Archive for the ‘Best Of HokeBlarg’ Category

What To Expect If You Follow Me On Twitter.

Friday, November 20th, 2009

homer_the_new_fail_whaleI’ve read a few articles like this, usually written by handsome internet-famous people (“weblebrities” is what they prefer to be called, I believe) and thought that I’d contribute. I’m no internet rock star or anything. This blog’s only been around for seven months (I had a blog before that which was highly acclaimed, but we don’t talk about Fight Club) and I’ve only been using Twitter for 249 days (neat website for keeping track of that), but I’ve developed a decent following that I appreciate the dickens out of.

This blog has had over 22,000 visitors in the last five months, despite the fact that I talk about beaver testicles. I can only imagine how awesomely successful this blog would be if I did anything worthwhile, like finish my book or bring short-pants back into style for guys or invent a way to put on a pair of pants both legs at the same time (I suspect this would involve rocketry to some degree).

I’ve also got over a thousand followers on Twitter (1,218 to be exact), which isn’t a whole lot compared to people like @feliciaday or @wilw or @ActuallyNPH or even @neilochka, but I still think it is kind of inexplicably awesome.  As long as I’m beating out people I know in real life, I think I’m doing pretty good. I at least feel like a weblebrity.

Anyway, so I’m writing this, not to totally show off my wicked stats, but so people know what to expect when they follow me on Twitter (hence the title). If you plan to follow me on Twitter, keep these points in mind. There are twelve thirteen of them, just FYI.

  1. I’m not here to tell you how to use Twitter; I’m just here to threaten you when you use it wrong. If you’ve got a robot linked up to your Twitter account that types horoscopes and inspirational quotes all day, that’s a deal breaker. Also, where did you get a robot!?
  2. If your Twitter profile picture is something other than your face, then I’m probably not going to follow you back. If I can be brave enough to show my face on Twitter and all over my blog, then so can you, Elephant Man.
  3. If your avatar picture is of your face, but it’s you when you were a cute little kid… you’re technically obeying the letter, but not the SPIRIT, of the law.
  4. If your avatar picture is of your nude body, that’s a technical foul and I won’t follow you.
  5. Unless you’re hot.
  6. I tweet most days, nearly every day, and sometimes I tweet 100 times in a single day. If I go a day without tweeting, send help. I’m probably trapped under old newspapers in my basement like Principal Skinner in that one episode of the Simpsons (the one where he gets trapped under old newspapers in his basement).*
  7. If you mention me (@chrishokeblog) I’m going to respond to you. Seriously, I’m not popular enough to blow anybody off. There’s nothing you can say that will offend me, either. Interacting with people on Twitter is something that I enjoy and encourage.
  8. If, for some reason, you mention me and I don’t reply to you, it’s probably because I hate you for something you said.
  9. I’m never going to lie to my followers about what I’m doing in real life, just to seem cool. That trip to French Polynesia last weekend? It totally happened. I know, I couldn’t believe it either. Neil Patrick Harris just called me up out of the blue and was all, “let’s go para-sailing in Bora Bora this weekend, C-Dog!” We’d hardly even spoken before that call.  And since. (Call me, @ActuallyNPH. I swear it won’t get all weird this time, dude.)
  10. I’m a gentleman. No, really. But occasionally I will say the “s” word or the “f” word. I encourage you to think of these words as a special treat, like bits of Gorgonzola cheese in the salad of life, and remember my philosophy on swearing**.
  11. Despite all my rules, I’m probably going to follow you anyway. But that doesn’t mean their meaningless; it means they were made with good intentions but lack substance.
  12. I’m not going to change just so you like me. That’s not who I am. I’m a loner at heart, Dotty. A rebel. I’m the original bad-boy and I’ve got something to prove. That’s why I wear this leather jacket. You can’t tame me. And there ain’t no jail that can hold Chris. You just try to keep out of the way and no will get hurt.
  13. Unless it’s a small change that will make you like me, then, yeah sure, why not? What am I, made of stone? (I’m actually made of pure awesome-sauce, that’s why I’m so popular.)

Well, I think that just about covers it. And remember that it’s not you, it’s me. Unless it’s you. Then, it’s totally you. Oh man, it’s so you it hurts.

Sincerely, @hokeblurbs

* – If you can tell me the connection between the episode of the Simpsons “Bart The Murderer”, you know, the one with Skinner and the newspapers, and one of the famous Twitter users I mentioned in this blog post, then you’ll win my very last Google Wave Invite. I’m serious. I just found one more. Put your answer in the comments section. Contest OVER!

** – My philosophy on swearing is this: there is nothing ungentlemanly or rude about swearing when it is done under the right circumstances. Furthermore, there are Three Distinct Stages of Swearing that a young person passes through:

  1. You swear. All the time with no regard to the sensitivities of those around you.
  2. You realize that it is ungentlemanly to swear, and you watch your tongue all the time.
  3. You achieve true communicative enlightenment and realize that it is not only acceptable to swear, but, under the right circumstances, it can be preferable, more poignant, and highly entertaining. So you swear.

You may find yourself in one of the stages above, and in my effort to appeal to all of my readers/followers, I hereby make amends to you, at whatever stage you’re in:

To those of you who are in Stage 1, watch your filthy tongues, you rogues. And to those of you who may still be in Stage 2: I deeply and sincerely apologize for offending your delicate sensibilities, and urge you, with the utmost respect, to get the fuck into Stage 3 already.

Adventures In Comment Spam With My Robot Pal.

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

spambot2I don’t know exactly what’s going on with my spam lately, but these guys are getting pretty good. I’ve got the Akismet Spam-Destroyer 9000 hooked up to the ol’ blog here, but I still routinely sift through the spam box because, well, I’m desperate for feedback and occasionally a comment from a legitimate person will wind up in there and then they’ll think that I ignored them or their comment was stupid (trust me, no comment is too stupid for me to approve) and then I’ve lost a reader for life and why? Because Spam-Destroyer can’t tell the difference between a real person trying to chime in with their opinion and a robot trying to sell me black-market penis pills.

