the most base and ignoble kind.
Of course, careless elves, the inadequacies of the Greenlander postal service, or possibly Santa's own failings - illiteracy issues? - might have been responsible for my missing missive, but even a idealist like myself was forced to admit that such excuses seemed flimsy and fanciful in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. If Santa Claus could cart sackfuls of wooden trains, candy canes and Kewpie dolls through the freezing winter night, then mailing a small picture postcard, even a zany reindeer-shaped one, shouldn't have caused him or his pointy-eared minions too many logistical problems. Only one conclusion could be drawn from the fact that my letterbox remained devoid of a jolly Yuletide message from the North Pole: Roger Eccles, rat-faced runt though he may be, was telling the truth: Santa Claus actually lived in Miami.
Fast forward many, many years to today. Now, obviously, I know that Santa Claus is really just a Northern folk memory of the Norse God Odin riding through the December night on his eight-legged horse Sleipnir, distributing loaves of bread to the worthy Viking peasantry below. However, this morning, Melanie Garfield, a triple-chinned religious zealot with whom I work, said that Santa is without doubt a commercialized version of some do-gooding early Christian bishop called Saint Nicholas. I just yawned in her fat face and told her to please keep her stupid, pious opinions to herself. Frankly, I'm all through with the shifting snowdrift of fact and fiction that is the Santa Claus story. These days I'm all about the Amazon Wishlist and one-click online ordering.
December 02, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Christmas is coming and the goose is getting fat. Too fat according to many health experts who claim that problem levels of obesity among geese are on the rise. "Foie gras on legs" is how one eminent gastro-ganderologist, Dr Felix Navidad, described the current climate. "We all know geese waddle," he added while putting a penny in an old man's hat, "But this is ridiculous."
Navidad notes that some goslings as young as two weeks old already weigh as much as mature geese: "They just squat in their so-called nests all day stuffing themselves with high-calorie bird seed. Many of them can't even migrate because they're too fat to fly in formation. You can blame the parents if you like, or even modern farming methods, but frankly I think that Christmas is the culprit here. It's a Yuletidal wave of heart-disease waiting to happen."
When pressed, Dr Navidad refused to be drawn on the subject of future Christmas dinners artificially grown from cloned goose DNA.
December 01, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)
November 29, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (2)
November 27, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)
How do you cook a turkey? Every family swears by their own traditional method, whether that means deep-frying the bird in a metal bucket or slow-roasting it in an Italianate oven. And so, in the interests of filling up space in this magazine, we asked several classic characters from both fact and fable how they prepare their Thanksgiving Day meal.
Three Witches from Macbeth: We boil our turkey in hell-broth and baboon's blood in a cauldron for two hours on high, or until the wing of bat stuffing starts to ooze out of its head.
Dr Doolittle: The day before the feast I'll sidle up the bird in question and whisper in its ear, "You're going to die, bird, you're going to die." I'm not normally a mean person, but I've never got along with turkeys.
The Duke of Edinburgh: I really don't have the faintest idea. I have servants to do that sort of thing for me.
Dracula: usually I just rip the neck out with my fangs and devour the meat raw. Then I throw the carcass against the wall with insane rage when I realize that I've forgotten to add cranberry sauce yet again.
Last of the Mohicans: I don't celebrate Thanksgiving anymore because I think the holiday has kind of backfired on my people. But I do like the occasional glass of mulled cider from time to time.
Birdman of Alcatraz: I always volunteer to pluck because I'm saving feathers to make a pair of wings.
Robinson Crusoe: There aren't any turkeys on this island so I have to make do with a seagull or small albatross. Generally I just jam a stick up its ass and force Man Friday to hold it over the fire.
Sarah Palin: In Alaska we've always spent Thanksgiving together as a family and we always will except when we don't. I shoot the turkey myself with an old gatling gun I inherited from my great-grandmother, then I buy one from the store that we can actually eat .... (continued on page 576)
November 23, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Just in time for the Christmas shopping season I shall be publishing my new book, The A-Z of Water, my long-awaited follow-up to last week's Dirt: An Illustrated History.
