Showing posts with label my hatred of the world. Show all posts
Showing posts with label my hatred of the world. Show all posts

Monday, February 09, 2009

Your Shattered Dreams Quizo Update

I had this whole piece planned that I was working on, and then I got the news that Chelsea fired Phil Scolari this morning, and you know what? Right now there isn’t a joke I can come up with that is a bigger joke than the Chelsea Football Club.

I was in a really good mood this morning, too. I was going to talk about how even though I was sick all weekend and LaSalle lost to St. Bonaventure, which despite evidence to the contrary I am pretty sure is a fucking high school in North Jersey, I was happy. I was happy because through a random twist of internet browsage Friday afternoon I learned that Farscape was on iTunes, and that even after the unfortunate loss of my complete DVD collection (the first TV show I ever collected on DVD in fact) and those DVDs subsequently going out of print (thus preventing me from replacing said DVDs) being sick for a weekend wouldn’t be that bad because I could spend that weekend watching for the first time in years my ABSOLUTE MOSTEST FAVORITE-EST TELEVISION SHOW FUCKING WELL EVER.

God, I was so happy. Blissfully, deliriously happy. On the list of Things That Cause My Brain To Release The Most Endorphins, number one is winning money at poker. Number two is Farscape. I am not kidding. And because I was sick I had spent the last three days doing nothing but sleeping and watching Farscape. When I woke up this morning I wasin as good a mood as I have been in at least four or five years.

Then the cockpunchers in SW6 said, “hey, we haven’t stuck a shotgun in our mouth in a while, let’s do that.”

I’d been saying for the last few weeks that hiring Scolari might have been the wrong move but I fail to see what firing the manager at this point in time gains us, unless there’s someone else out there that we KNOW is going to get snapped up later if we don’t grab him now. Mancini? Eriksson? Can we somehow get Mourinho back? Are we asleep at the wheel? Is there anyone even AT the wheel?

You know, I don’t even give a fuck anymore.

JLK

Monday, November 17, 2008

Your Growing Malaise Quizo Update



You ever have one of those stretches where everything lands in that grey, squishy space between right and wrong? Where things aren’t “oh my god this is awesome!” but they aren’t “oh my god this is terrible!” either, they’re just sort of “oh my… uh… yeah… so, that happened.” I’m sure we’ve all been there a time or two, had periods where everything is just comfortably mediocre, where our life events are like buying a new shirt and then getting home and realizing it’s half a size too big and taking the tags off and wearing it anyway. On the great sine wave of life we’ve all had times like these, those times between the highs and lows where things just hover around zero for a while. And for the most part we shrug these things off because, hey, that’s life. You take the good, you take the bad.

That is, if you’re most people.

You ever have one of those stretches where everything is mediocrity and squishy greyness and you overreact to it so outrageously, so vehemently, that you actually cause dangerous spikes in OTHER people’s blood pressure?

Let’s take a look back at this past weekend, shall we?

Friday – “this is a criminal waste of valuable resources.”

I normally play poker on Friday nights. This is a good thing. I legitimately enjoy the company of the people I play poker with, and it forces me to interact socially with other humans, which, I’m not going to lie to you, is something that given the choice I would probably opt out of in general. This past Friday I did not play poker for two reasons. The first was that it was raining.

Now, before we get carried away here, let me invoke the words of the great John Sullivan concerning rain: “it’s just rain, I’m not gonna melt.” No, my mortal fear of driving at night in the rain comes from long, long ago, back in the ancient mists of forgotten time when I, for a fleeting moment, was a student at Lehigh University. For some reason I was at a book signing at a Borders on Lancaster Pike and I had to drive back to Bethlehem in my old car – dubbed The Millenium Falcon by my friends not just because we were giant nerds but because as my then-roommate put it, “it’s big, it’s fast, and it breaks down at the worst possible times” - in the middle of the night on an unlit highway in a furious rainstorm and the only tape in the car was a collection of JG Thirlwell remixes of “The Downward Spiral.”

Suffice it to say, folks, that this is what we in the theatre call “EXCEEDINGLY BAD.” I got back to my dorm quite literally shaking with fright and nerves, and ever since the idea of driving at night in the rain has caused a fear reaction in me similar to what gazelles must feel when they hear that first lion’s roar out on the savannah.

Now I HAVE driven under these conditions – just not happily – but the weather was only half of why I didn’t go out. The other half of why I didn’t play poker on Friday night was because the expansion pack for World of Warcraft had come out the night before and I, in a remarkable combination of self-aggrandizement and stupidity, decided that the confluence of release date and weather was God’s way of telling me to stay home and play WoW on Friday night. So I did. Until about midnight, when I suddenly stopped playing, looked at my monitor, and said, “what the fuck am I doing?” This began a brutal series of self-recrimination wherein I spent a solid ten minutes chastising myself with thoughts like, “what the hell is wrong with me, I should have gone to the poker game, this is dumb, I don’t even like this game that much anymore, I’m certainly not very GOOD at it, there are a billion other things I could be doing with my time, I hate the world,” etc etc. Eventually I calmed myself down by firing up FIFA 09 on my 360, dialing the difficulty all the way down to the easiest level, and pounding on some Korean team with Chelsea (final score 14-1). I’ve said many times that you can play World of Warcraft or you can play video games, and I think I may have finally chosen the latter.

Saturday – “I guess Tosca isn’t for everyone.”

After some comical shenanigans involving birthday parties, air fresheners, and his fluid concept of time, Nick and I made it up to see Quantum of Solace on Saturday night.

Yeah.

Let me just state in my typical hyperbolic fashion that the only thing worse than a bad movie is an okay movie that could have been great. And don’t misunderstand me – Quantum of Solace could have been great. It could have been really great. In fact, the way to have made it great is so simple I can hardly believe no one did it. All you needed to do was have someone walk up to Paul Haggis, who co-wrote the screenplay, and say, “look, Paul, we know you’re hot stuff now. You’ve got the Oscars and the money and whatnot and that’s great for you. It really is. We couldn’t be more proud. Fantastic. But, Paul, we’ve got to be honest with you, if you come anywhere near another James Bond script again we’re going to break every one of your fingers one by one with a ball peen hammer. I hate to put it that way but that’s really how we feel about it. Nothing personal, of course. We love your work. Love it. We’re big fans. Now if you could do us a huge favor and just fuck off and write another script about race relations or euthanasia or whatever social issue you just discovered this fucking week actually exists and leave the James Bond stuff to those of us who know what we’re doing, yeah, that would be just fantastic. Yes, fuck off, thanks. That’s a good lad.”

How do you go from such a tight, well-written, perfectly-constructed film like Casino Royale to the messy, spineless, occasional-flashes-of-brilliance-but-otherwise-incoherent Quantum of Solace? You hire Paul Haggis to do a rewrite. God, I hate that guy. I hate him so much. This isn’t a case like Die Another Day, which was just absolute garbage from beginning to end, this movie actually had a couple REALLY excellent bits in it. Daniel Craig and Judi Dench continue to be utterly fantastic – I would watch a 2-hour movie of just M and Bond talking about, like, life issues and stuff – and there are moments where the film transcends the typical Bond-movie glop that Haggis tries to drag it back into which keep it just barely in “real movie” territory. Because, let’s face it, even the best of the old Bond movies – and this is coming from someone RAISED on them – are really fucking stupid, and I’ll take an okay “real movie” with James Bond in it over a great “Bond movie” any day.

You know your movie has problems if Nick – who, though he is like a brother to me as much as anyone who I am not actually related to and who I would probably kill if offered enough money to do so and thus is really more like a half-brother or a distant cousin or something, has zero artistic or aesthetic sense whatsoever – asks after seeing it “why was that scene in the movie?” When people who have no knowledge of screenwriting WHATSOEVER can identify structural flaws in your screenplay that is when it is time to get a new writer.

Daniel Craig is still awesome, though.

Sunday – “Mike, this is a case of the terrible versus the pathetic.”

In a similar vein to the conclusion of my thoughts on Quantum of Solace, when my FATHER is summing up his thoughts on the Eagles game with an impression of the Comic Book Guy – “Worst. Football Game. EVER.” – your football team has SERIOUS FUCKING PROBLEMS. You can’t beat the Bengals in SEVENTY-FIVE MINUTES of football? Seriously? SERIOUSLY? THE FUCKING BENGALS?