But lately… I might have to cut my spambot a little slack because it’s getting a little difficult for me to tell them apart, even with my trained and discerning all-organic spam-filtering brain-o-scope. Here’s an example:

Hi there! My name’s Jim and I just wanted to tell you how interesting I find your writing style.

Well, so far so good. How ya doin’, Jim?

This post was very interesting and funny! I think the way you related this story was insightful and clever. It really touched my heart. I agree with you whole-heartedly and applaud this fantastic post. I’ll be coming back to your blog for sure and I’ll tell all my friends about it!

Careful there, Jim-bo. Flattery will get you everywhere.

Indeed, I think your writing may have changed the very way I view life. You make me want to be a better person and I would love to be counted among your friends. Also, I was wondering if you might be interested in VIAGRA, CIALIS, FREE SEX PORN VIDEOS, ILLEGAL CABLE HOOK-UPS, UNDERAGE HAWAIIAN…

Holy crap. What the hell, Jim? We nearly shared a moment there and then you had to go and sink our friend-ship with a torpedo of obscene recommendations (You like that metaphor? You can keep it. Take it to the bank, no charge). You were Ishmael and I was the white whale and we were having a lovely tea party and then you harpooned me right through the eye. Thanks a bunch, bud.

Here’s another.

Hey there, I just wanted you to know that I disagree with this post.

Well, you know, that’s cool. Everyone is entitled to their opinion. Sure, this post was about how I’m dead-set against stomping puppies to death, but it takes all kinds, right?

I’m afraid that your information is wrong and your points are innately flawed. If there’s one thing that I hate, it’s an uninformed opinion. And if there are two things I hate, the second one is you.

Hey, now, this is getting a little hurtful. I was merely pointing out in the post that…

What’s more, my butler of fifteen years who read this to me as I lay in bed with a horrible whooping cough, found your post to be funny and insightful. As a result of our ensuing disagreement, I’ve taken out a contract on his life. I hear footsteps coming down the hall even as I write this, no doubt the killers that I’ve hired to bring any residual enjoyment my butler may be experiencing as a result of your blog post to a swift and bitter end. I only hope that his death will keep you from posting such outrageous drivel in the future, though I cannot expect much from a dullard such as yourself. Just in case, after I have finished writing this comment, I will be cancelling my internet service and donating my laptop to a worthy charity.

Wow. I’m, uh, a little taken aback. I’ve never written anything so badly that it caused a life to be taken. I mean, like many bloggers, I’ve had my suspicions, like that one time I wrote about searing gas pains, but never have I been confronted with such proof…

And yet, there is hope for mankind. As I ebb ever closer to death, as this whooping cough wracks my fragile body with explosions of pain, I find myself in a forgiving mood. (Unfortunate for my former butler that it comes several moments too late.) And why not? If Mahatma Ghandi could forgive the English occupiers of India, if Mandela could forgives those who wrongfully imprisoned him, and if Rachel could forgive Ross on “Friends”, then surely I could forgive you for your horrid post. And so I offer to you, friend, an olive branch. Although my time in this world draws to a close, I think we can come to a small agreement: We can agree to disagree on the subject matter of this blog post.

* sniffle* Sure, why not? I’m sorry for what I wrote and I can see that I was a fool! I am unworthy of your forgiveness, and yet I bask in the glory of your words! Thank you! Thank you!

PS: Check out these Hot Russian Escorts!

DAMN IT ALL!! SPAM-BOT, KILL!!

This Desert Night: Part 2 of 2

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Reno_dawn

If you missed Part 1, please go here.

“We’re going to be bagging and rubber-banding papers on-the-go here. When I call out for a paper, I’ll either say ‘bag’ or ‘tube’ (referring to the special tube next to the mailbox that the banded papers go into) and you’ll hand me whatever I need.” Ron explained.

“Also, don’t worry about the bunnies,” he added cryptically.

We drove through the night on a numbered highway out to the furthest neighborhood from my in-law’s house. We would be working our way inward and, it just so happened, from the poorest neighborhood up to the nicer houses. Our first neighborhood was a trailer park, err, I mean a mobile community. A pink flamingo lawn ornament breeding ground, perhaps. Wind-chime central.

We parked for a moment under a streetlamp so I could bag up the last of a stack of papers and then we took off. Almost immediately I saw the bunnies.

They were everywhere. We drove like mad through the narrow streets, tossing out papers onto porches and in driveways, and all the time the bunnies raced around like mad. Caught in our headlights, they would quickly bolt left, then right, then, torn between directions, they’d leap straight up into the air and land on their heads. Then they’d dazedly hobble over to the side of the road while we raced by. They would have just enough time to collect themselves before we made a run back down their street to hit all the houses on the other side of the road with papers. It is a credit to Ron’s driving ability that I never noticed him swerve or brake very hard and yet I also never felt a cottony little thump that would signal the passing of a furry soul beneath our tires.

“Kamikaze rabbits.” Ron remarked.

“I regret that I have but one fuzzy life to give for my people… bunnykind.” I added. It was getting late.

With the windows rolled down and the air already a crisp 43-degrees without the wind chill, we practiced our throwing arms and razzed each other when a paper landed in the bushes or glanced off of a car. Newspapers in bags make a peculiar sound when you throw them. There’s the WHIP as it’s thrown, then the SHHHH as it sails though the air and then the CLAP when it lands. The papers that landed in the bushes never made that CLAP at the end, so we could tell, even in the dark, if our aim was true.

“Alright, Jeremy. Here’s your chance to redeem yourself after that last one in the bushes. You need to clear the gate here, and get it as close to the geranium pot as you can.” Ron said.

WHIP-SHHH-CLAP.

“Nicely done. Alright, Chris. There’s a truck parked in front of this driveway. I need you to make it over the truck AND the gate.”

WHIP-SMACK-CLATTER.

