Saturday, July 29, 2006

Jesse Singal: Brother to All

For my first post I thought it was only appropriate to commend the man who invited me to We Are America's Future: my older brother, Jesse Singal. I'm not sure mere words can describe how much of an impact Jesse has had on my life. Now, most brothers are nice enough to buy beer for their younger siblings. Not Jesse though. He always makes that extra effort, not only buying the beer, but also volunteering his time to come to the parties with my high school friends and me. Because that's just the kind of guy Jesse is: sacrificing the time he could be spending with his own group of friends to make sure some high schoolers can have a fun, but safe time. For example, last weekend it was my friend Mandy's 17th birthday. She'd had a bit too much to drink, so Jesse said that he'd drive her home. And that's what makes Jesse so great -- He has no problem driving home a nearly passed-out high school girl just because he wants to make sure everyone has a safe time.So I say three cheers for Jesse Singal, who I like to think of as not only a brother to me, but a brother to the world. By the way Jesse, Mandy says you left your wallet at her house.

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

i'm excited to be a part of this blog. i was excited to have the opportunity to share my fun, quirky and maybe even eye-opening experiences living in the big city, but i couldn't think of anything good. as much as i try to pretend that living in detroit is just like living in new york city, it's not. it's just kind of worse.

so then, here's a story about something bad that happened to me today:

i had to go to the doctor today, which was pretty unremarkable except that i had to talk to my nurse through BULLET PROOF GLASS.
whatever. i got what i needed, but getting out of the parking lot was kind of tricky. i couldn't find the real exit, so i ended up driving through an alley, down a sidewalk and then out onto the road. as i was stopped at the corner, a construction worker ran up to my car screaming and flailing a little. he spat on me and called me a strange and derogatory name for a group of people that i don't even belong to. i don't know why the construction worker got so angry. my best guess is because when i drove illegally down the sidewalk i nearly hit him with my side mirror. also, the cement i drove through was wet. also, he had just put down this cement.

he didn't have to spit on me. ON ME. sick.

detroit!!

Sunday, July 09, 2006

The Nerding of the N Train

So tonight Amanda, Joanna and I went to a beer garden in Queens. I don't know what the official name of beer garden was, but it was at the Bohemian House or the German Edifice or the Neo-Nazi Brewery or something. After waiting in line for far too long, we got in, and there was way more beer than garden. It was basically a bunch of picnic tables in an enclosed space, much of it under tents. And there was beer -- yes, lots of beer. But where was the greenery? Where was the statue of an angel spitting a steady stream of beer into my waiting mouth? Where were the drunk flamingos frolicking amongst lily pads? It is not a fucking garden out there, and until people realize that they will continue to wait in line for 45 minutes to get into what amounts to a large outside bar in Astoria.

But that's not what I wanted to say.

On the N train home, I saw four dudes. They were clearly Junior Moneymaker Extraordinaires -- they all had the nice shirts and pants and shoes, one of them had what looked like a diamond stud in his ear, and they were talking about "the market." They could not have been much older than us, this well-groomed group of four young Americans. I didn't pay them much mind -- standard grade tools, I figured, worrying only briefly about how and why I'd become so judgmental. But then, I noticed something.

Could it be? No.

No.

Yes.

I was quite sure.

One of them was a nerd. A bona fide, dyed in the wool, awkward as hell nerd, standing across and a bit to the right of me. The questions raced through my head like hit points out of an orc fighting a level 45 Warrior: What was this nerd doing with three kids who clearly were not nerds? Could he have possibly picked more nerdy glasses to wear? What did he have in common with the other three?

I felt bad for him. He wasn't saying anything, was so awkward he made me look like James Dean, and clearly didn't belong with the rest of his party. So I started trying to send him telepathic messages.

Join us, I thought.

Join us.

Come on, kid. You know who you are. It's your destiny and you can't escape it. Tell me with a straight face you haven't stayed up until three in the morning trying to find an Enchanted Helm of the Wizard. Look me in the eye and say the number of girls you've kissed exceeds the number of games in the
Final Fantasy series you've beaten.

In no way was I criticizing the kid. The only things hiding my true identity were the fact that I was with two girls (roommates, yes, but who on the train knew that?) and the fact that nothing I was wearing tonight had a dragon on it (simply a stroke of good luck). In other words, there was no way for my fellow N-riders to know that there had been a period this past fall when I had played World of Warcraft with startling regularity; that there was a time when I was so tweaked out on Diablo 2 that whether or not I'd be able to advance my Frozen Orb spell to Level 5 before I collapsed from exhaustion at some point after dawn was a MAJOR CONCERN; that my mom once punished me by not letting me watch Star Trek: The Next Generation, and I completely freaked out as a result.