As an unabashed Donovan McNabb fan I will be the first to admit that he had what was probably his worst game since his rookie year yesterday. But, hey, here’s a thought – if D-Mac is having a bad day maybe we could, I don’t know, what’s the word for it, oh yes, RUN THE FOOTBALL! YOU HAVE BRIAN WESTBROOK! GIVE HIM THE FUCKING BALL!

The Eagles ran the ball 18 times yesterday. They threw it 58 times. You cannot play football this way. I don’t care if you have the worst running back in the NFL let alone the best whose talent is being wasted by that pass-happy fuck with the headset, you CANNOT BE A SUCCESSFUL TEAM PLAYING FOOTBALL LIKE THIS.

Merrill said it best, I think, when he opined about halfway through overtime, “if there was ever a game which neither team deserved to win, this is it.” If you are the Eagles and not only can you not beat a bunch of meatsacks like the Bengals but you actually come a hairsbreadth from LOSING to them a couple times, things have to change. That is it. The Eagles should have blown this team out by 30 points. Instead they tie, and only because Shayne Graham was the first kicker to miss a field goal against the Eagles in something like 800 years. You almost lost to the BENGALS.

Andy Reid has to go.

Monday – “Is it safe?”

I got word from Oprah’s yesterday on their choice of speed round topic and I have deemed it perfectly acceptable. Actually I think it’s kinda neat. I look forward to what I can do with it. So make sure to put a stop to them tonight, because though they get to pick a speed round after winning three times in a row, if they pull back-to-back three-peats everyone will have to address Palestra Jon as “El Jefe.” And no one wants that.

JLK

Monday, September 29, 2008

Your Less Than Relaxing Quizo Update

I'm back to work at the Death Star factory today (supposedly, at least, we'll see what happens when I get there), once again giving me the joy of going to work and not having to talk about it. I thoroughly enjoyed my little vacation and could totally get used to this six-months-on-one-month-off thing.

Sadly I cannot say I thoroughly enjoyed the Phillies winning their second division title in a row this Saturday because I had to watch the game with the horror of the annual block party raging outside. Let's see, an event that makes it impossible to park within 500 miles of my house that has children running around screaming up and down the sidewalk and concert-loud music blaring until ungodly hours of the night, all amplified by the strange acoustics of this block bouncing all of that noise directly into my bedroom window as though I was actually sleeping (or trying to sleep, as it were) smack in the middle of the street.

Dear god, there are few things on earth I hate more than the block party. When I get back to the office today I may "accidentally" hit the red button just to alleviate the aggravation.

JLK

Monday, September 22, 2008

Your "Why Is That Watermelon There?" Quizo Update


I was having a conversation with a friend of mine this weekend, and at one point she mentioned that she was fairly upset that over the next couple weeks she has to do a great deal of traveling for work. Something about three states in two weeks. I thought this was a pretty trifling stretch; when I drove cross-country I did 11 states in 8 days. It would have only been 6 but I was trapped in a hotel in Oklahoma City for three days by an ice storm (the tale of said trip being a long story unto itself).

However, in a rare moment of trying to be helpful, I said, "well remember, no matter where you go, there you are." Words to live by, those.

"Yeah," she said. "Hey, what's that from? Is that like Zen or something?"

"No," I said, "it's from Buckaroo Banzai."

"Are you sure? I thought somebody like Buddha said that."

"No," I said, trying to maintain my composure. "It's Buckaroo Banzai."

"I could have sworn I saw that on a TV show once – "

"NO!" I shouted. "It is fucking well Buckaroo Banzai!" I couldn't believe she was arguing about this with me.

Then came the words that really got my blood boiling.

She said, "what the hell is Buckaroo Banzai?"

(gasp)

(sputter)

Once I regained my composure at hearing such a shocking utterance, I started shouting again.

"You've never seen Buckaroo Banzai?"

"Uhm… no?" she said.

"You've NEVER SEEN The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the Eighth Dimension?

"Uh…"

"Red Lectroids? Planet 10? The Oscillation Overthruster? Yoyodyne Propulsion Systems? NONE OF THIS RINGS A BELL?"

"Okay, please stop yelling."

"How can you be an adult human and not have seen Buckaroo Banzai? What kind of sick childhood did you have?"

"I didn't – "

"Did your parents beat you with a leather strap when you were a kid? Chain you to a radiator in the basement? Did you subsist on rats?"

She finally got me to stop shouting when she said, "okay, see, this is why we never dated."

"Yeah," I said. "It's also why we never will." Though I'm not sure we were talking about the same thing by that point.

Never seen Buckaroo Banzai. What kind of hideous, twisted society allows that to happen?

Okay, so check this shit out: last week I was driving home from the Sev one afternoon and as I went past the front lawn at Lincoln I saw there were a bunch of kids out there playing CRICKET. I swear I am not making this up. They had the white sweaters going and everything. I mentioned it to someone I know in England who is a cricket enthusiast and noted that the closest equivalent would be for her to drive past a grade school over there one day and see a bunch of kids playing a pickup game of Your Garish American Football in full pads. Cricket. At Lincoln High School. I can't live in this world.

In other news, the Oxford English Dictionary reports that they will be adding a new word to their next edition:

Met (verb): to have a lead and subsequently lose it, to play poorly under pressure, to perform below expectations. See also "choke (verb)" and "Mickelson (douchebag)."

And I just found out that tonight's Flyers-Devils game isn't on television, so after the Buckaroo fiasco and Chelsea failing to beat United yesterday, that's just one more thing to be pissy about (as though I needed more). Oh well.

I suppose it's not all bad news. After all, the US won the Ryder Cup (yeah, stick that in your pipe and smoke it, Europe!) on a golf course that appeared to be a scale replica of the Appalachian foothills, there's a pennant race that the Phillies are actually winning, and last night I was able to do my favorite dance: the safety dance!

Yeah, okay, I'm sorry about that, it won't happen again...

JLK


Monday, July 07, 2008

Your Brush With Death Quizo Update


Since our motto here at Quizo HQ has always been "Safety First," I'd like to present you with some information, gleaned through actual, firsthand empirical research that may prove very useful in your future.

Things You Don't Want To Be Doing When Your Car Suddenly And Inexplicably Blows Up:

1) Driving it.

2) Driving it to work.

3) Driving it to work on 95.

4) Trying to get yourself out of it while pulled over on 95 on your way to work.

Some important corollaries to this list:

1) When driving your car on I-95, if you hear a muffled "BOOM!" when you step on the accelerator and, immediately thereafter, smoke starts billowing out the front of your car and people driving past slow down to shout "your car is on fire!" at you, that is what we in the safety business call a "bad sign."

2) When attempting to assess any possible damage to your vehicle, always do so from a safe distance, as after a piston punches a golf-ball-sized hole through both your engine and your oil pan there will be hot oil and shredded metal everywhere.

3) A safe distance to observe these phenomena does not include directly underneath the car while it is up on a tow truck lift since, as tow truck drivers and mechanics will tell you, and I am quoting here, "hydraulics fail."

4) The time to be especially watchful for any and/or all of these signs of danger is within 7 days of paying almost $400 to have your car pass inspection.

5) When preparing to take your vengeance upon a cruel and heartless universe, stock up on ammunition beforehand. As a regular person you will have no problem buying bullets. Once you become known as "The Destroyer of Worlds" you're going to find it very difficult to get any kind of customer service at the ammo counter.

JLK

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Serenity Now!


All the televisions in this place – in the break rooms, the convenience store, the hallways, everywhere – are constantly tuned to Headline News. Headline News is kind of the television equivalent of going to the dentist for a filling and the dentist saying “it’s not that deep, we’re not going to really go near the nerve, do you want to try it without novocaine?” And then you stupidly say yes, and everything goes well for a couple minutes and you’re feeling pretty good about yourself and the dentist isn’t actually so OW! MOTHERFUCKER! Guess you were closer to the nerve than you thought, you fucking prick!

This is what watching Headline News is like. It is vaguely bothersome but not really unpleasant for a while, and then something twitches and you end up with a spike in your brain.

