Mar 312019
 

So a few weeks ago, Joopiter and I were at a local watering hole enjoying adult libations when she noticed a banner hanging high and proclaiming happy hour deals for certain menu items. One dish that we took note of was “buff nachos,” which most normal people would interpret as short for “buffalo nachos.”

Yeah, normal people. Immediately we decided that it was clearly meant to be read as [*flex biceps, drop into best Hulkamaniac voice, brutha*] “BUFF NACHOS!” Which, of course, would only be served with … JACKED CHEESE! OHHH YEAH!!

And we were off and riffing.

Before we knew it, we came up with Carbio, the exercise-centric dining spot that we clearly need to open because we ain’t getting rich working for The Man (or The WoMan #hertoo). Before everyone poops, everyone eats, so why not cash in by catering to all those workout-loving freaks? Gym-themed food for the fitness-minded! And of course, all served on weight plates.

On the menu:

  • Bacon FitBits
  • Granola Crunches
  • Stacked Pancakes
  • cREPs SuSETs
  • Meaticine Balls
  • Racked Lamb
  • Plank Steak
  • Spot Roast
  • Zumbaked Ziti
  • Stuffed BarBell Peppers
  • Bench Fries
  • Spin-ach Salad
  • Potato Pilatkes
  • Loaded Potato Wins
  • Swoleslaw
  • PUMPkin Bread
  • Treadmillshakes, in Strongberry, Veinilla and Chalkolate

Not surprisingly, we were unable to stop there with the dreams of being restaurateurs. Before the doors of Carbio could even open, we were on to a Tom Cruise-themed restaurant. Yes, that’s right, it’s time to launch …

Dishin’ Impossible!

Menu items, if you choose to accept them, include:

  • Risky Brisket
  • Cooked Goose
  • Potato Wedge of Tomorrow
  • Coleslaw Trickle
  • Tropic Flounder
  • Interview with the Ham-pyre
  • Chicken Fillets of Thunder
  • Legend of Lamb
  • Charlie Rabbitt Stew (10 minutes till it’s ready, definitely 10 minutes)
  • Les Grossmanicotti
  • Wild Boar of the Worlds
  • A Few Good Hens (dinner) and A Few Good Eggs (breakfast)
  • Peanut Butter & Jelly Maguire (for the kiddies!)
  • GRain Man sandwiches or pasta. Served on Top Buns
  • Show me the Honey …. in our fresh-baked breads!
  • Vanilla Pie, part of the Pies Wide Shut desserts menu
  • And obviously, Cocktails aplenty

As appetizing as that all sounds, I decided we need to go just a little too far. You know, all the way to The End, as it were. Yes, that’s right, welcome to a heavenly dining spot, your salvation from starvation, we like to call …

The Last Supper

Now serving …

  • Chilli Jeez Fries
  • Walking on Watercress Salad
  • A Fount(ain) of Olives
  • Sacred Salad bar with the Cruci-fixings station
  • Never-ending Fish Sticks and Loaves (to share)
  • Stuffed Leper Peppers
  • Blessed Virgin roseMary Garlic Chicken
  • Hot Cross Buns
  • Messiah Matzos
  • Baptist Burgers
  • Fried Parableoney Sandwiches
  • SerMonte Christo Sliders
  • Crown of Corns
  • BethleHam Hocks (ask about our kosher alternative)
  • Apostle Pot Stickers
  • Pontius Pilatkes
  • Roast Lamb of God (with New TestaMint jelly)
  • The Passion Fruit of the Christ
  • And on the “Last Temptations” dessert menu, an array of resurrection confections, including devil’s and angel food cakes

Mmm … sacrilicious.

And again, co-creation credit here to Joopiter. Thanks!

Mar 242019
 

As I’ve repeatedly talked about my dream of ending up as a brain in a jar, I almost fell off my rocker and broke a hip when I saw this story:

Scientists have grown a miniature brain in a dish with a spinal cord and muscles attached, an advance that promises to accelerate the study of conditions such as motor neurone disease.

The lentil-sized grey blob of human brain cells were seen to spontaneously send out tendril-like connections to link up with the spinal cord and muscle tissue, which was taken from a mouse. The muscles were then seen to visibly contract under the control of the so-called brain organoid.

