Friday, October 31, 2008
MoCo Lotion Exclusive: The Laziest Columnist In Print, Caught Red-Handed!
Or, given how labor-intensive it can be at times to write our columns, I suppose another solution is to take the original inquiry you messed up, change a word or two (along with the sender's name and location), and pray your readership has a short memory.
What Mr. Know-It-All didn't count on is MoCo Lotion's powers of recollection. Oh, yeah, I also haven't blogged in a few months, and my initial outrage at the original error still appears on the front page of this blog, just three stories below this one.
Here's the excerpt from today's column, as it appears in the Examiner.
And, just to refresh your memory, here's the first inquiry as it appeared nearly four months ago:
Shame, shame, shame.
Monday, August 18, 2008
I Survived a Category 5...sort of...
Hands dripping wet, I found neither paper towels nor the standard electric hand dryer. What I did find was the XLerator, a supercharged electric hand dryer. The XLerator delivers a blast of air so intense, the skin on my palm was visibly pushed into a perfect circle for the six or seven seconds it took to completely dry my hands. I couldn't believe it, to the point that I returned to the sink to wash my hands (and dry them) again. With the nifty foamy soap, to boot.
The air velocity where your hands should be, four inches below the nozzle, is 14,000 feet per second. Some quick calculations translate that into a wind speed of 159 miles per hour, or a Category 5 on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale.
If anyone is interested, I did find an XLerator on eBay. It's on my wishlist for Chanukah, along with a urinal and bathroom-friendly TV. 125 days to go...
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Another Hollywood Fairy Tale Ends
Out of concern for their three young children, the announcement was timed to coincide with the media focused on the Summer Olympics and the Russian-Georgian war. Unlike celebrity couples like Brad and Angelina, George and Pam have somehow managed to fly under the radar and keep the paparazzi at bay, refusing to negotiate to sell photos of their 2002 wedding or three young children to People and US magazines. Nor have they allowed themselves to be known by the unifying moniker "Peorge."
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Mr. Know-It-All, In A Pickle
Audiences in the early '60s didn't see this without the benefit that I--as a doctorate of 1960s and '70s television--know from a lifetime of daily reruns (or DVD box sets) that allow you to see the different Pickles a few days or hours apart. And with only a small part in five Pickled episodes, the Pickles switch is not as obvious as more prominent TV land hijinks, such as when Elizabeth Montgomery swapped Dicks.
But my vote for the best Pickles ever: the Rosoff Half-Sour. Mmmmm.
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Sometimes A Blog Is Just A Blog
So I shared it with a friend, and he provided some additional observations. Observations that made the story all the more bloggable--just not from my keyboard.
So instead of borrowing his observations to tag onto my story, I promptly relinquished all blogging rights to the tale to Mr. Moose's Story Book. Enjoy.
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Shameless Self-Congratulation
No way. This is too weird. (And you can download it here for the next two weeks or so to see for yourself.) Shakespeare, Hemingway, Stephen King and J.K. Rowling have yet to make the BlogLog two weeks in a row, how did this happen to me?
I boarded car #1125, and (having had a nice rain yesterday) took a whiff. Yuck. Fate suddenly turned me into a disguised Neil Simon in the back of the Plymouth Theatre during previews of The Odd Couple, sharpening up the script based on the audience reaction.
It didn't occur to me how many Metro riders read the Express until I had a vested interest in its circulation this morning. And from my vantage point, I could see that practically all of them were favoring Express over Examiner. Based on my limited survey sampling of one subway car, the fullsize, "big-boy" paper, The Washington Post, is a distant third.
I was actually close enough to about a half dozen Express readers to see what page they were reading. So I discreetly kept a watch on them as, at various times, they each reached Page 36 and the BlogLog.
Some smiled. One pointed it out to his Examiner-reading seatmate. All of them took a noticeable sniff to verify my olfactory assessment of conditions in the antique 1000-series cars.
Now I was no longer Doc Simon in the back of the theatre. I was Clark Kent, standing idly by with that cocky, knowing smile as Lois and Jimmy marvel at Superman's latest and greatest feat at the end of every episode.
Do I take this ego trip full-tilt on my ride home tonight and rip open my shirt in full view of the Express readership to reveal the large "M" tattooed on my chest? Naaaah. Just knowing that this blog is read and apparently found to be engaging by at least one reader is enough to keep me posting on a semi-regular basis.
Thank you for your support and continued encouragement. Doors closing!