So every time I leave my little area to get a cup of coffee at the store I am assaulted by the insipid ravings of bubbleheaded anchors who, frankly, I would rather see in Playboy than on the news. Just now I saw the thing about the video of the Marine in Iraq supposedly throwing a puppy. The whole thing smacks of internet fakery. Now, for my money, I don’t know how many cute widdle beagle puppies there ARE in Iraq necessarily. I’m guessing it’s not many. And I’m also guessing that your average Marine getting shot at and blown up in Iraq doesn’t spend a whole lot of time making carefully-shot videos of ANY sort of interaction with puppies, much less picking one up and giving it a solid heave. I’m guessing they probably leave the puppies alone since it’s safe to assume that if you are a Marine in Iraq any puppies you encounter are some of the very few living things there not actively trying to kill you.

But still the douchebags on Headline News are talking about the video of the puppy-tossing. And then they go to I believe it was Lejeune for the Marine Reaction. Suffice it to say the Marine Reaction falls somewhere in the “Devastated” range. It’s a travesty. It’s an outrage. We’re going to court martial that son of a bitch within an inch of his life!

They talk to the commandant of the camp and he expresses his displeasure at this turn of events. Then comes the money quote:

“Every Marine is concerned about this.”

Every Marine? Every one of them? Really? REALLY?

Blowing up god knows how many puppies, that we’re fine with, but one guy pretends to be a Marine playing catch with a puppy – well, perhaps my usage of the phrase “playing catch with” doesn’t exactly express the transitive as well as it should – every Marine is concerned.

I hate the world.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Your "I'm Terrified Beyond the Capacity For Rational Thought" Quizo Update

It's been a sort of weekend where a whole bunch of things happened that I was certain would never occur. This is fairly surprising when one considers the staggering vastness of my intellect and my ability to consider the most outlandish possible outcomes of any given situation.

Saturday afternoon, after going to the pub to watch the Manchester United - Arsenal match, which ended somewhat badly for the Gunners, I somehow ended up watching Brokeback Mountain.

Now Brokeback, understand, is a movie where I've never quite understood why I have it on DVD. The first recorded instance of this phenomenon was a couple years ago when, at the Best Buy in Moorestown, I bought the Special Edition DVD of Schindler's List with a bunch of other DVDs. I remember walking back to my car and stopping in my tracks in the middle of the parking lot. I pulled the movie out of the bag, looked at it, and said, "why did I BUY this?" I couldn't conceive of a situation where I would ever actually WANT to watch Schindler's List. Despite the aforementioned vast intelligence and imaginatory ability I couldn't see myself ever sitting around on a Saturday afternoon, bored, and saying to myself, "you know what, I feel like watching Schindler's List." Despite the movie's obvious quality it does not exactly top the list of weekend pick-me-up movies. Brokeback Mountain is the same kind of movie - great, to be sure, but not really something you'd ever look forward to watching.

I did end up watching my DVD of Schindler's List a couple years later, though to be fair I believe it was on a Tuesday night, and I was working at Best Buy at the time. This is a general life situation in which watching Schindler's List will actually improve one's overall mood.

I originally watched Brokeback on my computer when it came out - to this date one of only two films I have ever downloaded off the internet* - and I vaguely remember thinking when I bought it, "why am I spending 17 bucks on a DVD I'm never going to watch?" Saturday, though, I was going through one of the many piles of assorted media littered throughout my space, small mountains of books, DVDs, and video games it would take the National Geographic society to accurately map, when instead of the video game I was looking for** I came across my still-unopened copy of Brokeback Mountain.

For some reason I was possessed by a desire to watch it, possibly caused by the fact that it was still in two-year old shrink wrap. It is of course as good as I remember, but watching it didn't exactly put me in the best mood. I decided to go with my timeworn method of making myself feel better: spending money (aka adding altitude to said mountains of books and stuff).

On the way to the store I was stopped at a light across the street from a funeral home. Sitting there I noticed something outside the funeral home, on the patio.

"That can't be right," I said.

I looked closer.

"No, there's no way that's what I think it is."

I tried to squint a little to get a better look, but I was still seeing something that could not possibly be there.

"There's no fucking way," I said.

The light changed and as I drove past I got a close look at what was outside the funeral home. It was, in fact, the impossible thing I suspected from across the street.

A wedding party.

The whole bunch. Groom, bride - in what I assume was a Valentine's Day-themed dress of white with red highlights - groomsmen, bridesmaids, the whole whack. Standing around outside a funeral parlor and - this is the absolute kicker, the thing that drives it totally over the top and me insane - DRINKING CHAMPAGNE.

I can't live in this world.

JLK



* 1408
** Final Fantasy XII

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Your "I Can Turn Back The Hands Of Time, You Better Believe I Can" Quizo Update

Though I have been awake when the sun was rising more times than I care or am able to count, the only two times I've ever purposefully witnessed the event directly – actually set out specifically to watch the sun rise as opposed to, say, squinting out the driver's side window while speeding down the Parkway at 5:45AM and wondering why I can never seem to leave New York at a remotely reasonable hour – both took place, as it happens, on the Delaware Avenue end of the South Street walkway.

I started doing theatre in grade school (I just realized I've been doing shows for TWENTY YEARS, and god that's frightening), but I didn't get serious about it until I did Anything Goes in the fall of my senior year of high school.

(Interesting side note: no less than three other high schools around here were doing the same show at the same time, and when I got to the theatre at LaSalle there was this whole great big lot of us who had all been in separate productions of Anything Goes within like three weeks of each other.)

Even for those who at that age realize they're pretty good at this stuff and get vaguely serious about it and may want to keep on doing it, high school theatre is something of a fool's errand. It's a bit like that statistic you hear about athletes: only 2% of high school athletes will play college ball, and only 2% of those will turn pro. I'd wager the percentages for folks who do theatre in high school are roughly the same. Of the 50 or so people I worked with on that production of Anything Goes way back when – by far the largest show I ever did in high school – precisely two do professional theatre work, and I'm one of them. (Okay, 4%, fuck off.) People fall off the bandwagon, discover other interests, get sick of doing tons of hard work for nothing. I've heard "discover girls" mentioned in that list when talking to people about this phenomenon, but only someone who's never met the kind of girls who work in the theatre would say something like that.

After a high school show closes you have the "cast party" at someone's house, where their parents serve soda and chips and whatnot and your drama teachers are there and you talk about how great everyone was – everyone in a high school show is great, if the talk is to be believed – and you hang out for a little bit. After that ends you go to someone else's house who has more permissive parents for the REAL cast party where you give that person's mother your car keys and everyone sits around and gets blitzed. (Oddly enough I was NOT one of those people; I didn't start drinking until college.)

The real cast party for Anything Goes was at some guy's house in Society Hill – can't remember who it was – and there were about 30 of us spread out over the entire third floor of one of those gigantic townhouses that you see all around the pub. Most of the people there were heavily invested into getting drunk. I remember at one point that I got into a heated discussion – at the age of 16, before film school was even a fleeting thought in my head – about why The Empire Strikes Back was CLEARLY a far superior movie to Return of the Jedi and how anyone who thought otherwise was obviously retarded.

There was one other guy there who wasn't drinking – Christ, I can't remember his name either, but I do remember he was blind in one eye because he took a paintball to the cornea the year before – and at around 6:00AM, when most of the rest of the party was either drunk, passed out, or having sex in one of the 27 bedrooms, he suggested that since we were sober and wide awake, hey, you want to go watch the sunrise?

I thought, I've never done that. Why the fuck not?

We drove over to the parking lot in front of Downey's - I DO remember that was the second time in one night and, swear to God, second of only two times I ever violated my Cinderella licence – and ambled over the South Street walkway to watch the sun come up over Camden. This was before the USS New Jersey was there, so it was just pink skies and industrial wasteland on the other side of the river. It was early November and it was absolutely freezing, but we just stood there for a solid twenty minutes in silence watching the sun come up, and when it was finally finished he just turned to me and said, "pretty cool, huh?"

I had to admit that he was right.

The second time I watched the sun come up from the South Street walkway was this past Saturday morning after a very, very, very long night of celebrating my 30th birthday. I was by myself this time, largely because I hate the world and everything in it.

The party itself went smashingly well – I believe over the entire course of the evening we had about 60 people go through the Rigger Bar, including at one bizarre point a sizeable delegation from the Pennsylvania Ballet. I am not making this up. I went outside for a cigarette around 10:30 and when I came back in there was a very large bunch of very small women standing in a cluster in the middle of the room. Not knowing who these women were or how they got there, I shouted "who the fuck are they?" at no one in particular.