“Balls,” I muttered as I got out of the car. I spent the next few minutes digging around in the back of this guy’s truck trying to find the paper I’d thrown beautifully, only I didn’t see the upper arm of the lumber rack on the truck. I had only just started imagining what might happen if he decided to walk out his front door at that moment when the porch light went on.

“Effing stupid thing… where are you?” My hand grazed against the paper and I threw it over my shoulder while jumping out of the truck’s bed. I scrambled to make it back into the car as I heard the front door open and we sped off, laughing.

We sped through neighborhoods for two and a half hours before making it to the nicer ranches and larger houses that marked the end of our route. Ron gave me a tour as we went along. Here he’d seen a coyote lazily sitting on it’s haunches in the middle of the road. There he’d been accosted by a bored police officer who wanted to lecture him about his driving technique, which, in the cop’s defense, was fast and furious. Though I had some difficulty imagining anyone lecturing my father-in-law.

As we started on the last leg of the route Ron told me that he does this seven-days-a-week and isn’t paid much, though that doesn’t seem to bother him much. The horizon began to lighten from India ink black to a hazy orange within a few minutes and I popped open a can of orange soda I’d been saving for the end, a reward of sorts. We cruised through the roads between a few ranches and were able to make out the shapes of horses in bespoke warming jackets standing beneath towering silhouettes you could just almost barely make out as trees. No longer was the world confined to the tunnel of the car’s headlights, it now had room to breathe.

The atmosphere reminded me of a trip my drummer and I took to Arizona a few years ago for a string of gigs at a casino near Tempe. We left in the evening from our home in the California wine country and drove down through Los Angeles and out East into the desert. As dawn approached and the pain of being awake became nearly unbearable, we cruised our rental car into the painted desert, that breathtaking landscape of hills and buttes, with it’s multitude of vibrant colors; lavender, red, orange, pink, and every shade between them.

Jeremy passed out in the back of the car and we slowed our pace just a little. A few more papers were thrown by me that hit the mark perfectly, one landed on it’s end right on a doormat and leaned against the door. That’s nothing, Ron told me. Once he threw one over a gate that ended up landing on it’s end like mine, but on top of the gate, on a strip of metal no more than three inches wide. It was a one-in-a-million shot, balanced there, just so, he said. I imagine that he gave it just a moment’s consideration before speeding off to terrify a few more bunnies.

This Desert Night: Part 1 of 2

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

Reno

As we rocketed along through the vast winding outskirts of Reno, Nevada, kicking up dust with the tires of my wife’s mother’s Chevy Malibu, under the inky blackness of the new moon, I let out a manly whoop that probably startled a few coyotes and scorpions, but definitely startled the bunnies.

But I’m getting ahead of myself.

Ron, my father-in-law, picked up a paper-route a few months ago to supplement his retirement. A paper route, I thought to myself when he’d told me, well that sounds relaxing. Somehow I couldn’t imagine my father-in-law who had been a fire department dispatcher for decades having a paper-route, but what with our economy being held together with scotch tape and wishes right now, a job is a job.

And little did I know the details.

The wife and I were up visiting Reno for his birthday and the night we arrived Ron extended to me an invitation to join him on his late-night route.

“It goes pretty late into the night,” he warned.

“‘Going late at night’ is my middle name,” I scoffed. Bladder issues aside, my musical endeavors routinely have me coming home in the early morning, as you may well know, so I wasn’t too worried. This would be a nice opportunity for the two of us to catch up.

We took off from the house at half-past midnight and brought along my wife’s aunt’s stepson, Jeremy, a good-humored sixteen-year-old boy who loves baseball and wanted to show off his pitching arm. On the way, a few things were explained to me. Mostly, I think, these things were for Jeremy’s benefit, but I listened too.

“When we get to the newspaper, stick near the car.” Ron explained.

“Alrighty,” we said.

“Jeremy, you’re going to rubber-band the papers and, Chris, you’re going to be the bagger.”

“Neat.”

“We’ll probably meet a few of the regular guys tonight. They’re sort of gruff, and many of them work regular jobs in addition to working a route, so don’t feel put-out if they’re not very friendly to you.”

“Duly noted,” I said.

We rolled into the newspaper’s back lot and parked in a line of cars that were waiting to load up with papers, ready for distribution. Trucks drove back and forth across the lot, ferrying metric tons of newsprint here and there. There was a loading dock at the far end of the lot where we’d be loading when our number came up.

It was at this point that the night began to deviate from what I’d imagined. Standing around the yard were not the fresh-faced boys that I had imagined, nor the stoner college students driving beat-to-shit Honda hatchbacks that I had expected. The ‘throwers’, as they called themselves, were some hardcore mothers.

I’ve been thinking about it for a few days now and I must say that the best way I can describe the motly lot I saw before me, leaning against their cars and drinking coffee or smoking cigarettes, is that they were a bunch of bearded, glaring, leathery, ornery, former sea captains. There’s really no other way to put it. They looked a little out-of-sorts, like they had been forced into abandoning their pirate/barbarian garb and had then been coerced, no doubt by their wives, into donning a wide array of colorful Cosby sweaters and Dockers, but they were clearly a crew not to be trifled with, a crew that watched each other’s backs, a crew that you’d want on your side in a bar fight.

Ron pulled the key out of the car’s ignition and a particularly crusty gentleman waved to him the group of sailors, not smiling exactly, but there was markedly less animosity in his eyes while he waved. Gruff, indeed.

“That’s Jim.” Ron said, nodding in Jim’s direction. “Let’s get out and say hello…”

“Is that completely necessary?” I suggested. “I mean, I thought you told us to stay in the car, right?”

“Get out.” Ron commanded.

Reluctantly, I got out.

Now, I’m no mincing dandy (well, maybe a little) but I have a remarkably acute self-preservation instinct. It’s like the spidey-sense of wussing out. I walk the edge, surely, and have been known to converse with criminals, but usually they’re smaller than I am. I view our nations laws as more of a set of suggestions and put myself in what others may view as “a dangerous situation” but more often than not it’s a carefully calculated scenario. The look and feel of the edge with none of the maybe-I’ll-be-dying-in-a-knife-fight-tonight substance. Here though, I wasn’t so sure.