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Tuesday, June 3, 2008
"I Feel Like A Million Bucks"
So while I can't swear that Teddy wasn't throwing out one-liners right after 3.5 hours of brain surgery, the Kennedy press machine is certainly capable of making us believe whatever they want as Camelot begins its final act.
Monday, June 2, 2008
I Swiped An Extra Bracha
I studied the transliteration and found the original Hebrew text online, which I often find easier to read than the transliteration. The day before the ceremony, the groom contacted me to ensure I had my part down. I mentioned my mastery of the Hebrew, and the the groom quickly clarified that we would only be reading the English translation, leaving the heavy lifting to the rabbi. Okay, works for me.
With the exception of a few technical difficulties and unmuffled motorcycles nearby that made the audio portion of the wedding difficult for all to hear at times, the outdoor wedding was perfect. For the visual portion, the bride was stunning and smiling from ear-to-ear. The groom was dapper and charming. Threatening skies held off. The ceremony went off without a hitch. That is, until the rabbi announced it was bracha time.
The rabbi called all the readers to line up at the podium, where the brachot were printed with our names in what must have been 80-point font. In case someone forgot their part or reading glasses, the groom left nothing to chance.
So MoCoSpouse and I took the podium, and the rabbi recited the first of the seven brachot.
"Baruch Ata Adonai, Elohainu Melech HaOlam, Boreh Pri HaGafen." (emphasis added)
And we looked at the transliteration. What we read clearly under our names was:
"Baruch Ata Adonai, Elokainu Melech HaOlam, SheHakol Barah Lichvodo."
"You are blessed, Lord our God, the sovereign of the world, who created everything for his glory."
Anybody who ever went to Hebrew school through the second grade should recognize the blessing the Rabbi offered as the standard prayer over wine, and seeing as it's offered approximately 373 times during the wedding ceremony, I thought his reciting it was merely a preliminary leading up to our assigned bracha. Yet there was a pause on the part of the rabbi that clearly indicated he was waiting for a translation. From us.
A thousand thoughts raced through my mind. Had my cousin's decision to join a reform congregation led him to a spiritual leader who was somehow cutting corners--would he also be enjoying the crabcake hors d'oeuvre waiting for us after the ceremony? How do I deal with this unscripted portion of the service? Do I throw caution to the wind and answer the Hebrew with the correct translation, or use the translation provided for #1 as it appeared on the crib sheet?
So what came out of my mouth was the product of hearing the given prayer translated thousands of times in my lifetime.
"Blessed art thou, oh Lord our God, King of the Universe, who hath created the fruit of the vine."
"That is correct," the rabbi called out, as if he were a game show host and the buzzer was about to go off.
I stood at the podium without leaving, not sure exactly what to expect next as Bracha Couple #2 stood alongside us.
"Baruch Ata Adonai, Elokainu Melech HaOlam, SheHakol Barah Lichvodo"
Yesssssss! Our assigned blessing!
So MoCoSpouse and I provided the given translation.
"Also correct!" the rabbi added.
I thought about getting cocky and asking "Brachot for $600, Alex?" and taking on the next bracha challenge as well, but wisely restrained myself as we took our seats as readers #2 and on continued to take their turns. All the while, I kept wondering about the unscheduled blessing over the wine. What was the significance? I made a mental note to look it up online when we got home.
All continued smoothly with everyone reading their assigned parts. The groom's sister took on the challenge of lengthy #6, for which I believe Oliver Stone is currently negotiating movie rights. Then the unlucky #7 readers got to the podium. The rabbi had nothing to say as they stood there for an uncomfortable moment, waiting for a bracha that never arrived. They had no choice but to slither back to their seats, understandably confused, underblessed and humiliated.
Only in creating this entry and studying all seven brachot have I learned the shocking truth. The blessing over the wine is, in fact, one of the seven brachot. The groom had provided us with the brachot in order from one source, the top choice when you Google "seven brachot" while the rabbi chose to work from his own script, #4 on the Google hit list at the time of this writing. So I inadvertently jonesed Bracha #7.
So for the thousands of Jewish brides and grooms planning their ceremonies during this busy wedding month, the lesson is simple: make sure you find a rabbi who knows how to Google.
To the hapless pair of first cousins who traveled hundreds of miles to recite Bracha #7, only to find it shamelessly stolen in full view by a second cousin once removed: God probably understands and forgives, hopefully you do as well.
Mazel tov to the bride and groom!