My friend Mike came over to me and said, "they're ballerinas."

I said, I thought not unreasonably, "who the fuck are they?" again.

"The Pennsylvania Ballet is having a party next door," Mike said. "I went in there and invited them over here."

"They look like they're 14," I said. I had never seen so many tiny little ostensibly-adults in one place before.

"I think the one might be," Mike said.

"I can't live in this world," I said.

People continued to come and go, mostly coming and not going, and the bar got filled pretty nicely. What was supposed to be the highlight of my evening happened around 11, when a large group of Chelsea friends of mine arrived from New York, including a young lady who I had hoped, at the very least, to get a word in edgewise with at some point over the course of the following 12 hours.

This did not happen, and thus begins my hatred of the world and all its contents.

This did not happen because amongst the group of folks who came down from New York was this douche nozzle who was cockblocking me like fucking Mike Munchak in a Nashville whorehouse. When I say I couldn't get a word in edgewise I mean this quite literally. This guy made any attempt at conversation impossible – and we're not talking conversation like, "so, your hotel room or mine once we're done here?" I mean "so, how was the train ride?" conversation. I couldn't get more than eight seconds of one-on-one with this woman without him showing up and – I am not making this up – positioning himself in such a way that no one – myself included, and I feel I'm the most important actor in this particular drama – could even LOOK at this woman without craning their head around this fuckwad. I couldn't make EYE CONTACT with her.

It actually got a point where my FRIENDS were getting angry at this guy. I had to turn down repeated offers of, alternatively, throwing him into the Delaware River, beating him up under the stairs out the back of the pub, and things that began with, "I have this knife in my car, and…" I made a for-me rare determination that violence was not the answer and I would solve this problem in a civilized way.

Later in the evening when we learn that – and this is the best part - he is GOING OUT WITH SOMEONE ELSE, I started to feel my sense of Zen calmness slipping away and began to get seriously pissed off.

As Kyra was kicking us out of the bar around 2:20 a group consisting of Chelsea fans from Philly and New York who had all gotten rooms at the Society Hill Sheraton – we had a game on at 7AM, so it was determined we'd just crash for a few hours two blocks from the pub – headed back to the hotel, and on the way back and in the rooms I again had to deal with this fucking muppet making any attempt at even casual conversation with the woman I invited to the party specifically so I could HAVE a conversation or two, or three, or perhaps slightly more than a conversation with completely impossible.

It is also important to note at this point that at this time I am, as per usual, the only sober person in the group.

When the small party in the New York people's hotel room turned into, quite literally, a beer-throwing fight, and I resigned myself to the fact that I wasn't so much as going to say hello to this woman until the entropic heat death of the universe thanks to this cockblocking kumquat, I decided to head up to the room we of the Philly persuasion had gotten and try to get a whopping three hours of sleep before the match.

About ten minutes after I got down there my friend Tim rolls in and all I can say is that he is fucking DRUNK. I mean, wow. I learned later that he had polished off most of a mini-keg of Heineken in the New York room, and after screwing around for maybe 90 seconds he flops down on the floor and promptly passes out. I was lying awake in the bed, thinking that interfering jackasses aside, and making a note to thank my "friends" for bringing the jackass in the first place, I came to the conclusion that all things considered it was still a pretty damn good birthday. Maybe turning 30 isn't so bad after all.

About two minutes after coming to said conclusion, at almost exactly 4AM, Tim begins to snore.

Well, "snore" isn't exactly the right word for it. The proper description would be something more along the lines of, "at 4AM Tim began to emit noises of roughly the decibel level and vibrational magnitude of a 400-horsepower Evinrude outboard yacht engine."

Let me tell you something, folks – when I was a bouncer at a city pool, way back in my youth, I used to sleep in the pump house of a 40,000 gallon pool, which at the time I roughly equated to sleeping inside a jet engine. I used to sleep like a fucking ROCK in there.

Friday night, I was lying awake listening to these frightening noises coming from my friend, and I couldn't sleep to save my life. I actually – and yet again I am not making this up – attempted to hypnotize myself so as to be able to enter a state in which I would be able to get at least a modicum of restful sleep. (Yes, I actually know how to hypnotize myself.) I could not. The noise was unbearable.

At 5:30AM I said, out loud – since I knew my other friend Ron, who was also bunking in the room, was as wide awake as I was – "oh, fuck all THIS," and took my pillow and blanket into the bathroom, closed the door, and sacked out in the bathtub. I have done this before on road trips when a bed was not an option. It's actually not that uncomfortable, almost womb-like.

On my 30th birthday, lying in a bathtub, in the dark, with a blanket over my head, with the bathroom door closed, I can still hear Tim snoring.

It is loud enough to keep me awake.

Oh, God.

At one point I decided to try the age-old method of counting sheep – in my case, just counting up very slowly in my head – in a last ditch attempt to get maybe an hour of sleep before I had to get up for the match. When I reached NINE HUNDRED, I pulled my cell phone out of the soap dish, saw that it was 6:15 and said, "fuck it, SSD opens soon, might as well get some breakfast."

I showered, changed into my Chelsea kit, and walked down to South Street. I picked up an Inquirer at the WaWa and walked over to the South Street Diner at about 6:35 to see that it didn't open until 7. Hmph.

I looked out towards Front Street and saw the sky starting to turn pink and said out loud to no one in particular,
"we're sober and wide awake, hey, you want to go watch the sunrise?"

So there I am, standing on the river end of the South Street walkway, about a month past 13 years to the day from the last time, watching the sun rise over the USS New Jersey.

When 7AM came I went back to SSD, availed myself of the best French Toast in Philadelphia, and headed to the pub to watch Chelsea beat West Ham 1-0 and stare at the back of that guy's head (conveniently placed directly between me and the woman in question, who I have now completely given up on ever saying another word to ever again).

As the day wore on I went home, got some sleep, watched my DVR of Navy destroying a hapless Army, made plans to watch the Ricky Hatton fight next week, and got some more sleep. Things returned to normal, at least as normal as they get around here.

Looking back at the whole experience of turning 30 I have come to the following conclusion:

I have faced, stared down, grappled with and survived thirty years of the weirdest, most ridiculous, most bizarre, most nerve-rattling insanity the universe can throw at anyone. And I won every time.

Thirty years down, a hundred to go. A hundred if those sons of bitches are LUCKY. I don't know about you, but I plan to live forever.

The last thirty years is the best you got?

Bring it on, motherfuckers.

JLK

Monday, October 29, 2007

Your Poorly Worded Quizo Update

Not a whole lot to say this week - I want to get this done and down so I can go back to Guitar Hero 3. So, highlights:

- Perhaps in response to the Royal Flush I found myself against last week, the poker gods saw fit to award me a straight flush (to the queen) this past Friday night, my first in about five years. It followed a pretty good run of cards on my part, and when one of the people at my table asked how I kept getting such good hands I joked "I'm sleeping with the dealer," and when she gave me an odd look I was momentarily mortified while I wracked my brain trying to make sure that I was, in fact, joking.

- I was at a Halloween party on Saturday night, and such parties can be tough when you don't really dress up in costumes. After being repeatedly asked "and what are you supposed to be?" like I'm some half-witted six-year-old prowling the streets of Mayfair on Halloween night in a mismatched Eagles shirt and Phillies hat I started responding "I'm an optimist." No one seemed to believe that; not the sober folks at any rate. The drunk people just sort of stared at me blankly. Mission accomplished? I don't even know.

- During the Eagles game yesterday, Dick Stockton described Darren Sharper as - I am not making this up, this is word for word here - "the leading all-time interceptor of the active kind." I really miss the days when Merrill Reese was in sync with the television broadcast and we could just turn off the TV and turn on the radio and be spared such inane ravings. Merrill's tendency to occasionally Yoda up his commentary aside - I always loved comments like "and shaken up on the play is William Thomas" - at least I didn't have to listen to crap like that. Also, Brian Baldinger predicted the Redskins would hold the Patriots to "about twenty five points," which I suppose makes him slightly less than half right. Stockton and Baldinger may be the worst commentary team in football, and on a landscape that includes Boomer Esiason and the team of Joe Buck and Troy Aikman, whose combined IQ numbers something like 11, someone needs to make it so Merrill is back in time with the TV before I throw something. Give us Moose Johnston at least, please.