Surely, I though to myself, as Ron’s son-in-law I was safe walking among these lions. Jeremy, on the other hand, was on his own.

Jim started yelling at Ron as soon as he was in earshot. He was an older man, in his late sixties, with a beard composed of straight, fine hair that matched the hair peeking out from beneath his weathered baseball cap. He drove a late-model sedan littered with whole newspapers and bits of newspapers and rubber bands and yellow plastic fettuccini that held together the bundles of newspaper. We stood a little bit away from the other sea-captains and their mud-covered pickup trucks and wive’s cars.

“Can you believe this weather we’re having?” Jim asked and then spit. “The weatherman said we’d have nice hot days here. What a load of horse-shit.”

“Yeah, it’s been pretty temperate.” said Ron.

“Yeah. If I’d wanted temperate, I’d have stayed with my son and his can’t-cook-for-shit wife in Portland. I moved here because I like it hot, man.”

“Hmmm. Yeah, that’s something.” Ron said. A few minutes of silence passed uninterrupted.

“This is my daughter’s husband, Chris,” Ron said, gesturing to me.

“Nice to meet you, Chris,” Jim said, jutting his hand out toward me to shake. “You ever been with Ron on his route before?”

“Nope. I thought it might be fun.” I said.

“Yeah, well it’s a lot like fucking work is what it is.” He spat again.

A few more minutes of silence.

“You see the baseball game?” Jim asked suddenly.

“Sure.” Ron replied, shaking his head. “Giants got beat.”

“What a bunch of god-damn retards.” Jim observed.

“Yep.” Ron said.

“Hmmm,” I interjected, wanting to join in. “God-damn retards.”

“Yep,” they both agreed.

This is how, I have found, most men converse. For my female readers this could come as a shock. Only those lady-readers who grew up with a bunch of brothers or who listened in on their father’s weekly poker night are familiar with this kind of masculiny colloquy.

There’s a protocol and it goes, roughly, like this:

  1. Person 1 says something about baseball or crime or the weather, etc., usually peppering the statement or question with liberal swearing or saying something vaguely racist or sexist in the process.
  2. Person 2 agrees, then rephrases the original sentiment, adding some fresh vulgarity.
  3. Person 1 nods and swears again.
  4. The process is repeated.

Whether or not this conversation is happening at a rodeo or a posh winebar, it makes no difference. The subject can be literally anything, from the oakiness of the scotch to the new rubber ball-gag that his wife makes him wear in the bedroom to the latest model of tractor. Sure, the enlightened among us occasionally bring up a point about the plight of the working man or the unjust nature of life, but that’s as far as we deviate.

Also, sometimes step one can be a burp or a flatulence.

When our time came up to load in the papers, I got back in the car. I was instructed, probably smartly, not to help with the loading, so I sat there. As soon as we were done we jetted out of there with a ferocity of which I had not, until that moment, thought my father-in-law capable.

Part 2 will be posted Friday.

I'm (Almost) Speechless In It's Presence.

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

In response to a post I wrote last week, the amazingly talented D at Seafoodpunch has drawn something of such beauty/horror that I am rendered speechless. It is awesome and, dare I say, bad-ass.

Additionally, by some sort of innately transitive property, it has rendered me, at least temporarily, awesome and bad-ass as well. Please click on the link below so that you too can experience…

A Bear With Sharks For Arms

Now I’m going to go kick-start a motorcycle with a glance.

On The Subject Of Beaver Testicles…

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

As we watched the tv-edited version of the movie “Bring It On” (it plays on cable quite a bit, I’ve come to realize), my wife, who has been laid up with a hurt back (she’ll be fine, I sprayed a little Windex on the area) over the last week (and who I have been waiting on hand and foot for the last week, husband-of-the-year award pending) began telling me about a program she watched yesterday through a Vicodin-induced haze, while I was at a gig.

“It was a show about dirty jobs in which…” she started.

“Was it the show ‘Dirty Jobs’?” I inquired.

“Well, no. Maybe? I don’t know. Perhaps. Anyway, on this show, it had these people, farmers I think, and they would squeeze the testicles of these animals and out would pop these white things…”

At this point I’m already making horrified faces at her. She continues on.

“…these white things would pop out, and, even though they had a tool for the purpose, the farmers would bite these white things, which I think were the testicles themselves, and pull them off with their teeth.” She still had a puzzled look on her face, as if this were a distant memory she was trying to grasp, but it’s edges were gossamer threads on the wind of flittering…

Oh, nevermind. I’m not affixing such a lovingly crafted metaphor to a post on testicles. It’s insulting to the English language, and I’m just not going to do it.

“Wait, they would squeeze the testicles of small animals and… did they cut open the, err, ‘pouch’?” I asked.

“I don’t know.”

She had my full attention at this point, and I’d muted the television, leaving Kirsten Dunst to flip around and whatnot in a silent world. I also stopped eating my yogurt, which suddenly looked unappetizing.

“What kind of animals were these? Sheep? I mean, I’ve heard of that, somewhere, I think, farmers biting off sheep’s testicles. I pity their wives…”

“I don’t think they were sheep though, they were like small… bears. Yes, they were bear-like creatures. But small.”

“What-what now? Bears? Small bears? Like Tasmanian devils?” I suddenly had a vision of Bugs Bunny biting the testicles off of that whirling Tasmanian devil from the cartoons. Suddenly those large front teeth looked a little threatening.

“Yes, bear-like. But this was in the Appalachian Mountains, so I doubt it was a Tasmanian devil.”

Hmmm. I wondered about this for a minute, then asked my wife a relevant question, I thought.

“Are you high, like, right now?” She scowled at me. I’m going to take that as a ‘no’.