This new encyclopedia includes everything you and your family ever wanted to know about water and more - mostly more - from bottled Evian to urine via stagnant canals and Tivoli fountains; from the Waters of Lethe to the River Styx via Kubla Khan's caves of ice and the blue stuff in your grandmother's toilet.
For example, the first entry in the A-Z is "Aaaaaaagh," an ancient Egyptian term employed by a Pharaoh or High Priestess who had just stepped in bath water that was far too hot, and, amazingly, the expression is still in common usage today, many of thousands of years later. That is the power of water, and it doesn't even have to be hydro-electric.
The meaning of "Aaaaaaagh" is just the first of many thousands of fun and informative water facts 'on tap' in this hugely entertaining book available for a special, secret discount price when you order today.
Simply leave a comment on this blog with your name, credit card details and billing address, and operators will immediately dispatch your copy of The A-Z of Water within the next three years. Just in time for the holidays at some point in the future someday.
What could be easier? Order now and receive a free copy of this blog suitable for framing. (No CODs, checks, IOUs or Government Bail-Outs. Not responsible for undelivered or unwritten goods oor the fact that you're obviously an idiot if you buy this sort of thing)
November 22, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (1)
A recent study by the respected Pecksniff Institute has revealed that over one-hundred percent of teenagers in the United States have never heard of Josiah Blimpberg. That the inventor of the Reverberating Gas Belch has fallen into obscurity is a sure sign that America's children are being transformed into an underclass of illiterate slum-dwellers content to waste their lives listening to "jazz" music and playing soccer in negro clothes. Nothing good can come of a society peopled by such Obamacized feral street urchins except many more sanctimonious articles similar to this written by me and published in this magazine and other right-thinking periodicals. After all, how is an overweight, closeted bigmouth like me supposed to support my wife's Lithium dependency if I cannot keep re-writing the same piece over and over again ad infinitum.
This is what Sarah Palin means when she talks about family values. It is what Ronald Reagan meant when he told me privately that he would return from the dead to lead his people against the forces of Marx and the heathenism. And yet, incredibly, the liberal elite in control of the New York Times still refuse to hire me to pen a daily editorial denouncing the New York Times for being an organ of the liberal elite. It is time that we stopped appeasing these unpatriotic appeasers who seek to appease us with their policy of appeasement and free Hugo Ahmajinedad temporary tattooes. In fact, I personally challenged Mahmoud Chavez and his international terrorist friends to a belching contest at the burger chain of his choice. So far the pinko coward has declined to face me. Is that because he is a salad-eating wimp like his idol Adolf Hitler or, more likely, because the President of Iranq has a personal vendetta against me and does not want me to earn the Medal of Honor for meat-eating services to my country? These are the kind of tough questions our present socialist government cannot - will not - answer.
It is true, I do not give a damn about the so-called environment. But unlike many of my colleagues in the conservative movement, I am very concerned about climate change. Indeed, quite often my daughter turns the heat on when it's still only just below freezing in the house. When will she learn that being locked in her bedroom and forced to read the complete works of Josiah Blimpberg by candlelight in sub-zero temperatures is the best preparation for life? I only wish that my own father had given me the same advantages instead of paying my way through prep school and college and pulling strings to get me this full-time job on the Weekly Low Standard
November 17, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (2)
I wandered lonely as a cloud
That floats on high o'er huge land-fills
And feeling ill I cried aloud
For my extra-strength antidepressant pills.
Need I go on? Of course, any cloud foolish enough to go wandering by itself today would get mugged by a gang of smog before too long, or might even stumble over a divot in the ozone layer and break its condensation. This is why most clouds stick together, hence the name "cumulus." Any unaccompanied cloud scudding across the sky is probably a problem cloud; a bum cloud that has taken too much vapor on board and should spend a little more time on the meteorologist's couch; the kind of dirty trickster cloud that might rain frogs on unsuspecting Forteans.