All right - La Grange awaits on the Playstation.

JLK

Monday, October 01, 2007

Your Belated Quizo Update

Yes, there is still Quizo tonight. I have, until now, been unable to send out the e-mail.

Anyone care to guess WHY?

Here's a hint: it's not anything nice, like the Phillies, or the new Springsteen album tomorrow, or me going to see Springsteen on Saturday.

There is a distinct chance that by the time I get to the bar tonight I will have told my boss to go fuck herself.

JLK

Monday, September 17, 2007

Your Mister Subliminal Quizo Update

The thing I really hate about lapsing into smoking again - aside from, you know, the actual buying and smoking of cigarettes - is falling back into what I would call "smoker's thinking." This refers to things like waiting for your ride to show up and, realizing that your ride's car is a non-smoking flight, thinking "well, I'd better get a cigarette in before he gets here." I had almost that exact thought Friday night and I was immediately rather disgusted with myself and, after swearing vengeance against the world for turning in such a way that my choices to relieve the crushing stresses I labor under became a) start smoking again or b) start recreationally murdering prostitutes, I determined that once my show was over I would have to go back on the smoking wagon. This is, as I have said previous, not especially easy, but after going seriously smoke-free for a while I recognize that it's the way to go. It's unfortunate, really, since to once again quote the great Neal Stephenson, for something disgusting and lethal smoking is remarkably enjoyable. PAYING for cigarettes, now, that's a different story.

(Dealer's Choice, at the Dark Horse, opening September 18, $10, www.phillybinge.com)

Speaking of disgusting and lethal, I had the grave misfortune of watching the new Highlander movie this weekend. I am a big fan of Highlander, at least the first movie and the TV show. The hideous, misbegotten thing I watched Saturday night was the Darth Vader of Highlander - more machine now than man, twisted and evil. I had been told it was on TV only minutes before it aired, and I quickly called a friend of mine who I knew was also a fan, and we spent the entire film texting each other back and forth about how awful it was, and then immediately after it ended I had to give him a sincere apology for telling him it was on. I think he summed it up best when he wrote: "when I watch Highlander I want good sword fights, a little melodrama, and Scottish accents, and this garbage doesn't have ANY of those things." All things aside - and I mean ALL things - if you make a Highlander movie and you don't at least have one really cool-looking sword fight you have failed at life. But not only were they not good, they were actively BAD. Like, you watch it, and you realize that the director - a term used here, surely, in its loosest and basest sense - was trying to do something "new" and "interesting" and "cool" but along the way forgot that he's a fucking anencephalic colobus monkey who couldn't choreograph or shoot a good sword fight if he was possessed by the restless spirit of Douglas Fairbanks.

Put it this way: this movie makes the Star Wars prequels look like the crowning achievement of world cinema.

Put it another way: it's worse than Highlander 2.

There is no more damning assessment of any movie than that, but to make a HIGHLANDER movie worse than Highlander 2 is pretty astounding.

(Dealer's Choice, at the Dark Horse, opening September 18, $10, www.phillybinge.com)

It's sad, really, because I was hoping a new Highlander movie would lift me up out of the despair of Chelsea being robbed of a win on Saturday morning by an official who does not understand the fairly important part of the offside rule that one can not be offside if one is BEHIND THE BALL. I dread the possibility that Blackburn's play on Saturday - 8 men on the defense at all times, hardly a shot on goal to speak of, three defensive substitutions, and a general unwillingness to even consider trying to win - is what we're going to face all season. It's bad enough when your winning goal in the face of such cowardice is wrongly disallowed, but if I have to watch that kind of garbage football all season it's going to be a long year.

(Dealer's Choice, at the Dark Horse, opening September 18, $10, www.phillybinge.com)

Remember that we have special Monday Night Football Quizo tonight, meaning that we will be starting at 7:30. That is SEVEN-THIRTY-IN-THE-PM, folks, since I want to be done and dusted in time to get home for kickoff. You thought the 24 premiere night quizo was fast? Tonight I will be the goddamned Flash compared to that.

(Dealer's Choice, at the Dark Horse, opening September 18, $10, www.phillybinge.com)

You also may have heard that I am producing a show which is playing at our very own Dark Horse Pub. It's called "Dealer's Choice," and it's by Patrick Marber. It is out-fuck-standing. It opens tomorrow night and tickets are but ten dollars. It has poker, English accents, and beer. What else could you want from a play? All the information you need is at our website, www.phillybinge.com. Come see it. You will be glad you did. More accurately, I will make you very unhappy if you do not.

(Dealer's Choice, at the Dark Horse, opening September 18, $10, www.phillybinge.com)

7:30 tonight, then, see you there.

(Dealer's Choice, at the Dark Horse, opening September 18, $10, http://www.phillybinge.com)

JLK

Monday, August 20, 2007

Your Wildly Vacillating Quizo Update

I have railed against the weather numerous times in this space - previous instances of summer cold or winter heat or snow in April or whatever - and despite the fact that it is dark, cold, and raining in mid-August, the weather specifically is not what I'm shaking my fist at today. No, the problem is that for the last weekend life in general has taken this strange sort of erratic turn and, well, I tend to think my life was interesting enough beforehand.

One of the underlying causes of all of this is that the constant stress of obsessing about the horror show that my job has become is beginning to cause noticeable cracks in my psyche. This wouldn't be so bad were it not for the fact that it was pretty well cracked to begin with.

Things started well enough on Thursday night when I went to a book signing by William Gibson at the library. This was quite the big deal for me, bringing to 40% my completion rate for Meeting My Top Five Literary Idols - which is close to as impressive as it's going to get when one considers that meeting F. Scott Fitzgerald or William Shakespeare would require, respectively, some serious necromancy and some really, REALLY serious necromancy, and the fact David Mamet scares the shit out of me. (For the record, the other 20% that I successfully met was Neil Gaiman.)

The reading/signing thing was cool - he has aged an awful lot recently, but he's still sharp and funny, and when he signed my books he commented happily on how well-traveled my copy of Neuromancer was.

Then on the way home from the signing my car blew up.

This is only slightly an exaggeration. My car overheated fairly dramatically - the temperature gauge swinging back and forth over the redline, steam occasionally, but not constantly, billowing out from under the hood - and the next morning when I went to open the hood (it being too dark to see the engine at the time being, you know, night and all) there was coolant fluid pretty much everywhere, so it's a safe bet that SOMETHING with coolant in it, a hose of some sort I'm guessing, failed rather catastrophically while I was driving to the comic shop from the signing. I figure I was lucky to limp the car home. After consulting my finances and my personal feelings on the matter I determined that I am sick and fucking tired of spending money keeping this goddamn 16-year-old whoring sonofabitch car running. So, after my show is over I will be out and about on the market for a car.

Show, you say? Why yes! A show. Perhaps you've heard I produce shows. It's called Dealer's Choice. It is by Patrick Marber and it will be playing in the Restaurant at the pub opening on September 18. Originally we were going to be part of the Philly Fringe, but that is a gigantic pain in the ass to say the least, so we're not. Someone in my ridiculously talented cast - and here I do not exaggerate even the slightest little bit, this bunch is the most talented single group of actors I think I've ever seen in a show in this city, I don't know how in the HELL they're working for me - came up with the idea of calling our show the headliner of the "Philadelphia Binge Festival," and I liked it so much I decided to steal it. Tickets for the show are a scant $10, and if you get there early enough you also get to have dinner. So it's like going out for dinner and a show, only you're going to one place. Ask me for details. Website is up and ticket sales begin shortly.

Everyone remember the Medea references? Oh, that was nothing. Prepare to be besieged.

Anyway, a rental car later, me and some of my boys (and their moms and sisters, which was a little odd) were on our way to the Meadowlands on Saturday night to see the Los Angeles David Beckhams (nee Galaxy) play the New York Red Bulls. I wasn't sure what to expect from the experience necessarily, but two tailgates (totalling some 7 hours, both before and after the game), being pressganged into cooking for more than a hundred people at said tailgates, 66,000 fans in the stadium, spending the game next to several hundred Red Bulls supporters who can be charitably described as "completely insane" and NINE FUCKING GOALS! was certainly not it.