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Kakuro No-No
On the ride home last night, I found myself violating one of the fundamental rules of Kakuro: posting the same number twice within one add-sum.
Surely, a big newspaper syndicate such as Universal Press had done its homework and spot-checked the puzzle for accuracy. So I panicked. Had the Concerta worn off? Did a recent Lasik procedure leave me seeing things that just weren't there?
But I read and re-read it over and over. You try adding six unique digits from between 1 and 9 together to come up with 17. Just not happening. Mr. Know-It-All is apparently not the only syndicated contributor to the puzzle page just coasting through life.
So here it is, in living black-and-white, from this morning's Examiner. Yesterday's Kakuro solution.
I won't give up on the Examiner just yet. But for a Kakuro fix that won't leave you scratching your head, check out Krazydad's collection.
Oh, and while we're at it, here's Mr. Know-It-All's exhaustively-researched lead story this morning.
Ka-ching!
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Strategies For Surviving On Metro
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Murder and Mystery In My Backyard
To my horror, I figured out why Jeremiah wasn't moving as I drew closer. Jeremiah had presumably moved on to the great lily pad in the sky. Kicked the bucket. Morto. Ceased to exist. Dead.
"Not a whole lot. What's your question?"
"Well, I have one in my backyard pond, it's stretched out on top of the water, and it has a bird in its mouth."
Then I immediately headed for the computer and Wikipedia to learn more about bullfrogs. Bullfrogs are not the cute, cuddly creatures portrayed on obscene Ocean City T-shirts and Saturday morning cartoons waiting for a fly to come around. They are major carnivores, pretty much at the top of the food chain for creatures that size. I had no clue, thinking maybe they just stopped at flies.
But bullfrogs don't get as big as Jeremiah by waiting hours to stalk one measly fly, not any more than I got to my size munching on celery sticks. What I found is they'll try to eat anything so long as it's not larger than themselves, provided that it's moving when they get it into their mouths.
But birds? Most of the references I found online indicated that this wasn't a dietary staple, but not totally out of the question, either. So I bet myself that I could find some video on YouTube, and sure enough, I was right.
I told the tale to MoCoSpouse, who was less than interested in the scientific aspects than she was grossed out and knowing that the pair were properly disposed of. I assured her they were. As luck would have it, one of God's other creatures managed to dig them up just a day later and drag the pair into the middle of the lawn, where I learned about their presence quite audibly from MoCoSpouse.
We decided to let Mother Nature take its course as winter approached, and Lake MoCo grew calm for the next four months as we neither fed nor saw any of the fish, who apparently wintered at the bottom. Where bullfrogs go in the winter, I still have no clue.
Which brings us to the present. A few weeks ago, spring arrived, water temperatures reached the 50s and it was time to bring Lake MoCo back to life. In went the food; up came four hungry pond comets. Surely there was a miscount. No such luck, four pond comets. Again came denial, and the thought came to me: If the pond was the "world" as my fish knew it, then maybe the missing comet was the last snowbird still hanging out in the south while his friends headed back north. With no competition for the early bird algae dinner at 3:30 pm in the pond's virtual Boca Raton bottom, I might be tempted to do the same.
I faced up to the sad truth. Sometime over the winter, one of my comets met its maker. I tried to understand, rationalize, justify. The best I could come up with was that the missing comet looked very similar--solid red/orange--to another, and this was God's way of hoping I wouldn't notice and be spared the pain of the loss of a longtime companion, easily replaced for perhaps $10 at the local aquarium. Or perhaps this comet gave its life so some other creature could survive the long winter.
I'm not sure who the culprit is; bullfrog, bird, raccoon, natural causes, or maybe even another of the pond comets. For now, my eye is on Bruce, the great white, who somehow managed to emerge from his winter fast appearing a lot fatter than when he started.
Thursday, April 17, 2008
My Own Private Holiday
More notably, nobody gets the day off except D.C. government workers, who are but a blip in a workforce dominated by Federal and private-sector employees. I would conservatively venture to guess that 99.9% of those who need to work on April 16th have absolutely no clue they're doing so on a D.C. holiday.
While we may not like to admit it, everybody has a little schadenfreude in them; my daily dose comes from walking the streets around my office and seeing the ticketed cars belonging to those who feel they're above the law. My bonus comes when I see someone trying to negotiate with the DPW guy after he has started the ticketing process. Once it's printed...he's dead, Jim.
Look forward to next year's blurb on D.C. Emancipation Day. But for now you'll have to mark your own 2009 calendar to remind you, as I won't until it's over.