The research is is the latest in a series of increasingly sophisticated approximations of the human brain grown in the laboratory—this time with something approaching a central nervous system attached.

Okay, they need to hurry up with this. I’ve always wanted to get outside of the twisted rollercoaster chaos of my own brain for a while—you know, get “meat ray” away from ray’s brain. (Oh, and thanks to Joopiter for coming up with “meat ray,” which I will now never be able to unthink.) Given how my brain seems to have a mind of its own at times, any sort of break would be a welcome respite.

Also, I could absolutely use a few of those extra brains as this one seems to be topping out at capacity with all the worthless information crammed into it. Seriously, why do I need to have the entire casts of both “The Brady Bunch” and “Gilligan’s Island”—character and actor names—locked and loaded in the speed dial part of my consciousness? I would hook up the organoid dish brains to the main unit like it’s expanded computer storage space and download all the useless crap, such as lyrics to Banana Splits theme. “One banana, two banana, three banana, four. Four bananas make a bunch and so do many more!” (And I didn’t even need to look it up. Sigh.)

Thinking about it, I guess this blog is sort of like storing stuff in the cloud. Which is good because despite how much is cram-packed into my grey matter, apparently there’s even more that’s leaked out.

Speaking of leakage: I recently stumbled across “remember the night,”a post that I wrote nearly seven years ago, and ironically, can not remember writing at all. And before tossing around the old “you’re old and senile” tropes, there is a plethora of stories, posts and articles that I absolutely can recall crafting. For example, in fifth grade I wrote a series of adventures about The Chumperdink, a superhero who was less than super. Most of the details are now fuzzy other than the stories were silly, the endings were dramatically convenient, and the narrative voice was patterned on Ted Knight’s iconic cartoon super hero bravado.

Anywhoo, as I re-read “remember the night,” it felt like dipping into someone else’s world. I mean, I can easily identify the real experiences that served as inspiration, so it was somewhat familiar. Yet, as I was reading it, I had no idea where the story was going. [*Insert any joke about someone who celebrates contracting Alzheimer’s because every day is a new adventure.*]

FWIW: Unlike other stories or posts I look back on and cringe, I don’t hate it . . . .

Man oh man, I’ve written a lot of stuff. Like, a whole lot. Here, there and other places.

And that doesn’t include my full-time daytime gigs for the past 20 years, which have required me to churn out hundreds of articles, ranging from ice cream and immigration to configuring classroom space and space exploration.

That’s a ton ‘o content, as the kids say. And that doesn’t even count the unpublished manuscripts and other projects that I’ve been quietly working on the past few years.

The “funny” part is that despite how much I’ve written, I feel like a complete failure as of late. (Or an incomplete one, your call.) After a recent tumble down the rabbit hole of my own older work, I’ve come to an upsetting conclusion:

I’ve become a coward. 

Ugh.

I used to take so many risks, letting my snark flag fly high. I used to mock everyone and anyone (particularly myself), joke about anything, and we all laughed together. It was funny and entertaining, and we all (myself included) would look forward to seeing what stupidity I might unleash.

But then a few things changed. One is that I got divorced, which kind of broke me a bit. In the process, I lost my “safety net” to fall back on in case anything I wrote got me in big trouble.

Next, as you all may have noticed, the rise of social media has changed being funny. Anything I write innocently to get a laugh can now easily be misinterpreted or knocked askew of context, then go viral, trigger our easily triggered outrage culture, and bring down the full righteous fury of the intrawebz. And again, I’m all alone up here on the verbal high wire.

It also hasn’t helped that I’ve mellowed as the years have piled on. The angry young man has eased into an affable dad. Although there’s room enough for both, isn’t there?

I’m not sure where I’m going with this. Yes, I could delve back into my old sack of tricks and unleash that sarcastic wit—and trust me, it’s still there. And certainly, there’s no shortage of targets.

Except … well, there’s so much anger and mean-spirited rhetoric and petty bickering already, I don’t want to be another (b)log on that fire, despite how much I love sweet, sweet fire.