Sunday morning saw a big-time shock in the Manchester derby, and then something less of a shock as Chelsea and Liverpool played another spiteful, mean-spirited game that ended, mercifully, in a 1-1 draw, though I'm still convinced Chelsea left 2 points on the table there and could have won. The combination of the beginnings of cold and rain, the knowledge that I'd have to go to work 18 hours after, and the fact that we didn't beat the filthy Scouse put me in quite the pissy mood. Until I got home, at least, where after weeks of prodding I finally convinced my father to watch Hot Fuzz which - as I predicted - he loved, thus once again proving the age-old axiom "I am always right."

Then, just before bed, I pulled out my new William Gibson book to read before sleeping, and I noticed that one of my Top Five Literary Idols apparently inscribed all of my books "To Joan."

I don't even smoke anymore, but there aren't enough cigarettes in the goddamn world for this.

JLK

Monday, July 09, 2007

Your "One Shall Stand, One Shall Fall" Quizo Update

Let's spend a minute or two talking about the Transformers movie, which I saw last week.

Transformers is the greatest movie in the history of ever. It is the crowning achievement of all human endeavor and is the single most important piece of entertainment since the dawn of human civilization, if not before.

Deviations from or disagreements with these statements will not be tolerated. Freedom may be the right of all sentient beings, but if you bitch on Transformers in my presence I will kick your ass right off this planet.

And that's all we need to say about Transformers.

The movie was far and away the highlight of the last week, since the only thing that even could have competed with it (before I saw the movie, at least) was my trip to New York this past weekend to hang out with the New York Blues (the official East Coast Chelsea supporters' club), and that ended with me watching my friend Tim, who was at the time the single drunkest being in not only this universe but through several layers of parallel dimensions on either side of it, asking a prostitute if she knew where the Kwik-E-Mart was. You haven't been mortified until you've watched someone ask a hooker for directions to a fictional convenience store.

You'd think that the only single woman at the party leaving with you and your friend is a good thing, even when said friend's blood has enough alcohol in it to successfully clean your sparkplugs, but trust me - said friend spending a 30-block cab ride threatening to throw up all over you and said single woman and then, after said cab ride, walking up to said prostitute and saying, "hey, do you know where the fucking Kwik-E-Mart is? Come on! I know you do! Where - is - the FUCKING! - Kwik-E-Mart?!" is not repeat NOT a good thing.

This is my life, and it's ending one minute at a time.

Finally, if anyone would like to see the New York Red Bulls play the Los Angeles David Beckhams on August 18 for $25, please let me know by noon tomorrow - the aforementioned New York Blues are getting a group ticket thingy and this is, to my knowledge, the only way to buy tickets to only that game (and not, as they normally make you do, also buy tickets to three others).

That's soccer I'm talking about there, by the way, for those of us who haven't been paying attention.

JLK

Monday, June 11, 2007

Your Misinterpreted Symbolism Quizo Update

This morning we have a few random snippets from the last few days around the horn in an effort to bring some vague semblance of meaning to a random, chaotic universe.

- At work on Thursday in one of the many useless, interminable meetings I am forced to sit through I actually had to utter, totally seriously, the phrase, "I'm sorry, but I don't see our choice of software platform as a moral issue." This is the kind of crap I have to deal with during the day. And you wonder why I get crabby.

- Standing in the rear lobby of the Borgata (which is kind of like the Endor Shield Generator Back Door of the casino) at 4AM on Saturday a dealer friend of mine uttered, totally seriously, the phrase, "Frankie the Hat just cashed at the fifteen hundred stud, made thirty-six hundred, he woulda done better but that fuckface Darden outboated him on 7th Street," and not only am I vaguely horrified that I'm having this conversation at such an ungodly hour, but I briefly wonder where my life went wrong that at said hour I'm talking about SOMEONE I KNOW who is actually called "Frankie the Hat."

- I was still at the Borgata at 4AM on Saturday because, simultaneously, the bridge on the White Horse Pike was stuck in the "up" position, there was a gigantic accident at the Atlantic City toll plaza on the expressway, and there was - I am not making this up - a tattoo convention totally gridlocking traffic throughout the city, all of which combined to make it essentially impossible to leave Atlantic City before that ungodly hour. On another note, I have come to the conclusion that island living is probably not for me.

- I do not have any specific comments on the final episode of the Sopranos, but I did get a fairly complete recap of it from a friend of mine who did watch it and based on what I was told I agree with him that it does not sound exactly riveting.

- I did successfully vacation at the shore this weekend, and in between Jeeves and Wooster DVDs - FUNNIEST. SHIT. EVER. - managed to catch the back-to-back basic-cable airings of The Silence of the Lambs and Hannibal which, shall we say, lose something in their edited versions. (For the record, I think Hannibal is a fascinating movie.)

- On the way home from the shore last night, I was stopped at a light in Pemberton when a car pulled up next to mine. Well, next to and just slightly forward of. While I was fiddling the radio between the Philadelphia and North Jersey NPR stations I heard some music coming from this car that made my head jerk up very quickly. Coming from this car was a song by a ridiculously obscure Swedish band called The Sounds that, to this date, I have never met a single other person who has heard of them. They're so obscure that I'm not even mentioning them as a clue to a question tonight as that would be unfair. To hear this band coming from another car in the middle of nowhere in Central New Jersey at 10 o'clock on a Sunday night is completely unreasonable. I looked to see who the other person in New Jersey to find - gasp! - a beautiful woman. Well, I assume she was beautiful. The combination of darkness and my viewing angle meant that all I could see was that she had blond hair and wore glasses. Suffice it to say that from the shoulders-up rear-three-quarter view she was quite attractive. And she had Pennsylvania plates! She was on her way home from the shore, just like me!

I was certain at this point that I had finally found the girl of my dreams.

This feeling lasted approximately 0.85 seconds until I realized that a) I still knew absolutely nothing about this woman other than the fact that she liked a band I liked and had her car registered in the same state as me, b) the last couple women I thought were the girl of my dreams turned out to be closer to Hannibal Lecter than Helen of Troy, and c) I refused to meet the girl of my dreams in a car in New Jersey, and especially not on the Pemberton end of 38.

Still, I was vaguely wistful when she peeled out of the light at about 400 miles an hour with "Queen of Apology" blaring out of the car windows.

- During a Rite Aid trip over my shore weekend I saw an endcap display for an actual item called "ear lobe tape." Now, the fact that "ear lobe tape" exists is frightening enough. The truly scary thing is that THERE WAS ONLY ONE LEFT. In a weekend full of frightening adventures, the fact that multiple people are walking around Ocean Gate, NJ with their earlobes taped to their skulls is the most frightening thing of all.

JLK

Monday, May 14, 2007

Your Clenched Teeth Quizo Update

Today's e-mail is again short and has little useful information in it because I am not at my desk. I am not at my desk because I am sitting at a computer hastily set up on an end table in another person's office - an office designed for use by only one person - because the thrice-damned whore I used to share a large, two-person office with (we've talked about her before) decided she wanted her intern to have my desk.

So because there is literally nowhere else in the entire department to put a computer, I (the systems administrator who has worked here for six months) am sitting at an end table while a 19-year old intern (who started 25 minutes ago and whose duties, I just learned, consist of data entry and stuffing envelopes) gets my gigantic desk in my large office. And my chair. And my phone.

Yeah, this is gonna end well.

JLK

Monday, April 16, 2007

Your Share and Share Alike Quizo Update

I woke up this morning and peeked out my blinds to see how hard it was still raining, as the night before I had been seriously worried that I could drown walking from my house to my car. Five inches of rain in the last day and no end in sight. FIVE INCHES OF RAIN! That's the equivalent of, like, twenty-five feet of snow. Or two feet, I can't be bothered to figure out how much it actually is.

I could not tell how hard it was raining, however, because my window was covered in some kind of opaque white substance. "Now," I said, "that can't be snow, because it's April 16th, and for me to be unable to see out my window on April 16th because it is covered in snow is just insane."

I instead chose to believe that, somehow, my window had been covered in white paint by some malicious third party. Possibly leprechauns. The fact that my window is some 25 feet or so above the ground was merely a logical inconvenience, and I went about getting ready for work convinced that gold-hoarding pituitary dwarfs from County Cork had painted over my windows, as the alternative was too terrible to contemplate.