November 13, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (2)
November 11, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (3)
Having spent the past four days in the rather stale city of St Louis, I can wholly empathize with Lewis and Clark's urgent need to get away from the area for a year or two. It has the aura of a one-horse town whose most imposing building is a glue factory. In fact, so empty, soulless, flat and square seemed St Louis that I constantly felt like the last little plastic figurine in an abandoned architects model of a generic metropolis. Also, having sampled several varieties of St Louis' meaty, vegetableless cuisine, it came as no surprise to me to learn that the heartburn relief tablet branded Tums was developed nearby.
My hotel room was pleasant enough, I must admit, but an otherwise excellent view of the Mississippi river from the window was unfortunately ruined by some ludicrous arch-shaped monument.
Supposedly this scrawny structure represents "The Gateway to the West," but it reminded me more of a Mouse-hole to Nowhere.
Another case of the St Louis blues, perhaps? Well, I for one would certainly agree to meet the Devil at any crossroads if he could give me a ride out of there.
November 09, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (4)
I have never been a consumer of newspapers; and I fail to understand why anyone else in their right mind would voluntarily read such confabulations of fatuous and poorly-written reportage either. Nevertheless, the possible terminal elimination of these broadsheets and tabloids from kerbside kiosks, convenience store-shelves, bus seats and the morning's doorstep in favor of more modern media does concern me. Not, I hasten to add, because I believe that such a loss would impact quality news gathering, the proliferation of wisdom, the process of democracy or anything like that. I am just worried that there will be nothing to cover the floor when I'm refinishing that table, washing the dog, or entering the house wearing muddy boots. And, more importantly, what about raw materials for my proposed life-size papier-mache sculpture of William Randolph Hearst Rebuking the Producers of Citizen Kane? No doubt I shall be forced to turn to the world of glossy magazines to protect my rugs and carpets, such as The Fortean Times, Minerva, and Soccer Italia, which are the only periodicals I bother to peruse these days.
November 07, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (2)
"Raindrops keep falling on my head." How surprisingly true those words really are, I reflected, standing groggily before the bathroom sink this morning, amazed by the perspicacity of lyricist B J Thomas, until I realized that there was actually a leak in the ceiling above me, from which rusty-colored water bubbles were dribbling forth like beads of sweat upon the brow of a cheapskate who suddenly and very grudgingly recognizes that he must call an expensive plumber.
Of course, I rationalized, I could always adapt this structural defect into one of those soothing, indoor Japanese waterfalls. After all, I've always wanted such a piece of aquatic art, and, who knows, perhaps the charges for the leak might even appear on my upstairs neighbor's utility bill, not mine. And to think that fashionable Manhattan designers earn top dollar for experiencing these kinds of interior decorating whims and fancies.
November 02, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (3)
October 27, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (2)
"Eat where the locals eat," travelers are usually advised when seeking restaurant suggestions in foreign cities. But in my experience the locals generally tend to eat at home, and so, unless you invade their dining rooms without invitation, accidentally dropping your passport in the zuppe bowl and knocking over Papa's grappa with your camera bag, it's highly unlikely that you will experience any such native gastronomic pleasures.
"Never order from the Tourist Menu," you are also lectured. "Avoid eateries that line the main drags and famous squares. And don't sit down at an establishment with mug-shots of pizza and spaghetti Bolognese taped to its facade." But of course, being on vacation, the main drags and famous squares are exactly where you want to be. You can call me the Philistine of Food, but I would much prefer to chew on leathery, shriveled scallops beside the Grand Canal than salivate over exquisitely-cooked squid in some "quaint" poky backstreet ristorante. Let's face it, you can waste half your holiday lost in unlit alleyways searching for that "authentic" taverna that the guidebook recommended.
One saltimbocca in Rome is as good as another to me, ditto goulash in Budapest, herring in Amsterdam, London's steak 'n' kidney pies, and whatever that oily Athenian fish is called. I am more than happy to pay six-Euros just to sit down at Caffe Florian to enjoy an equally extortionately-priced cheese panini in Saint Mark's Square. Otherwise I just bring a packed lunch: some salad, boiled egg, bit of chocolate, and arrange a picnic in the park. That’s the best kind of local eating.