I was stymied. So, I do what I always do when I’m confounded: I googled it. I actually googled the phrase “biting the testicles off of small bear-like animals”, which is a phrase I never thought I’d ever type, let alone google. Luckily, I did not come up with any videos, instead I found a few rather informative yet unhelpful articles.

Also, I came up with this picture, which I saved, because, well, if I died tomorrow, this is exactly the kind of thing I want someone to find on my computer. I’ve put it in a folder along with a picture of a bunny rabbit with a pancake on it’s head. What? Oh, yes, the picture. Here it is:

beaver_balls

Yes, that’s a beaver* biting off it’s own testicles. I’m thinking of making it my desktop wallpaper.

I love the guy’s hand that’s pointing at the beaver in the picture, like he’s saying “Don’t you bite those off! Don’t you dare… aww, he’s doing it! Ewwwww.” Also, is it my imagination or does that beaver look a little blasé about the whole thing?

Allegedly, according to Aesop’s fables, the beaver was once hunted for it’s testicles**, and, knowing this, would, when cornered by hunters, bite off it’s own ‘huevos’ and throw them at the hunters, thus escaping death.

Ah, the miracles of nature.

This is, of course, a fallacy. Aesop was a drinker and a pervert, I reason, and prone to fabulous tales that would later be recognized as fit for reading to children, despite their dark nature. Or am I thinking of Grimm? Oh, I’m just lashing out.

Although, I must admit, it’s a rather elegant defense mechanism, not unlike a lizard losing it’s tail to avoid being eaten by a hawk. Although tails grow back, ‘nuts’ don’t. It’s a trick that can only be done once. You’ve got to really be in peril, I’d think, and even then it would be a toss-up for most male animals.

Also, how many hunters or attackers would continue with their attack after having a set of furry little balls tossed at them in a forest glade? Imagine chasing down a pack of beavers and dodging a bevy of testicular missiles, some of them inevitably hitting you with a velvet ‘thud’. I’d stop in my tracks, I would. I’d really have to reconsider my choice of prey. I might have to reconsider my whole way of life, really. I’d walk home in a daze, have a cup of tea and consider taking up another line of work. That sort of assault can really break your spirit, you know? Do you know what I mean?

I rather hope you don’t.

* The wife doesn’t think that looks like a beaver at all. “I’m telling you, it looks way more like a dog or a raccoon. Why are we even having this argument?!” In my defense, she started it.

** They have magical powers, the beaver’s testes, according to Aesop. I’ll now refrain from making a crude joke implying my own magical anatomy. Again, husband-of-the-year award pending.

Hey! I’m going to be featured at The Guy’s Perspective later this month! Neat! Many thanks to the Sai Ghose for inclusion in the Relationship Humor Carnival. I’ll be posting a link to it later in the month, so stay tuned.

On Wal-Mart, Women, and Wanting.

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

This is one of my old Gentleman Savant blog posts. I actually had a request to repost this one, so here it is.

“Holy Jesus!” I exclaimed in the Wal-Mart. “This lamp is only five dollars! Why, for that price, I could afford to light up every corner of every room in the house… twice, probably…”

“No, they can’t be that cheap!” my wife asked, and then, upon seeing the lamp’s price tag, “That can’t be right. It doesn’t SEEM right, does it? Maybe it’s a mistake.”

“It’s got to be right. They’re all marked like that. I saw the same damn lamp at Gottschalks for, I think, twenty-five bucks, and here it is for practically nothing.”

“Well, it doesn’t come with a bulb, see? Right there on the box, it says ‘Does not include bulb’. That’s where they get you.” she points out, “That’s where they get you, and then they ‘f’ you. They bend you over and they ‘eff’ you right in the ‘a’.” She’s channeling a self-censoring version of Joe Pesci. Not that she’s got any sort of aversion to swearing in public, I think she just likes to change it up to keep it interesting.

I don’t like to go to the local Wal-Mart because I really believe them to be an evil organization of kitten-eating lizard-people. Sometimes, however, I find myself there, buying something for someone. Like today, for instance. Buying a hot-pink vacuum cleaner. For the wife. And whenever I do find myself there, I am always awestruck by the amazing prices. There is simply nothing more beautiful to me than an incredible deal. Nothing.

“My god, there’s, like, 500 Otter-Pops here for two-dollars and thirty-seven cents! If I ate one Otter-Pop per day, it would take me… one year, four months, and a fortnight to eat all of them! And, look, they’ve got the same characters on them that they did when I was a little bastard: Alexander the Grape, Poncho Punch… Hmmm… They don’t quite seem so clever now that I’m grown up. ‘Sir Isaac Lime’? How is the word ‘Lime’ at all like ‘Newton’? I mean, sure, I get the ‘Little Orphan Orange’ being, obviously, ‘Little Orphan Annie’, but it’s not exactly clever, right…?”

It’s about this time that I realize my wife has left long ago and I’m talking to an elderly Mexican woman who looks confused, but is smiling politely.

“Oh… err.. sorry.” And then I try to explain my jubilation to alleviate the awkwardness. “Otter-Pops for… umm… dos dólares and… uh… treinta siete… err… centavos.”

Well, now. Where did that come from? I’ve picked up a bit more Spanish over the years than I’d thought. I was giving myself a mental pat-on-the-back when she replied to my statement.

“Yes, I know.” she says in perfect English, rolling her eyes. “I can ALSO see the label.”

Oh. My bad, I think, as I drop two boxes (that’s a solid 1,000 packets of sugar-water, mate) into my cart and get the hell out of there as quickly as possible.

Earlier, at home, I’d had a talk with my wife where I explained the game plan. “We’re going to get in there,” I said, “get the damned pink vacuum cleaner, and then get the hell out before you find something else you can’t live without.”

“Well, what if I want to look around?” she said to me. “I might see something that catches my eye…”

“We can’t afford to just go browsing around, spending money right and left. This is a time to be fiscally prudent. Who knows how bad the economy will get?” I’m making this up as I go along, really. I’m honestly just a cheap bastard, unless it’s a really, really good deal. Then I’m willing to spend ridiculous amounts of money.