Then I stepped outside to go to work to find that not only was it, in fact, snowing, but it was snowing sideways.

Snowing. Fucking. SIDEWAYS. On April 16th.

I just stood on the front step, sighed, and said, "it's going to be one of those days."

And, lo, it is. I had almost an entire hour to myself in the office this morning before the thrice-damned woman who also sits in this room arrived and showed me that a day when I wake up to sideways snow actually CAN get worse.

Let me explain something to you.

I like my job. I really like my job. Those who know me well realize what a freakish statement this is, but it's true. Aside from the occasional grunt work - like back in February or so when I spent two weeks looking up zip codes, which is as much fun as it sounds - my job is challenging and interesting. The people, for the most part, are very nice.

But I swear to god I'm going to kill this fucking woman.

I know more about this woman's personal life than I knew about the personal lives of most of the women I've DATED, since even when we were dating I didn't spend forty hours a goddamned week listening to them talk - talk very loudly, for hours at a stretch - about their personal lives. I know where she lives. I know what her husband does for a living. I know what her EX-husband did for a living. I know where her children went to college. I know where they work. I know what kind of car her husband drives. I don't want to know these things. I know them anyway.

This knowledge, mind you, comes JUST from when she talks on the phone. This activity takes up, I dunno, maybe 3-4 hours a day. The other 4-5 hours are spent talking to the never ending stream of people who are constantly in and out of this room to talk to this woman. As close as I can figure, approximately 3% of these visits are work-related. The rest are just her talking about meaningless nonsense to other people - sometimes as many as FOUR other people at one time - about, I dunno, whatever stupid shit is rattling around in the sorry excuse for a birdcage this woman calls a brain.

Not to mention that she has what might be charitably considered the most annoying speech pattern in the history of sentient lifeforms. Imagine listening to, say, Fran Drescher doing an impression of Kelly from The Office reading the Declaration of Independence while jabbing icepicks into your eyeballs every time the word "for" or "he" comes up. It's like that. When ending a conversation or when someone leaves the office she says bye-ee. Two syllables. "Bye" and "ee." I hear the word bye-ee about 40 times a day. At one point, when someone came in here to tell a story about their newborn son, she said the word "awww" fourteen times in sixty seconds. I counted. FOURTEEN TIMES IN ONE MINUTE. I am not making this up. This is the background noise of my day.

At least it was. Initially I listened to my iPod while working because it helped me concentrate while I was trying to do extremely detailed systems administration. Now I just blast whatever I've got - at this moment it's the soundtrack to The Matrix Revolutions - at the highest volume possible to drown out the incessant noise in this room. Because, you know, programming a massive database that has to accurately track every penny that comes into this place lest the IRS seize the hospital's assets, I wouldn't want to work WITHOUT FUCKING DISTRACTIONS while doing that, would I?

I look outside and it's still snowing, though at least right now it appears to be coming straight down.

Anyone still wonder why I'm bitchy?

JLK

Monday, April 02, 2007

Your Screaming Agony Quizo Update

As you may or may not have heard, today was the first day of the new "campus-wide non-smoking policy" here at the hospital. Well, technically, the first day of the policy was yesterday, but as I'm not one of the poor bastards who has to come in on the weekends ( i.e. "nurses") it started for me today. I gave the matter a lot of thought and came to the conclusion that I'd rather be miserable for a week while I stop smoking altogether - well, more miserable than usual - than me miserable every day for the rest of my life.

And so, on my first day enjoying the new policy I'm sitting here, the woman who also sits in this room who NEVER FUCKING SHUTS UP I MEAN CHRIST ALMIGHTY DO YOU REALLY THINK I WANT TO LISTEN TO YOUR PERSONAL CONVERSATIONS ALL GODDAMNED DAY FOR GOD'S SAKE JUST STOP TALKING FOR FIVE FUCKING SECONDS will be here any moment, I have forgotten the headphones for my iPod (which is the only thing that makes being in this room all day with that cursed woman bearable), and I have to sit through three hours of training later today for software that a) I never, ever use, and b) I already know how to use. Instead of cigarettes to deal with all of this, I have a bag of Tootsie Roll pops and the knowledge that I'm pretty sure I could successfully murder someone if I have to. This is not as comforting as you might think.

Now some of you may be wondering what the big deal about this is. If you are it's likely you've never smoked in your life (good for you!) and have thus never tried to quit smoking (go fuck yourself!). Let me try and explain what quitting smoking is like.

First, imagine you're standing barefoot in the desert. I'm not talking some candy-ass desert like the Mojave or the Gobi or shit like that. Serious desert. Super-desert. The Sahara. Victoria. Real badass desert. We're talking Tatooine here, except instead of two suns there's, like, five. Okay, so you're standing barefoot on the surface of Tatooine. You don't have any sunblock and you've been standing out in the desert for, let's say, seventeen days, so what little actual skin you have left looks like the original copy of the Declaration of Independence that somehow got basal cell carcinoma. While you're standing there, your mother-in-law is standing behind you reciting bad knock-knock jokes while repeatedly jabbing you in the kidneys with a #8 crochet hook. Small desert imps chase each other around your shoulders with mini desert imp flamethrowers which occasionally catch your hair and ears alight, and you are constantly fed undercooked Thai food which causes gastrointestinal convulsions that could power a small automobile. Finally, boll weevils slowly eat your fingers and a large desert crocodile sits in a lounge chair wearing a jaunty straw hat, sipping an appletini and reading Gravity's Rainbow, occasionally looking over at you, licking its lips and saying, "you know, I think I'll eat you tomorrow. Or, you know, perhaps not. Got to keep you on your toes, old boy."

The situation I describe there is, in fact, PREFERABLE to quitting smoking.

Yeah, I'm going to be a real peach for the next week.

On the plus side, the new season of Doctor Who started so, you know, yay.

JLK

Monday, March 19, 2007

Your More Than Likely Quizo Update


I remembered this weekend something I read once about quantum mechanics, how when the first scientists started studying it and they tried to get exact values of things all their equations pumped out garbage (the one guy who kept getting 1=100 I found particularly amusing). They learned that at a quantum level everything operates on probability, that you can only determine the ODDS that something will or won't happen.

The structure of the universe is based on a probability distribution. That doesn't give me a whole lot of hope for, you know, anything, since as the theme song to Casino Royale (which I've watched approximately 14 times in the last week) teaches us: "the odds will betray you."

Take for instance, the following situation from Saturday morning, once again guest-starring my father:

After waking up two hours before I planned to (highly unlikely) and spending the better part of an hour trying to dig my car out of several inches of solid ice and then still being unable to go anyplace (also unlikely) my dad comes out and along with two neighbors (me interacting with my neighbors in any way: incredibly unlikely) push me out of my parking space so I can get to the bar and watch Chelsea thump Sheffield United 3-0 (very likely) all by myself (unlikely).

I go around the block to find my father standing next to his car. He can't get out of his space, doesn't have time to dig out, and needs me to drive him to work. No problem. I still have time what with me getting up so freakishly early on a Saturday.

So after dropping him off I'm taking the Boulevard to the pub instead of 95. As I'm on the Route 1 bridge making the merge onto the Schuylkill a truck turns off onto 76 westbound. As this happens, a piece of ice about the size of a bread plate flies off the top of the truck towards my car.

Now at the exact moment this is happening I am using the handy windshield-spray-thing - again, my knowledge of cars does not extend to the actual name of this device - to clear some gunk of the windshield.

The ice flies in an arc towards my car and strikes EXACTLY ON THE JOINT of my windshield wiper arm where the blade connects to the arm as it is in mid-wipe and my driver's side windshield wiper blade splits in half lengthwise and flies off of the front of my car in two different directions.


My response to this event was to say:

"JESUS FUCKING CHRIST AAAGGGHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!"

As at that precise instant I was certain I was more than likely about to die, since with no visibilty and my car apparently under attack from ice artillery I could quite easily have driven myself off the bridge.

Let's line up all the pieces here (the "probability cloud" as the physicists say): me - truck - my location - truck's location - my velocity - truck's velocity - position of windshield wiper - velocity of windshield wiper - original resting location of ice - escape velocity of ice from top of truck - windspeed, gravity, and air resistance affecting trajectory of ice towards car.