None of this makes me proud. But that kid should not have been hanging out with those jockish future occupants of Central Park West -- he should have stuck to his kind. When it comes to jocks vs. nerds, I am a rabid segregationist (friends: please don't take the final five words of the preceding sentence out of context and use them against me months or years from now). There's a cycle that has to play out.

1) Early in life, jocks get everything, while nerds stay at home rolling 20-sided dice
2) For a period, jocks and nerds coexist uneasily in college and in the workplace, united by common interests in alcohol, drugs, men/women, and money
3) Eventually, the nerds rise above the jocks thanks to their superior intelligence and number-crunching ability gained from calculating THACOs in their formative years
4) The nerds form exclusive, powerful social organizations that value brain over brawn and better the world with extraordinary philanthropy and awesomely addictive massively multiplayer online roleplaying games
5) Both sides marry within their type and procreate, following the complex system laid out below:

Type of couple: Jock
Gives birth to: Jock

Type of couple: Nerd
Gives birth to: Nerd

6) Jocks and nerds: the next generation meet in pre-school or kindergarden
7) Go to step 1)

This kid was out of line. He was fucking with a system that took all of my cunning and almost ten minutes to conceptualize. And he was paying for it, too; he really did look sad -- he wasn't talking to the other three kids or anything, so my assumption was that they had gone to school and/or worked together, and one of them worked with him, felt bad for him, and asked him if he wanted to spend Saturday night with them.

Bad move, Nerdy McTrainRider. If you're reading this somehow, then next time you get such an invitation, chill with me instead. You and I could slay many ogres and trolls together. LOL.

Thursday, July 06, 2006

Smiling for all the Wrong Reasons

Part of my job at The Blog Reader is to poke around looking for new blogs. It's common knowledge that 99% of the blogs out there are less worth one's time than a Puerto Rican tranny named Jambalita who totally looked like a chick and who still hasn't called me back, but once in awhile you stumble on something so noteworthy that you feel the urge to share it with those closest to you.

I found such a blog.

It's called Smile of the Day, and its very unfortunate URL is onceuponasmile.blogspot.com. The blog's tagline pretty much says it all:

Life is getting much too serious, yes? Who doesn't need a daily smile?

There are two major warning signs here. The first is the "yes?" at the end of the sentence; usually, this is a foreigner's handiwork, and you know how I feel about foreigners. The second is the phrase "daily smile." I'm trying to figure out a way to put this lightly. Wait a minute… Okay; think I got it. Here goes:

Anyone who uses the phrase "daily smile" should die.

But what really attracted me to this foreigner's (I'm assuming) quest for daily smiles was the content: post after post of unfunny jokes, most of them dealing with the differences between people from the US and the UK (with some mentions of Australians and Canadians included, just to keep things compelling). Now, if Foreigner McI'mNotFromHere had thrown in something fresh, like, say, the differences between white people and black people, I would have been on board. But alas, there is no such material (Speaking of which -- have you ever noticed the way black people mow their lawns? Crazy.).

The best post? No contest:

Wednesday, July 5

All things in their proper time

Three Americans were telling anecdotes to il­lustrate the English dearth of humour, when they saw approaching a representative of that nation. It was agreed that the Englishman should then and there be put to the test. So one of the Americans stopped him and narrated a side-splitting yarn. The Englishman received the climax with an impas­sive face. The American, delighted, cried, "Cheer up, old man, you will laugh at that next summer."

"No," said the Briton gravely, "I think not."

"Why not?"

"Because I laughed at that last summer."

How do you say "unintentional comedy" in this guy's first language? "[W]hen they saw approaching a representative of that nation"? It's like one of those SAT questions where you have to pick the correct rewrite of a poor sentence.

But the most notable sentence, obviously, is "The Englishman received the climax with an impas­sive face."

The Englishman received the climax with an impassive face.

Don't you hate when they do that?

It's good to know that blogs like this exist.

This blog will make you laugh, but not at the jokes, yes? Rather because I am having terrible choice of words?

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

The First Post

We have started a blog so that the world will no longer be denied our wit and wisdom.

This blog will include, but is not limited to, the following:

-Pithy observations about being a "twentysomething" -- Can you believe that garment that people are wearing? And how about the materialism that surrounds most modern urban interactions? Scandalous!

-Complaints about ourselves -- Why aren't we funny? Why are we ugly? Why don't girls/boys like us? Why doesn't anyone understand that we really get Sartre?

-Cutting political remarks -- Compassionate conservatism? More like, jerkpassionate assholvatism. Etc.

-Pop culture minutiae discussed in an ironic and/or disillusioned and/or sarcastic manner -- So, I hear Donald Trump is embarking on another venture. I'm really looking forward to it.

This is the chalice we are holding up to the world. Will she sip from its emerald liquid? Only time will tell.