“Whatever.” my wife replies flippantly.

Women, I thought to myself on the drive to the Wal-Mart, they’ve just got no willpower when it comes to shopping. I think I may have even shook my head and chuckled at the thought.

The vague memory and realization of it’s evident irony evaporates instantly, though, as I round a corner and nearly run right into an enormous display, nay, a veritable mountain before me, of compact fluorescent lightbulbs for only ninety-three cents each.

“Dear sweet merciful heavens…” I say in hushed reverence.

Upon examining a package sitting near the base of the peak, I learn that the compact fluorescent bulb can last from between 8-10 years and, by just replacing your existing lightbulbs with these CFL bulbs, you can save up to fifty cents per month on your electric bill, PER BULB. The savings are really incredible.

“Are those tears?” my wife asks me, and I turn away slightly, not realizing she’d sneaked up right next to me.

“So-what-if-they-are?” I snap, “It’s just… *sniff*… such a good DEAL…” I say, dabbing my eyes with my shirtsleeve while I read on about wattage and candlepower. It’s got a graph and everything.

My wife sighs and puts her hand on my shoulder. “We’re going to need a second cart, aren’t we?” she asks.

“At the very least, baby-doll.” I say, holding my head up high to stave off more tears. “At the very least.”

On a related note, I still haven’t used up those bulbs I bought that day. Score one more for self, baby.

Haunted By The Zombie Owl

Saturday, April 11th, 2009

When I was first learning how to drive, I had an irrational fear of pigs. At a young age my Grandfather had impressed upon me the fact that, were I to hit a pig with my car while out for a leisurely drive, I would suffer a horrible fate.

“Pigs,” he told me, “are unlike other animals you may hit with your car. A deer, having long legs and most of it’s body mass a few feet off the ground, will pop up over your hood, or, since it’s not very heavy, it’ll bounce off of your bumper without causing too much damage. A ‘possum or raccoon will go beneath your vehicle and you’ll feel a small bump, nothing more. In both of these cases, you’re pretty safe.”

At this point he would pause, and then, staring right into my eyes so I knew he meant business he’d say: “But not… a pig.”

“A pig,” he’d continue, “will not go over your hood or under your wheels. If you hit a pig, you’ll hit it square on. Now, your average pig can weigh anywhere from 200 to 1,000 pounds, and when you combine that with the velocity of your car?” At this point he’d clap his hands together, loud. “Wham! It’s like hitting a brick wall. You’re gone. You’re dead.”

Of course, my grandfather grew up in a rural area of West Virginia, so this makes sense to him. Pigs wandered into the road there and it was a real concern at night that you might go over a hill on your way back from the sock-hop or the hamburger stand and there would be a sow and whammo! Of course, we were all living in Northern California now. I haven’t even seen a pig in years. I rarely even eat bacon. But that did not stop my Grandfather from impressing upon me the grave fate that would befall me if I were to encounter a pig on the road. I would die, is what I’d do.

So when I started driving, I’d watch. Sure, I thought to myself, I’m just being careful. There could be a dog in the road, or worse, a woman with a stroller might step off the curb. There’s no pigs out here, I’d remind myself. But in the back of my mind lurked that pig. I’d see a shadow in the road up ahead and I’d think, instinctually, for a split second, “Pig?!” but no. It would always turn out to be a ‘possum or a fluffy white cat who would look very shocked up until the moment I lost sight of them under my bumper. Just a little “bump” as my tires rolled over it’s poor little skull. No “Wham!” Not even a “Smack!” Sigh. I never hit anything exciting.*

That was, of course, until I hit the zombie owl.

No, that’s not exactly right. Technically, the owl was not a zombie until after I’d hit it and it came back to life, but I’m getting ahead of myself.

“It was on a night just like tonight…” I tell my nephew as I drive him over to my place so that he may escape the wretched boredom that is my parent’s house for a night. I’ve got a fridge full of Coca-Cola and more video games than a grown man should probably own, which makes me a rather ‘cool’ grown-up, in his book. What can I say? My wife tells me I’ve got the heart of a child. Which, I think, really says something creepy about her, you know, sexually. (The pervert.) But I digress.

“…on this very same stretch of road…” I continue, saying it slow, for effect.

He rolls his eyes. He’s a teenager now, so he’s really good at it. “This isn’t the ‘zombie owl’ story again, is it?”

“You just listen, or I’ll take you right to the closest minimum-security orphanarium. And don’t think I can’t explain my reasons to your mother. I’m gifted with words and horribly persuasive.” Oh, he knows I’m joking. I don’t even know where the orphanarium is located. And the paperwork would take SO long!

“And, yes, it’s about the zombie owl. I don’t care if you’ve heard it before. If you want to drink Coca-Cola until you’re silly with sugar and caffeine, you’ll be quiet and let me tell my story.” He rolls his eyes, but waves his hand in a manner that tells me to go ahead with my tale.

“Anyway, like I was saying, night like tonight, same stretch of road, and, oh yeah, around this very same bend! It was two in the morning and I was in my big Chevy diesel pickup truck, coming home from a gig.”

“The truck where you spilled an entire 32-ounce strawberry-pineapple smoothie right into the pocket of the driver’s side door?” He asks, giggling.

“Yeah. That’s the one. Now shut up. Like I was saying, as I came around that bend, right back there, I was suddenly confronted with an image I will never forget. A pure snowy-white owl with a wingspan as wide as my truck stood in the middle of the road, stooped over eating, probably, a person. It could have been a vampire he was eating, which might explain his unwillingness to die. You know, like a transfer of powers where, through eating the flesh of a vampire, the owl gains the ability to come back from the grave? What do you think?”

“I think… that…,” he stalls for a moment, and is, I assume, carefully weighing soda-pop and video games with the perfect opportunity to verbally bash my silliness. It’s a test of my authority. He decides to play it safe. “I think that’s an interesting theory. Yep, interesting.” Well played, young man. Well played.