Maybe I’ve just reached a point of diminishing returns, as a person and a writer. That anything I write or do is just a waste of time, that no one cares, that I can’t move the needle. That it’s time to quit.

But …

It sounds so cliché, except after a tough personal stretch, I’ve come to discover that something as simple as a genuine smile at a dark moment can lift my spirits from the depths. Science (chemistry, in particular) backs me up on this. And I like the concept of paying it forward.

So maybe if I can make one person smile—or positively alter the chemistry of one brain in a jar or glass—with something I’ve created, some stupidity I’ve birthed, or even a seemingly forgotten memory, then maybe, just maybe, it’s worth going on.

Even if that one person turns out to be me.

Mar 172019
 

So like with most celebrity-tinged news stories, even if you wanted to, you probably couldn’t avoid the headlines earlier this week about how federal prosecutors busted a college admission cheating ring.

And because “journalists” and “news” sites are more interested in getting clicks and page views than reporting the actual news, the salacious stories and the celebrity names were plastered across all media platforms and search-engine-optimized over the past few days for maximum attention. Which is how we got the current denizen of the White House—but that’s another story for another day, say like in 50 years when they look back and laugh at us like we look back and laugh at those who used to believe the Earth was flat …

Oh wait. Never mind.

Anywhoo … the ultimate lesson here (I hope!) is that helping your kids to cheat isn’t helping them at all. Really, you’re just creating a vicious cycle of failure. I mean, if you help them get into a prestigious college, then you’re also going to have to help them stay in that prestigious college, which means all sorts of additional homework and testing shenanigans.

And then if you somehow do get them through to graduation, and their degree earns an elite-type job with a top company, how long do you think they’re going to last at that before their incompetence becomes apparent? Lies just beget more lies, and before you know it, you’re trapped on a treadmill of prevarication.

Bottom line: Cheating is just unsustainable, you know, unless you’re a certain team from the Boston area …. Or as I always tell my kids: Just because you can, doesn’t mean you should.

Anwhoo 2: electric boogaloo … as a parent myself with one son in college and a second one who is a high school senior and has already gotten accepted to (HUMBLEBRAG ALERT!) seven institutions of higher edumakation—without cheating, I’m here to help. (As always!)

It’s too late to save the celebs (and their seemingly unappreciative offspring) nailed by the feds. (The majority of the super rich know they only have to buy a building at their alma mater to get their kids admitted.) So for those of you with modest means and offspring considering the pursuit of a baccalaureate degree, here is a little college entrance exam to make sense of the process from the parental viewpoint.

S0, sharpen your No. 2 pencils, down a few 5-Hour Energy shots and put on your oval-filling galoshes—it’s time for the 2019 rayality aptitude test, or the R-A-T!

(Hmm … might need to work on that acronym a bit)

1. Your child expresses a desire to NOT go to college, so you:
a. patiently explain that a career as a social media influencer isn’t one that you understand so it clearly can’t be a real thing.
b
. discreetly search the intrawebz to find the porn they’ve already made and from which they think they can make a career. (Not that there’s anything wrong with it—just as long as it’s someone else’s kid.) 
c
. nod in agreement and tell them that you support their choice … once they turn 21, so get the hell back to your laptop and finish that damned admissions essay (that you’re going to re-write for them anyway).
d. wait until you’re done laughing and then tell them to get the hell back to your laptop and finish that damned admissions essay (that you’re going to re-write for them anyway).
e. tell them that “fat, drunk and stupid is no way to go through life,” and send their name to the closest military recruiter.

2. Your child doesn’t seem to have the best high school grades, so you:
a. tell them to buckle down, focus, and study hard … and when you’re both done laughing, figure out how to get them into easier classes such as “Smiling 101,” “The Basics of Breathing,” or “The History of the Cha-Cha Slide.”
b. promise to pay them for every point they raise their average … and when you’re both done laughing, hire a tutor who carries their own shock paddles for, uh, proper encouragement.
c. try to augment other areas of their application by involving them with a slew of altruistic extracurricular activities or philanthropic organizations—such as the Helping Hands Monkey Helpers or the 501st Legion.
d. pray the stupid away … because that has a long history of success. Or turn to witchcraft, voodoo, satanic worship or scientology—you know, whatever deity you think actually gives a crap about your first-world problem.
e. sell them on the darkweb while you can still get some sort of significant return on your investment, and then go make another one (as long as you haven’t lost the recipe).