Monday, April 14, 2008
License to E-Mail?
But a car is nothing in the hands of seniors struggling to maintain a sense of independence in the world today. Yesterday, I began lobbying my Congressman for legislation to require licensing before seniors are allowed to send and receive e-mail.
My proposal first requires identifying the target audience with a simple test:
1) Ask them for their e-mail address. If they give you their AOL screenname with no "@aol.com," they're subject to the licensing requirement.
2) Give them your own e-mail address. If they ask "is that with a capital 'C'?," they're subject to the licensing requirement.
As further evidence, I provided my Congressman with examples of the unlicensed senior e-mailers currently cluttering my inbox.
The Western Union e-mailer. My Dad doesn't always have a lot to say, but when he says something, it's short and to the point.
Dad grew up poor through the Great Depression, and treats e-mail like we're living in 1940 and he's writing a telegram, being charged by the word. Also, he never really learned to type, so fewer typed words are easier while longer treatises are still delivered in his illegible retired physician's longhand.
The few messages I get from him via e-mail are usually all caps, with all the charm of World War II-era death notices. But in Dad's inimitable style, they're short and to the point.
WE REGRET TO INFORM YOU MOM AND I CANNOT BABYSIT STOP CAN YOU PUT IN TONER CARTRIDGE STOP LOVE YOU STOP
The Telephone Confirmer. These are the seniors who have no trust in the reliability of electronic communications, but nevertheless use them so they can be viewed as being in touch with the times. But they find the need to followup with more conventional communications immediately after hitting the "send" button.
I work with a guy like this. My in-box dings, I read his e-mail. Within minutes, either the phone rings or he'll appears personally at my office door to confirm receipt.
Telephone Confirmer: "I just sent you the latest data for the Pinsky file."
Me: "And if you didn't have such shpilkes, you'd see my response back in your inbox."
Then there's the variant to this, the Jewish Senior Telephone Confirmer. If you've been contemplating the purchase of a Blackberry, iPhone or similar device to have instant access to your e-mail, you've just saved yourself a few hundred dollars if your only contacts are JSTCs.
At 11:42, the JSTC sends the e-mail. At 11:44, your phone rings.
JSTC: Did you get the e-mail I just sent?
You want to choose your yes-or-no answer very carefully with this one.
Answer "Yes," and immediately enter into a full-blown discussion on the topic at hand for which you're not adequately prepared.
Answer "No," and you'll get a word-for-word reading of what was just e-mailed to you, immediately followed by a full-blown discussion on the topic at hand for which you're not adequately prepared.
My mom is sort of the Reverse Jewish Senior Telephone Confirmer. Mom freely gives out her e-mail address to others in an effort to appear hip, but--unless prompted to do so--checks her mail about once a month, and then only after you explain how to do it. So I wind up in the role of confirmer/explainer after sending the e-mail.
Me: "Mom, I sent you something Thursday about Uncle Hesh. Did you get it?"
Mom: "I haven't checked. He was going in for bypass or something?"
Me: "Uh...did you want to kick in $25 for a shiva platter?"
The Serial E-Mail Forwarder. This is the senior in whom the Internet has created a newfound sense of humor or cause celebre they feel compelled to share with you. This demonstrates their mastery of not only the "forward" function in their e-mail, but the ability to indiscriminately include all 300 names in their address book; coincidentally, the number of remaining dial-up AOL customers nationwide.
My aunt is the queen of pro-Israel sentiment and virus warnings that are no more valid today than when they first circulated. Yesterday I got one warning me, "If you get an e-mail marked 'Click here for a special surprise from Izzy,' don't click on it!"
From my wife's uncle, we get every misleading illegal immigration argument and "America, Love It or Leave It" tidbit misattributed to Andy Rooney. Battered women and homeless animals from my cousin. And from numerous relatives old enough to personally remember the Borscht Belt-era of comedy, plenty of Borscht Belt one-liners along with things George Carlin never wrote. And lots of sentimental "Remember when...getting stoned was when David slew Goliath?" routines.
I've always gotten along well with seniors, sharing my interests in old movies and early 20th century history that pre-date me by decades, but are still quite fresh in their memories. I think that's why so many of them feel this kinship and comfort in including me in their e-mailings. Seeing myself included in the listing of recipients sandwiched between "Sadie & Manny Feldbloom" and "Sol Lefkowitz" is a mark of honor. And a reminder that my own license to e-mail isn't that far off.