October 23, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (3)
Perhaps the most important task you can perform in your own life is amassing a vocabulary that best describes your own life to yourself. How can you understand what is happening to you and what you thnik about it if you lack the words to explain the situation properly? My vocabualary is stuffed with confabulatory nouns, verbicides like "perhaps," and shadowy adjectives of-no-fixed-abode. Yours, no doubt, contains many candied euphemoes and lisping multi-syllables. And possibly we both enjoy adopting pretentious Gallicisms, such as Non-Lieux, or "Non-Places."
Non-Places are apparently those super-functional, transitional environments that delude us into believing that we are active participants in some dynamic global network connected by the airport lounge, the twenty-four-hour motorway service station, the midnight ATM, the lobby of any international commercial franchise. Non-Places are fabricated from a sort of modern architectural muzak: slabs of polished glass and marble forming endless sky-ways and mezzanines that are filled with digital information and plasma screen advertising, providing instant access, instant consumption and instant gratification in an impersonal world of PIN numbers, passwords and barcodes. They are everywhere and nowhere; the terminus of human identity in an abstract space and time.
Personally, I have a lot of time for the theory of Non-Places since I spend an inordinate amount of my life within their borders, and consequently the term has been added to the "regular usage" section of my self-defining lexicon. Mind you, if I were mugged at an ATM I don't think I'd consider it a Non-Place anymore. The little cash-dispensing cubicle would then become the scene-of-the-crime: a post-theoretical interzone of violence and fear where knife blades flash and threats are growled in a self-fulfilling, fluorescent urban prophecy. However, most of the time I just withdraw a hundred bucks and move on to the shopping mall. This, of course, is how the Non-Place becomes a Non-Savings Account, and I don't need a French intellectual to explain that to me.
October 20, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (4)
And they needn't be red, either.
October 15, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (2)
As collector, connoisseur, and slightly puzzled owner of one of those microfiber LP cleaning brushes complete with tiny bottle of unidentifiable fluid, I have always been extremely proud of my rare vinyl copy of 'The Essential Chad Bragadin.' Not only are there a scant two copies of Chad's recording in existence, but you don't have to balance coins on the head of your hi-fi stylus when you play it either. Furthermore, my "advanced white-label" copy was presented to me by the Sultan of Woorp'd-al-Scratzz during that long, hot summer of 1987 when I was busily employed booking circus acts at the local oasis. Indeed, much of the rarity of The Essential Chad Bragadin is due to the fact that the Sultan had the unfortunate singer beheaded in the autumn of that year, subsequently decreeing that the LP be renamed 'The Inessential Chad Bragadin (Peace Be Upon His Singing)' into perpetuity. So the upshot of Chad's execution and the Sultan's whim is that all later pressings are known by the longer, negative name and only mine and the harem's copies still retain the original positive, shorter title.
You may be wondering what all this musical history has to do with my recent trip to Venice. Well, just examine the track-listing of Chad's album:
Side One: Battle of Lepanto; I Ain't No Infidel; Doge's Dirge; Remember Malta; Out Of My Skin.
Side Two: The Bragadin Blues; Hey Turk; Queen of the Adriatic; (I Won't Be) Your Galley Slave; Lepanto Reprise
I suppose the Sultan had always admired Chad's voice - "shades of early Ted Muezzin" - but was never entirely convinced by his choice of material, influenced as it was by sixteenth-century Venetian conflicts with the Ottoman empire, an artistic peccadillo that surely accounts for Chad's lack of commercial success in mainstream markets also.October 13, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Venice: the preternatural city. Having just returned from there I find myself unable to understand why I've never visited before, since Venice contains within its watery contours all the elements of life I like most: scandalous history, narrow streets, ornate cafes and elegant domes, campari and aperol, umpteen bridges and canals, laconic water craft, expensive chocolate, mysterious artworks and mosaics, salted cod, gray mist and yellow sunlight, unusual doorknobs, and empty palaces ad infinitum.
