Archive Page 18

16
Jan
09

Star Wars, or Whatever

Here’s another cop-out embedded-video post. But it is hilarious.

It’s a retelling of the original three Star Wars movies by someone who has never seen any of them in their entirety. This woman has only a very shady passing knowledge of story. She gets some details right on, but she is way off in some other areas.

These movies are part of the Fabric of American Identity, or whatever. Everybody knows something about Star Wars.

I want to go to the bar planet!

I often wonder what sort of empty lives are lived by people who never saw Star Wars. It must be like a form of torture. Someone ought to tell Eric Holder about it.

14
Jan
09

Cat Swimming

This is absolutely delightful. I don’t know why, but hurling cats into a swimming pool to watch them swim is just gut-busting funny to me! Maybe it’s because it lets one be just a little sadistic — while also being completely harmless.

Makes me wonder about our cat…

13
Jan
09

Bright as a New Penny

The E train home from Midtown tonight was new, like the N or the L. It was disorienting to hear the calm, cogent voice of the prerecorded station announcements. (It was distracting to be able to understand the voice at all.) It’s the female voice of the N train, not the male voice of the 4/5/6. And I swear that train traveled faster and smoother than the old model.

The seats are blue and clean. The video monitor shows the bright blue “E” circle. The LED display clearly shows the next stops. The windows are not all scratched up. The floor is already scuffed … but I’ll let that pass.

09
Jan
09

Best. Product. Review. Ever.

Ari Brouillette is my hero. Bear with this and read through to the end:

The Secret saved my life!

08
Jan
09

There’s a Party in my Pantry, and Everybody’s Coming

Apparently it’s a trend in corporate interior design to trade a kitchen or break room for what is being called a “pantry.” In the house where I grew up, the pantry was where we kept the food. At work, the pantry is where the Splenda and coffee stirs are stored. There’s a microwave, a refrigerator, a TV, a Pepsi machine, a coffee maker. A kitchen sink. In fact, it’s a kitchen. But whatever.

I must make one correction: It’s not actually a coffee maker. It’s a “drink station.” It’s Flavia — a space-age, whiz-bang whirligig that whips up a variety of personalized hot beverages with the insertion of a flavor packet and the swift, light touch of a button.

To paraphrase the sagacious Edina Monsoon, I don’t want more choices, I just want better things. Really what is the difference between Flavia’s Colombia, French, Sumatra, and “Intense” roasts? And it’s incredibly wasteful, chucking out dozens of empty plastic packets that go directly into the trash.

The primary benefit of this machine is that our coffee at work is now drinkable. The regular coffee maker at the old office &#8212, the one with the filter, the ground coffee, hot water, and bulbous glass decanters — where the universal symbol for “regular” was an orange plastic handle, and for “decaf” a green one. It produced a dull, brown liquid that tasted like dish water steeped in cigarette butts and filtered through a used vacuum cleaner bag.

Also, the Starbucks on our block takes a notoriously long time. Plus I hate Starbucks.

The drink station has captivated the attention of a band of new neighbors from another division of the company who just moved onto our floor from across the street. They stand around in the pantry in groups of five or six and rave about it, talking loudly about what flavor do I want, do I want the creamy topping or not, is there a training manual for this, and so on. They must be reading from a script. The sequence is repeated at least once a day.

A rant note about the creamy topping. Supposedly, you can create a cappuccino or a frothy hot chocolate. There’s a Milky Way-flavored drink that uses the creamy topping packet, too. It’s a white powder that the machine pops out of the packet into your cup. The machine then hits the powder with a jet of hot water to produce a foamy imitation of steamed milk. Then you add a second packet (coffee, cocoa, or Milky Way), and the machine adds the other half of the beverage. And then it squirts in some more hot water for good measure. It all looks very dramatic, with steam rising up from the cup and water splashing out at the sides, but ultimately what you get is a watered-down, chalky instant coffee.

All the activity, apparently, is meant to distract us from the fact that it’s really just running hot water through miniature coffee filters and squirting water into flavored powders. For my money, I’ll take a Diet Pepsi if I’m just looking for the caffeine.

The new folks will realize this soon, and they’ll turn tail on Flavia (like everyone else), and the chatter will die down, and I can stop using my headphones so much. But for now, that pantry is a tin cup on a string leading directly to my ear. I sit in the adjacent cubicle settlement, and I hear all the beeps, human chatter, and various mechanical utterances channeled through that echo chamber.

I know we’re supposed to like the open spaces. We have room to breathe. We’re all united, one family, no secrets, etcetera. That pantry is the first room you enter through the doors from the elevator. It’s our hearth, the warm center of life at the office. We’re supposed to bump into each other and force interactions with people we don’t work with and exchange ideas — potentially ideas that could change the world!

In reality, when we bump into each other, we’re more likely to spill our cute little coffees.

At least the Pepsi machine offers 25-cent cans and 50-cent 20-oz. bottles. There’s always a silver lining.

07
Jan
09

The Most of Christmas Past

The tree started out nice. OK, it was always a little funny-looking, but it had a sort of rough-hewn, homemade dignity. I would have sawed about six inches off the trunk and removed some of the scraggly lower branches to give it a more classical triangular shape. (See, Dad, I was paying attention!) The lights are random leftovers from previous years’ trees, mostly pale yellow, a couple strings of multicolored lights, one of them blinking.

The pièce de resistance was the Christmas pop music coming from a radio hidden under a little red felt tree skirt. I confess I felt a slight swelling in my heart and a tear in my eye at “Do They Know it’s Christmas?” (Remember 1984’s Band Aid?)