“Well, anyway, he was stooped over, eating, and when my headlights hit him he spread his wings out to take flight and that’s right when I hit him, head on.”

I notice that I’m using the pronoun ‘he’ a lot. Who’s to say this beast wasn’t a female? If we’re going by the theory that “hell hath no fury like a woman scorned”, then ’she’ might be a bit more accurate. But that’s just a theory, too.

“He bounced right over my hood, and right by my open driver’s side window, and I could swear I caught a glimpse of a blood-and-gore-encrusted beak and some enormous talons, but I can’t be sure. He crashed over my truck with a few weighty ‘thumps’ and I came to a …screeching** halt. I pulled over and got out, taking my big ol’ metal flashlight with me, to see if, against odds, the owl was still alive and I could put it into my truck bed and save it’s life. I envisioned myself bringing this great big, possibly endangered snowy white owl into the animal emergency room, just in time to revive it. I’d visit it occasionally during it’s healing process, and there would be an article in the local paper, detailing my compassion and heroism. Possibly I’d receive a medal. I’m just saying.”

“Yeah. Right. A medal.” My nephew said.

“It could happen. So, I walked back along the road to the point where I’d hit the thing, and there it was. No, not the owl. A pile of white feathers with blood on them. The owl was nowhere to be found, and neither was the carcass I’d seen it chewing on. Nothing else. I was confused. And horrified. Had it dragged itself away, into the bushes next to the road? Had is flown away on twisted, broken wings? Had a lurking predator made off with the fresh owl and it’s meal? I mean, what the hell had just happened?”

“You’d hit an owl.” My nephew deadpanned. “With your truck.”

“Yeah, thanks. Anyway, I got back into my truck and drove home. When I got out of my truck I had the bright idea to check out my bumper to see if there was blood or anything to prove my story to the wife, any evidence. And there was. Wedged right into the gap between my headlight and it’s frame, there were white down feathers. The frame around the headlight was broken, too, cracked through the plastic. The headlight was fine, though.”

“Well, thank goodness for that.” My nephew said sarcastically. He’s too young to appreciate how expensive a headlight is to replace on a 1985 Chevy truck.

“So, as I was checking out the feathers, I heard the most blood-curdling screech right behind me, coming from the direction of my front door. Then, a sound of something scraping against the wood shingles of my roof, something evil. Then, whatever it was that was on my roof fell off and landed in the bushes. So I did what came naturally to me. I got the fuck in my house and shut the door.”

“Hey, you can’t say the ‘F’ word around me! I’m an impressionable youth!” My nephew said, suddenly paying attention to me after hearing my accidental swearing.

“What are you like, thirteen now? I can say the ‘F’ word, you can’t. That’s life, buddy. It’s a double standard.”

“That sucks.” He replied.

“Don’t say ’sucks’.” I said. Then I laughed. “I’m just kidding, you can say ’sucks’ all you want. I don’t give a shit. So, I got into the house and told your aunt Traci all about it and she listened to the story, half-asleep. She said it probably just dragged itself into a ravine, and she’s probably right. But here’s the thing. Ever since that night, I’ve heard, probably about once a month at least, that hideous screech that I’d never heard before. I can practically see him out there, creeping around in the dark on broken, ragged wings, his rotted feathers crawling with worms, his eye sockets hollow and his beak gleaming and sharp as a razor. He rises every night and roams the countryside, attacking people who resemble me and old Chevy trucks, hoping to one day sink his beak into my throat, and when he eventually does? Then he will finally rest. And I’ll be dead, the only person on Earth to have been killed by a bloody vengeful owl.”

We pull up to my house and my wife hears us and opens the door, creating a golden parallelogram of light that spills out invitingly, with herself silhouetted in the middle. We get out and walk up to the house, my nephew carrying his backpack with clothes and CD’s and teenager stuff.

“He told me the one about the zombie owl again.” He tells Traci, and she rolls her eyes, just as good as he can.

“Again?” she says.

“He’s out there somewhere.” I tell her, narrowing my eyes and turning to stare meaningfully out into the darkness with my arm around her. “Oh, yes. He’s out there. Waiting.”

* Don’t give me that look! Let me explain: I live in the wine country and the roads I use to get to and from gigs and errands are long and windy and just full of cute little woodland creatures harboring suicidal tendencies. These circumstances (combined with the fact that I come home from gigs at 2- or 3- or even 5AM) mean that I run over a couple of groggy little critters every month. It’s a “them or me” mentality. (Or, rather more correctly, a “themselves or I” mentality.) I’m not about to swerve off the road and ram into one of our famous thousand-year-old redwoods, killing my wife and I, while that furry little bastard hippety-hops away to father another few thousand garden-ruining runts.

** Ha! Owls, screeching, you know?  ”How does he come up with these?”, you’re probably asking yourself. Magic, my friends. Magic.

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8 Strange Wonders of Nature

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

The world is just awesome and also strange and sometimes deeply disturbing on a psychological level. For every beautiful butterfly out there, there’s a flesh eating deer. For every cute little bear cub, there’s the Dracula Ant. And nowhere during the “March of the Penguins” did they mention that, on occasion, a penguin will kidnap another penguin couple’s chick. Yes, penguin-napping. It happens.

So on that note, here’s some more interesting stuff about those beautiful, exotic, and sometimes very weird creatures with whom we share our planet. Enjoy!

8. Tardigrades: Tougher than Chuck Norris.

Tardigrade - Nature's Chuck NorrisCommonly called “water bears”, tartigrades are microscopic water-dwelling organisms with segmented bodies and eight legs. The name “water bear” comes from the way that they walk, which is reminiscent of a bear.

These hardy little critters can survive almost any place, as long as there is moisture: hot springs, the peaks of the Himalayas, under layers of solid ice, stone walls, roofs, ocean sediment, and toxic bogs.