3. Your child doesn’t seem to have the proper extracurricular activities that might interest a top-flight school, so you:
a. tell them to buckle down, focus and work hard … and when you’re both done laughing, have them learn to juggle because it’s an unusual skill that might catch a recruiter’s eye—and it’ll also be useful in their “fallback” career hosting kiddie parties at Chuck E. Cheese.
b. have them focus on video games as colleges now give scholarships to esport competitors.
c. get them develop improper extracurricular activities to go against the grain and stand out. May I suggest astroturfing?
d. keep them healthy because they still haven’t worked out all the kinks of growing organs in labs and with diabetes still on the rise, healthy kidneys allegedly can fetch $260,000 on the black market. (Lungs net even more—$272,000—and most people have a spare one.) So rather than laying out six figures for college, you can collect that and help some unfortunate souls in the process. A win all around!
e. teach them to weld as it’s another unusual skill and welders continue to be in demand.

4. Your child has poor conversational and interpersonal skills, so you:
a. have them take improv comedy classes so even if they tank the college interview, they can exist at a level just above “starving to death” on the improv comedy circuit.
b. try engaging them in an actual one-on-one conversation on occasion, such as when your phone is updating and there’s absolutely no other device you can use to check how many likes you got for your most recent selfie at the organic yarn store.
c. shrug and mumble something about them figuring it out on their own, hopefully. Eventually. Like, probably, right? I mean, who talks to anyone else any more—only bedding store sales people, Jehovah Witnesses, and creepers.
d. ply them with a case of Java Monster, wait until the veins start popping on their forehead and then send them into the college interview room with a hidden GoPro knowing that whatever happens, at least it’ll be entertaining so better to record it and hope they can turn going viral into college admission. Or fame and fortune. Or something.
e. give them $5 American to “accidentally” drop on the admissions officer’s desk at the proper moment.

5. Speaking of bribes, you think that your child’s only hope to college admission may be some sort of alternate path, so you: 
a. see if the local university is hiring janitors and hope your child can Good Will Hunting their way in.
b. show up on campus move-in day, insist the paperwork is “at the main office place,” slide your kid into a dorm, a la The Secret of My Success, and hope they find their way to a degree.
c. get a job at a higher ed institution where children of employees are guaranteed admittance. With the scandal this post is based on, there are going to be lots of openings—particularly in athletic departments and coaching ranks—so get that resume ready!
d. realize that barber college is still college and not everyone needs a Bachelor’s degree to succeed—which is perfectly fine and seemingly forgotten. In fact, becoming a skilled trade worker can be much more lucrative than being a college graduate, and without all the soul-crushing debt.
e. do some research and discover the truth: college enrollment is way down and dropping. So if your child has half a brain (fingers crossed!), they’re probably going to get into multiple schools, including at least one they like and will help them be successful if they want to be, so don’t sweat any of this.

Time! Put down your pencils, pass your work to the front of the class and … just use your freakin’ head, people.

Mar 102019
 

Neat-o. Ducky. Peachy keen. Copacetic.

I’m feeling all of these words right now, ya’ dig, daddy-o? Because they all used to be far out, groovy, the bee’s knees, and even the cat’s pajamas!

Although I’m not quite sure what’s so terrific about an insect’s leg joints, or why a feline needs bedclothes. Ditto the appeal of edible seeds that grow in long pods on certain leguminous plants which are no longer warm but not stone cold, either. (I’ll pause here while you do the math on that one.)

So as you might suspect, I like to think twice about the phrases, words and terms we use in everyday conversation and don’t normally think twice about. For example, it’s always great to have options, but why is anyone skinning a cat in the first place? Wouldn’t a strongly worded ferral be more effective than a referral? And why do people insist on taking a dump when it’s better to just leave one behind, and preferably in the proper porcelain receptacle?