I will write a longer post next week, when my mind returns to normal mode. Until then, one wonders what desperately moronic advertising strategy convinced Geox brand shoes that erecting huge, disfiguring billboards around the Bridge of Sighs will sell their wretched, and presumably extremely uncomfortable products.
October 09, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (4)
It was, I believe, Marinetti and the Italian Futurists who declared that the canal of Venice should be filled-in with rubble from the destruction of its waterside palaces. Nowadays, of course, we all agree that these gondola choked highways should be filled-in with all the zillions of unsold copies of Andrea Bocelli and Sarah Brightman CDs that PBS fund-raisers can't get rid of.
Nevertheless, I myself will be cruising the narrow streets of Venice until the middle of next week, where I will be reluctantly filling-in the coffers of local boatmen and restaurants with my hard-earned Euros. Although, as regular readers might suspect, I prefer to say I shall be visiting the Veneto rather than vacationing in Venice since it sounds far less touristy. I depart tomorrow and doubt very much that any screeds of interest will appear in this space before next Thursday.
September 29, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (1)
Three valuable members of staff are missing from work today for Yom Kippur. Frankly I blame the Jews ....
September 28, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (1)
I am a son of Adam
You have evolved from the apes
He is some sort of god-awful goblin changeling thing.
I survive because I am the fittest
You survive because you pay me to look after you
He is as dead as a Dodo
September 24, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)
I have recently returned from circumnavigating the salad bar at my local Shaw's Supermarket. Magellan may have sailed further into uncharted realms, but I doubt that he experienced as much uncertainty and ill-omen as I did amid the lettuce and tomatoes. Darwin's voyage of discovery may have penetrated more exotic ecosystems, but his microscope cannot have encountered any specimens more fearsome, alien and repulsive than those that wriggled between the teeth of my tongs.
Aside from the usual, unappetizing array of salad bar items such as scrimshaw cauliflower and dead-man's cucumber, there were macaroni-shaped pasta worms drowning in some sort of mayonnaise scum; rubberized eggs, too; broccoli rendered as verdigris carbuncles; mushrooms that might have been grown in the dimmest recesses of a slave ship's hold; and various other undesirable, indescribable types of organic matter that had been lately dredged from their watery grave. These were the monsters of the deep; vegetable krakens, giant squids and sliced albatrosses that lurked beneath a bed of brined lettuce and scurvy onion. Talk about a "nightmare life-in-death" that "thicks men's blood with cold," I think tomorrow I'll hike overland to Dante Ristorante instead. I hear tell that they do a good Italian cold-cut special, even if waiting in the long lunchtime line is purgatory.
September 16, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (1)
1. Scene: The Draper household. Morning
Betty: What's the matter, Don?
Don: Nothing. I'm fine. I guess it's just that I think that the new black maid has smoked all of little Sally's cigarettes.
Betty: It wasn't her Don. It was me. I'm pregnant and I really need the high tar to calm me down.
Don: Okay .... but hey, have you seen my new nylon, sta-prest contraceptives anywhere?
Betty: (bursts into tears): Don, Don, are you having an affair?
Don: No, of course not. But I will be working very late at the office tonight. It's this new TV show account we're working on. We've run out of ideas.
2. Scene: The offices of Boring Blooper advertising. Later that day.
Pete: Hey, Peggy. What do you think of my lame Steve Buscemi impersonation?
Peggy: It's great Pete. I'd definitely sleep with it.
Joan: Poor suburban Peggy. Frankly, it'd take at least a reasonably decent Richard Gere impersonation to get me out of this girdle. I mean this is a major prime time drama, not a daytime soap, although I'll admit that you can only tell the difference because of the amount of money they've spent on the sets and wardrobe.
Peggy: Thanks for the advice Joan. I'll bear it mind next time I'm desperately trying to develop another ludicrous plot line for my character.