A few days before Christmas the tree greeted us in the lobby of our building, generating a gentle glow and sparkling meekly. It was a sudden change to an otherwise cold and empty lobby, and the effect was enchanting. It was like a kid’s art project you’d tack to the fridge. But like said art project, the longer it stays there, fading and gathering dust and food stains, the sadder it looks, and the less it does to honor the artist.

The tree has not aged well. Nearly all the lights have been either unplugged or have burned out. All that remains of its once festive twinkle is a single string of multicolored lights. It snakes up through a few of the lower branches like a good time barely remembered.

The radio station stopped playing Christmas tunes on December 26. Now it’s back to boring old Lite FM. I can’t figure out for all the world why it’s still turned on and tuned in. Now that we’re past the twelfth night, I think it’s time to say good-bye to Christmas.

It’s a little depressing to see the last vestiges of a withering holiday. I boxed up our own tree last weekend, shuttered it away in the closet. The sentimentality gets me every year: I decorate the tree after Thanksgiving with carols on the stereo; I take it apart in January in total silence, distracting myself from heavier thoughts by counting the lights by twos so I can rubber band the strings to fit back in the box properly.

This morning, walking to work from the subway, I thought I caught a piece of confetti floating and twisting down to the sidewalk from somewhere. I looked up and saw about a dozen squares of tissue paper. They do a pretty good job of sweeping the streets on New Year’s Day in Times Square, but I guess they don’t get to the confetti trapped on the rooftops until the week after. Looking down from my 31st-floor office later, I saw men with power blowers shifting piles of multicolored glitter and paper off onto the sidewalk, briefly showering pedestrians in the memories of the melée of a few days ago. For a moment I wanted to be down there, but with Christmas neatly folded up, we are all back at our grindstones.

01
Jan
09

No More Double Zeros

You see street vendors and junk shops selling a lot of crap this time of year. Things that glow, things that spin, plastic hats. More stuff to litter the streets or end up in a junk drawer somewhere. One of the most annoying items has to be the glasses they have been making out of the years since 2000 with the double zeros. I was delighted to realize recently that 2009 is the last year for a very long time that will have that characteristic. If wearing 2009 on your face looks dumb, then 2010 would just be unforgivable!

17
Dec
08

Now This is Change We Can Believe In

I wasn’t a big fan of the dress Michelle wore to her husband’s acceptance speech. But — big deal … I’m just thrilled the Obamas are going to be taking up residence at 1600 Pennsylvania.

Here’s hoping for something a little prettier at the inauguration! She should take a leaf out of RuPaul’s book! This is just gorgeous.

RuPaul as Barack and Michelle Obama

13
Dec
08

‘Tis the Season (4.5)

There are such long breaks between seasons of Battlestar Galactica that I’ve forgotten what the frak is happening in the series. That half-season tease last year was a rotten, dirty trick.

I remember something about finding Earth, though in considerably poorer shape than anyone had anticipated. But there’s still a great deal of speculation about who the missing cylons are. And I don’t remember many remain to be revealed. (Or have they been revealed? I don’t remember!) Is Roslin still dying? I’m finding it hard to recall who’s dead and who’s still alive. That air-lock sure got a lot of use last season.

Currently, I’m enthralled by a series of webisodes (oh, how I dislike that word) taking place after the last season 4 broadcast. It’s all so deliciously familiar: the spaceship sound effects, Tigh’s crusty Canadian voice.

Plus, apparently, Gaeta’s gay! I’ve been wondering why a show depicting a society sexually liberated enough to have men and women share the same bathrooms, has been so completely absent of gay characters. But I am a little suspicious. The last time they dragged out a gay character, it was during a lull between seasons. Remember Admiral Cain from Galactica Razor? And she ended up dead!

There was no hint of her love life during Season 3, but in a between-season TV movie, we find she had an affair with a Six!

And now a freshly amputated Gaeta has a revelation. Is it a cynical plea for attention? Are the homos not good enough for the regular seasons? We’ll just throw them an extracurricular bone here and there? We’ll see.

For now, I miss this damn show so much that I am perfectly willing to live through another tease. And it gives me plenty of time to pick through the site and catch the frak up. There’s an excellent eight-minute recap of the first three seasons.

I’m so hooked, I’ll even put this widget on my blog:

09
Dec
08

A Day Without Gay

There’s a clever little short story that made an impression on me as a young college kid, just fresh out of the closet, just beginning to figure out how to use my newfound super powers. (For good? For evil. For good? For evil. Good? Evil…)

It’s called Am I Blue? In it, all the gay people are blue, and the narrator is trying to figure out if he (or is it she?) is blue too. I think he (or she) is a sort of pale blue, somewhere in between. Anyway, it’s not the gender the matters, but the concept: What if we were all suddenly revealed? (Bearing in mind, of course, that some of us reveal ourselves just fine without any trouble at all, thank you very much. We can’t help ourselves!)

There are a ton of us. It would be a big damn blue planet.

(Oh … wait. Too late.)

What would happen if we were all suddenly revealed in a way that was obvious to everyone? Say… by our absence? What would it be like if gays stayed home? Here’s something some of my more clever colleagues cooked up:

Gay music and video from NewNowNext.com

I, of course, cannot call in. I am a professional homosexual at my little gay network, and I am already fighting the good fight! We have to keep those gay wheels turning, or the entertainment industry would shut down. It’s the gay people in non-gay jobs that could make a difference. We’d notice the school teachers, security guards, bank tellers, bus drivers — certainly the waiters.

If all the gays stayed home, we’d all be a little blue.

UPDATE: There is some good, clear thinking about the impact of this project at Queerty. Most interesting is the analysis of how the focus has changed — or, rather, been completely lost. A fine idea in theory, but impossible to measure effectively in the real world.




the untallied hours