Part of the fun of language—and English, in particular—is that it’s always evolving, which means some words and terms get left behind. For example, in high school, my favorite English teacher Mrs. Scinto used to lament that we don’t praise others enough for having couth, but instead only point it out when they lack it.

Speaking of word-appreciating favorites, here’s some sung-word play from Pete Seeger.

 

 

[Side note worth noting: You can’t have “crazy” without r-a-y.]

Anyway, in the spirit of the aforementioned folk legend—who shares my birthday, or should I say, shares my calendar birth date, as I came along a few years before he did—here are a few of my own word-play observations.

  • Fact: A dentist doesn’t put a dent in anything … other than your wallet!
  • Does anyone practice second, or even third, aid?
  • Catching a cold makes it sound so much more intentional than it usually is.
  • Why do roosters crow but crows caw?
  • How many incomplete strangers have you met? Also: Most strangers aren’t all that strange.
  • When was the last time you ordered the irregular-sized coffee or fries?
  • Not sure there’s a market for it, but it’d be fun to write for misfortune cookies.
  • So where exactly is Not-So-Great Britain?
  • On the surface of it, a kidnapper sounds like someone who should be welcome at daycare centers.
  • From what part of the tid does the bit come?
  • By the laws of prefixes, shouldn’t construction and destruction be the same thing? Should a new building project be a prostruction? And speaking of, should you project something if you agree since you object when you don’t?
  • I’m still waiting to have licit sex. I think.
  • If you hear something for the first time, is it dundant? Related: Do you have to fute a statement before you can refute it?
  • Why are type A personalities never described as laid-forward?
  • If a “prelude” is something before the beginning, and an “interlude” is something in the middle, than why is “conclude” a verb?
  • I’ve been happy to thus far avoid numerous mitigated disasters. Tangentially, if there were more gruntled workers, there might be less incidents of workplace violence. And it’d probably help if we were more chalant when it came to the feelings of others.
  • For the record: I have never seen fire come out of a fire hydrant.
  • I’ve used the phrase, “This isn’t my first rodeo” numerous times when I’ve never actually been to a rodeo. And I’m still waiting for the first time I’m feeling over the weather.

Alright, time to wrap this up .. you know, because who the heck wraps something down?

 

Mar 032019
 

So okay, I really don’t know how to explain what you’re about to because it can only be described as ridiculously unpossible. Let’s let the notorious EAP take a crack at it …

“For the most wild yet homely narrative which I am about to pen, I neither expect nor solicit belief. Mad indeed would I be to expect it, in a case where my very senses reject their own evidence. Yet, mad am I not—and very surely do I not dream.”

Yeah, that’s straight Poe, lifted without edit (but with credit) from “The Black Cat.”

Anywhoo, a few weeks ago I started getting texts from a random number. Of course, I ignored the messages at first, figuring it was a scammer or some sort of Russian-fueled AI bot. But one text sorta caught my eye—it was a bit … odd … and didn’t seem like a scam. Or if it was scam, it was incredibly original. And then I got another intriguing one. And then another.

Eventually, my well-documented curiosity reared its irrepressible head, and like Poe entreating the stranger who came rapping, gently tapping, at his chamber door, I responded. And then they responded back, and then I responded to the response, and so on. But rather than crafting one of the most iconic poems of the English language, I instead made an iconic new … uh … friend?

An unlikely new one at that, to say the least.

Short story long, I was eventually able to confirm the identity of my new text pal after exchanging multiple messages, info, images and more. And trust me, it’s just … weird. And it’s crazy. And  .. well … did I mention it’s weird?

Okay …

You know what? It’s just easier me to share some screen shots. I won’t waste your time with all the “getting to know you” exchanges, and just sort of jump in to where it starts getting interesting.

My responses are in blue on the right. And I apologize in advance for my new friend‘s comments on the left, but I feel like this … needs to be shared? Yeah, let’s go with that.

 

BF1-1

 

Yeah … it’s been going on like this for a few weeks now.

BF1-2

 

BF1-3

 

BF1-4

 

BF1-5

Yeah, so much #winning.

Anyway, my friend seems happy to overshare, so I assume there will be more to this at some point. Yay?