For those things to all come together at once to destroy one of my windshield wipers - and incidentally, mean I had to travel the length of 76 from Route 1 to 676 leaning over to look out the passenger side of the window since, with the plowed snow, there was no place to pull over - well suffice it to say that the odds against that are mathematically disharmonious.

Afterwards my dad said "you're lucky you're not dead," and I'm like "yeah, being lucky, that's my problem."

Also speaking of odds, if you watched Galactica last night - and shame on you if you didn't - it is clear that some of the people we know and love are going to be revealed as Cylons next week, which is something I'm not sure how I feel about. For what it's worth, my take is:

More than likely a robot (5-3 odds): Sam, Torii

Less than more than likely a robot (6-1): Gaeta, Dualla, Starbuck [choke][sob]

Not remotely more than likely a robot, aka almost certainly not a robot (12-1): Helo

If he's a robot there'd better be a damn good explanation for it (20-1): Saul MF Tigh

I will be taking bets tonight. Get in on the Cylon Pool while the action is hot.

Then, this morning, on the way to work traffic on Cottman Avenue was backed up (and I mean way the hell backed up) in this one spot where it never is. I finally get there and learn that the cause of the problem - I am not making this up - is these two old people just standing in the middle of the street. A man and a woman, easily 80-something if they're a day, standing square in the right lane on Cottman Avenue.

What are the odds against THAT?

JLK





Monday, February 26, 2007

Your Back To Earth Quizo Update

It's a good-news-bad-news kind of day.

The good news is that my back doesn't hurt anymore and hasn't for a couple days. The bad news is that this means I don't really have an excuse to consume dangerous quantities of painkillers any more and thus have to live on this lousy planet with everyone else. I couldn't even pull a Brett Favre and get hooked on them and claim that's why I throw so many interceptions. I do kinda miss the purple clouds, though.

The good news is that Chelsea won the Carling Cup yesterday, defeating Arsenal 2-1 and winning us our first silverware of the season. The bad news is that Chelsea and England captain John Terry got kicked in the face and was knocked out for a little while, but he seems to be okay.

The good news is that the Oscars were last night and Martin Scorcese finally came up big. The bad news is that I was supposed to go to an Oscar party down the shore last night and the FUCKING SNOW prevented me from doing so.

Remember that bit a couple weeks ago, from that one psychotic e-mail that went out because Dr. Chill complained that I hate everything, where I talk about how wonderful snow is? Yeah, that was a lie. I hate it. I HATE IT. I hate it more than anything. MORE THAN ANYTHING, do you hear me? It drives me insane. Then last night I'm trying to get ready for this thing - which was black tie, further pissing me off, because goddamn I look good in formal wear, as those of us who were here on Barrymore night are aware - trying to divine from the weather forecasts whether it's safe to drive to Somers Point. Or, more accurately, whether it's safe to drive BACK from Somers Point at 1AM.

All the websites and TV stations were being relatively noncommittal and I was about to take the plunge when the thing on weather.com changed from "light snow, with a possibility of sleet and a secondary possibility of some icing" to "DON'T DRIVE TONIGHT IF YOU VALUE YOUR LIFE ZOMG WEATHER DEEEEAAAAAAAAATH!!!!!!shift1"

So much for that idea.

Did anyone catch that one commercial during the show last night, where Diane Sawyer is doing an interview with Bob Woodruff? He's that reporter who got bombed in Iraq and needed massive brain surgery and whatnot. I certainly have nothing against him, but during the commercial they quote this one bit where Sawyer asks him incredulously - Diane Sawyer, curse her black soul, is always incredulous about something - says "so you have no fear of death anymore?"

At this point I said out loud to the TV, "you know what, if I took a fucking RPG to the dome and lived to tell about it I probably wouldn't be scared of a whole hell of a lot anymore either. I'd be like, skydiving? You got it. What? No. Parachutes are for pansies."

Then I peeked outside and saw that the entire world had been encased in snow and ice and STILL wished I'd gone to the Oscar party. Goddamn snow.

The good news, though, is that my recent back injury, while comparatively healed, gives me total immunity from shoveling, since that's how I did myself last time. The bad news...

Well, I guess there isn't any bad news on that one.

JLK

Monday, January 22, 2007

Your "Life is Once Again Pain" Quizo Update

If anyone is keeping track of such things - and I severely doubt that anyone is - you may recall a Quizo update from about a year ago (February 27, to be precise) which occurred after I spent an entire weekend moving out of my old apartment and moving a bunch of furniture out of my old office. This, as you may recall, led to a significant amount of physical pain and the infamous "pain" speed round.

Well, folks, we're back there again. And, let me remind you, pain can take on many forms.

First we have the sort of pain caused by seeing something so strange, so odd, so unbelievably weird that you get that tickle in the back of your brain that you realize is your actual consciousness writhing in agony.

Saturday night, upon returning from the theatre, I found an instant message waiting for me on my computer. Now normally I am very good about putting up an away message so that people think I am not just ignoring them when I am unable to receive one of the many thousands of IMs I get on a daily basis. This one said:

"Is this John?"

I looked at that and realized that the only way someone could have actually GOTTEN my IM is if I gave it to them or they read it on the Quizo website, which is essentially the same thing as me giving it to them. OBVIOUSLY, yes, this is me. Who else could it be? Let's look at my IM for a second: "LSUKozemp." It's been that for almost ten years. There are only something like 25 people named Kozempel in THE ENTIRE UNITED STATES, and as far as I know I am the only one who went to LaSalle, and I am for damn sure the only one who a) is, in fact, me and b) tells people "my IM is LSUKozemp." At that point I am seriously starting to worry that someone is out there who not only managed to obtain (through whatever means) my IM but for some deranged reason thinks that SOMEONE OTHER THAN ME WOULD BE USING IT.

Put another way: did one of you IM me this weekend? If so, I was at the theatre. Sorry. Leave a name next time.

Speaking of theatre, this week is your last chance to see Medea, playing at the Second Stage at the Adrienne, tickets $20, box office 215-563-4330 or www.prosfromdovertheatre.com. And that's the last time we'll hear about that.

There was also emotional pain this weekend, though thankfully it was all sports-related and thus reasonably minor. Chelsea lost to Liverpool on Saturday morning, which - though painful - was made considerably easier by the fact that the 7:30AM starting time meant that there were reasonably few Scousers at the pub and those who were there were, frankly, surprisingly well-behaved.

Then, on Sunday afternoon while watching the conference championships, we had two little muddles. First, the Chicago Bears' embrace of a cold weather running offense means I was denied one of the greatest pleasures of the NFL, i.e. watching Rex Grossman - aka "Sexy Rexy," aka "Rextasy," aka "The Sex Cannon" - throw interception after interception and generally be the worst, most hideously overrated and undertalented quarterback the NFL has to offer. That displeased me greatly. There are few things more entertaining than watching Sexy Rexy completely self-destruct.

Then, of course, came the AFC Championship. After a first half in which it seemed that Bill Belichek and Tom Brady's Faustian bargain was going to come through big-time once again, Peyton and the Colts fought back to take the lead.

The situation, then, is that the Patriots have the ball on the 20, with 54 seconds left, down 4 points.

I said to my father at this point, "well, clearly, the Patriots are going to win."

Note well the fact that Tom Brady - who I am largely ambivalent towards but hate his fans with unbridled passion - has engineered an astonishing SIX game-winning drives in the postseason. Tom Brady, in that respect, is the Jack Bauer of the NFL. 4 down, minute to go, 80 yards - yeah, he's got them right where he wants them.

Then he threw an interception and... and... it suddenly became clear that something is dreadfully WRONG with the world. Hence more emotional pain.

And, on a final and physical pain note, yesterday morning I was awoken by an incredible, earth-shattering pain in my left leg which has since been determined to be a cramp. I maintain that if this is a cramp it is no ordinary cramp, but the Mayor of Cramp City in Cramp County in the United States of Crampia on Planet Cramp in the Cramp Galaxy. I mean, fucking OW. It still hurts. This is why I may still be walking with a cane tonight, because there is a good chance I will be unable to fully flex my left leg. But, hey, House teaches us that leg pain and cane usage is an excuse to be cruel and aloof and not give a damn about other people's feelings.

So, well, at least now I have an excuse. Thanks, House!

JLK