But, the most amazing things about Tardigrades is that they can go into a state of reversable suspended animation where they become like tiny little superheroes. While in this suspended state, Tardigrades can survive bursts of heat up to 151ºC and cold as low as –272 °C (a single degree above absolute zero) They can withstand super-low pressure as well as super-high pressure (up to 1200 times atmospheric pressure) and can survive a completely moisture-free state for up to ten years. They can also withstand boiling water and being submerged in pure alcohol, and. They’re also impervious to radiation. Pretty amazing, really. But not as strange, per se, as…

7. Female Trout Who Fake Orgasms

Female Brown Trout Can Fake Orgasms

Swedish scientists have found that female brown trout fake orgasms in about half of their spawnings.

During a normal spawning, the female digs a gravel pit for the eggs. When she prepares to mate, she crouches down to protect the nest, opens her mouth and starts to quiver intensely. The male then swims alongside the female, assumes the same position,opens his mouth and starts to quiver as well. After a few seconds, the female releases her eggs and the male fertilizes them. But some researchers found that sometimes the female fakes it and doesn’t release her eggs when the male releases his sperm.

Why? Well, some say that the fish may perform this ruse with a less desirable male in order to ‘make it go away’ so it can then get it on with a more desirable trout.

6. The Platypus

The Platypus has a venomous barb on it's hind leg.Despite being 12 animals rolled up into one, the platypus also has the honor of being one of the only mammals in the world with venom and is THE ONLY mammal in the world that delivers it’s venom in a way other than a bite.

The male platypus has a venomous spur on its hind legs, which can incapacitate an adult human and causes excruciating pain. The venom is unlike any other venom in the animal world, using defensin-like proteins, which are normally reserved for innate immune functions like killing bacteria.

On a similarly freaky note, the platypus also lays eggs AND nurses it’s young with milk, although it doesn’t have any nipples. It secretes the milk (and immune-boosting chemicals) through patches on it’s skin.

Just like Mom used to.

5. The Argentine Lake Duck

The Argentine Lake Duck has the world's largest penis.Also called the Argentine Blue-bill and the Argentine Ruddy duck, this species of fowl is a small, stiff-tailed duck native to South America. Clumsy on land since their legs are set unusually far back, they spend most of their time in water where they feed by diving, and very rarely fly.

Which is probably difficult anyway, because these ducks have, in relation to their body size, the longest penis of all vertebrates on Earth. The penis, which is coiled up in its flaccid state and has a bristled tip, can reach about the same length as the animal itself when fully erect (about 42cm), although, despite what the male ducks will have you believe, it is more commonly about half the bird’s length (about 20cm).

Most male birds do not have a penis at all, but male ducks have a long corkscrew penis and female ducks have a long corkscrew vagina (it corkscrews in the opposite direction).

It is theorized that the remarkable size of the Argentine Lake Duck’s spiny penis with its bristled tip may have evolved in response to competitive pressure in these highly promiscuous birds, removing sperm from previous matings in the manner of a bottle brush.

4. The Wholphin

The Wholphin is a cross between a false killer whale and a bottlenose dolphin.A hybrid known to occur in the wild, a wholphin is what you get when a false killer whale and a bottlenose dolphin love each other very very much. A false killer whale (Pseudorca crassidens) looks just like an orca (killer whale) but actually is a member of the dolphin family, hence how they can breed.

A wholphin almost exactly averages the characteristics of it’s two parent species. Example: Bottle-nose dolphins have 88 teeth, false killer whales have 44 teeth, and the wholphin splits the difference with 66 teeth.

3. Giant Salamanders

Japanese and Chinese Giant Salamanders are awesome.Asian giant salamanders are aquatic amphibians found in streams and ponds in China, Japan, and (occasionally) in the Eastern United States. Japanese salamanders can reach up to 4 1/2 feet and have been known to live over 50 years! Chinese giant salamanders can get as big as 6 feet in length, and eat crustaceans, fish, and insects, worms and mice.

Giant salamanders are the largest species of amphibian currently living on the planet, yet perhaps not for very long. The giant salamander’s numbers are dwindling due to the fact that it’s flesh is considered a delicacy in many parts of Asia.  It is currently listed as a ‘Critically Endangered Species’, according to the IUCN Red List.

2. Albino Alligators

Albino Alligators. At least you'll see it coming.“These gators are a genetic mutation of the American alligator,” says Kathy Landry, a zookeeper at the New Orleans’ Audubon Zoo. Buried in the cells of every newborn animal is a unique set of genes. The blueprint shapes how the animal will develop and grow, what its eyes, scales, fur, or feathers will be like. But sometimes the instructions have defects.

The gators inherited a defective gene that produces too little melanin, the pigment that lends skin its hue. Their parents may have had normal greenish skin and eyes (no one knows, since the gators were found in the wild). But if an animal offspring is albino, then both parents carried the gene for that trait.

1. Carnivorous Red Deer

Carnivorous Red Deer on the Island of Rum (Rhum) eat puffins to help them grow antlers.Red deer on the Scottish island of Rum eat the heads and legs of live seabird chicks in order to get the minerals they need to grow their antlers.

Situated 16 miles off the west coast of northern Scotland, the island of Rum has one of the largest colonies of Manx shearwaters (Puffins). In late August, the birds hatch and begin to venture out from their hillside burrows (birds burrow?). Unable to fly, they make a perfect snack for carnivores, among them that lovely picture of doe-eyed innocence, the red deer.

For many years the appearance of decapitated shearwater chicks baffled bird watchers. The bird were mostly intact, though, missing only their heads and leg bones.

Generally, vegetation will provide a deer with enough minerals and nutrients that it needs, but the vegetation on the island of Rum has a low calcium content. The calcium supplement that the deer get from the bird bones aids in the growing of strong antlers, which are vital for a deers mating rituals.

Now, I know that this all makes sense and everything, but I don’t think I’m alone when I say that I don’t think I’ll ever get the image of Bambi ripping apart a dove out of my head.

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