3. Scene: the boardroom at Boring Blooper. Lunchtime
Harry: Well, I don't know about everybody else, but my character is so sick of only having scenes in this damn boardroom.
Paul: Mine too. Let's all go out and have martinis for lunch.
Ken: Good idea. Nothing much is happening so the audience certainly won't miss us.
Director: Actually guys, if you can just hang around for another series or so. We need all the static electricity from your clothes to keep the studio lights working
(Don Draper enters)
Don: I don't care if I missed anything because I know it was all just comic relief dialogue and goofing off anyway. So. Anyone got any ideas about this TV show thing.
Ken: What about a Martin Scorsese directs an episode of "The Guiding Light" kinda thing.
Don: Yeah, let's go with that. I really can't be bothered to think of anything else.
Paul: Great. That's another episode in the can. So those martinis - who's buying?
Sal: Mine's a cosmopolitan.
The End
September 14, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (4)
The current squabble surrounding Obama's speech to school children is simply an example of - unfortunately ironic - infantile political grandstanding on both sides of the political perambulator. Nobody ever thinks to ask the kids themselves what they want to do. All those little Cassandras and Jeremiahs would definitely supply a far more cogent and sensible response than all the hysterical politicians and pundits combined. Yes, let the disenfranchised classroom horde decide whether or not they desire to be harangued by Barack "Simon Says" Obama for hours on end. Frankly, having read the speech online, if I were still a runny-nosed, ink-splattered student I know I'd much rather hear the Hunchback of Notre Dame read The Swiss Family Robinson backwards in Hindustani than listen to my President's sanctimonious and predictable waffle. But then I'd also like to shower Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty with rotten eggs during recess for good measure. Power to the people, however small they may be.
September 08, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (5)
The great cathedral of Saint Extortionata de Aisore in the city of Schitz was built during the pontificate of Inbred VII in the twelfteenth century. Famed for its stained-glass windows depicting Saint Extortionata readmitting the money-lenders back into the temple, the cathedral can also boast possession of a holy shekel believed to have been left by our Lord as a tip at the Last Supper. This priceless relic from the messiah's own purse is displayed in a majestic collection box fashioned from human teeth and is viewable for a fixed fee.
Visitors can also admire the many classical paintings adorning the cathedral's unique buttock-shaped altar. These include Scribbelino's Jeremiah Eating the Last Fig in the Box, Bubonik the Younger's Figures Consumed by the Fires of Hell, and an inflatable crucifix attributed to Andy Warhol.
Musically, Saint Extortionata's has been blessed with many fine organists over the years: Elton Johannes (1582-1603); Richard the Little (1721-1725); and Amon Duul (third album). Additionally, there are four sets of choristers in residence: The Schitz Boys Choir; The Schitz Small Boys Choir; The Schitz Very Small Boys Choir; and the Schitz Ultrasound Choir. All of these can be heard singing Te-Diums during the cathedral's annual Kreschendo Jamboreum de Musique on Unmentionable Day.
September 03, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (5)
It is an oft-repeated fact that roughly seventy-percent of the Earth's surface is water, but did you also know that a further twelve percent of our world is covered with golf courses? That's even more acreage than colossal land masses such as airport shopping and unsold copies of the Boston Globe take up.
Golf, usually pronounced "goaf," is a form of self-flagellating penance performed by misogynist weaklings armed with over-sized dental tools. Some woman also undergo golf but they are deemed to be honorary men for the day. The most extreme example of golfing guilt and self-loathing occurred in 1969 when Neil Armstrong had himself fired as far away from human contact as possible so that he could endure pitch-n-putt on a barren rock floating in space.
The aforementioned golf courses, those grassy arenas where golfers submit to their tedious rounds, are generally referred to as "greens." But this is a misleading term because these so-called greens also contain brown sand, blue ponds, and a truly repulsive spectrum of synthetic trouser and sweater color-combinations.
The purpose of the golfing punishment remains unknown, mostly because it is so boring that nobody has bothered to investigate its origins.
September 01, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)