Thursday, April 3, 2008
I've Got A Ticket To Ride (Free!)
This low-tech option--your driver punches a hole in one of 20 spaces each time it's used--is 25¢ cheaper per trip than using the more convenient, durable, high-tech SmarTrip card most of us Metrorail riders also happen to carry. So when the last space on the ticket is punched, I go out of my way to do something really frivolous with the $5 I've saved, like buy an extra gallon of milk or gas.
I bought my current ticket over two months ago (January 30 to be exact, as Quicken reminds me) and it still has seven punches left. Sometimes I drive to the Metro or catch a ride with a neighbor, sometimes I'll walk the two miles to the train if the weather is decent, and then there's an occasional day off to go find brisket in Texas or tend to a sick MoCoKid at home. But there's no way I've only used the Ride On just 13 times in the last two months. Something's not right here.
Then I thought about it some more. A few weeks ago, I gave my driver the pass for punching. And he tells me his bus isn't "equipped" with a hole punch. ("Equipping" isn't a major undertaking, as the 99¢ punch is typically connected to the transfer-holder with a cable, string or cheap chain.) He shoos me along to take my seat, free of charge, along with another pass-carrying rider at my stop. The next day--same driver, different bus--there is a hole punch, and I remind the driver that I owe him an extra one. "It's okay," he says, as he punches my pass once.
The next day, he returns with the first bus. Still not equipped. And I'm shooed along to take a seat, my counteroffer to cough up an extra quarter and pay with my SmarTrip card politely rejected. And the next day.
Sometimes, like this morning, he waves me along for no apparent reason when I see the punch hanging there. My speculation was that it takes about 15 seconds to fumble for the hole punch, find the available slot on the ticket (my old driver needed to take time to put on his glasses), punch it and give it back to me. And 15 seconds to deal with my pass now could mean an additional red light down the line, putting him another two minutes behind if he's running late.
But this morning, he wasn't running late. In fact, he was running a minute early. The punch was in easy reach. And once again, I got the wave and no explanation. So here's another theory: A lot of riders on the route are flashing 100 different passes at him (seniors, students, riders of cooperating transit systems) that presumably entitle them to a legitimate free ride, and he waves them on quickly. He couldn't possibly keep track of all of them in his head, so it's easier just to let anyone by rather than checking out what's actually being put in front of him. So just for smiles, tomorrow we'll see how far I get with my Snyder's Creative Pretzel Eaters Club card.
A few times, everyone has gotten a free ride. At least twice I've been on buses that had malfunctioning fare collection equipment, and the driver simply sends everyone to their seat telling them "the box is broken." Then there's the one bus that has no fare collection equipment whatsoever on which I've gotten at least four free rides. Watching the reactions of the passengers boarding this one gives you the eerie feeling that the ghost of Allen Funt is going to be boarding at the next stop.
Then there are the few times everyone has been comped for no apparent reason, accepting a grunt from the driver accompanied by a wave of the hands to take their seats as he rejects their offers of tickets, SmarTrip cards, and cash.
And now I get to look forward to Ride On's public policy free rides. Anyone rides free the week of April 7-13 if they donate a canned/boxed food item when they board. (Note to self: Visit the Giant. Find the marked-down dented cans of kidney beans. Ride On will actually be paying me to ride that week.) And with summer rapidly approaching, everyone rides free whenever the air quality index reaches "Code Red," which around these parts is, oh, pretty much daily throughout July and August.
The ticket itself is made of paper, just slightly thicker and no more durable than what comes out of the office copier. Mine has long exceeded its typical 2-4 week lifespan, falling apart by being removed from and returned to its resting place between the IDs in my badge holder for so many punches that never seem to materialize. The cynic in me has pegged Ride On's business model: Let the ticket disintegrate faster than it can be punched.
The unfortunate irony is that while I'm being given a free ride perhaps half the time over the last two months, MoCo is simultaneously cutting back on or eliminating bus routes to the detriment of some of its neediest citizens in order to close the county's massive budget shortfall. At a micro level, just adding a 99¢ hole punch to one bus would have brought in at least $8 in revenue from me and the other guy at my stop over the course of a few weeks. While I may not be able to extrapolate $400 million in found revenue over the course of a year by ensuring buses are equipped with working fare collection equipment and operated by drivers who will let riders pay what they owe, it could be a start to saving a few needed bus routes and restoring other vital county services.
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Hollywood Serial Killer Strikes Again
Why he suddenly struck yesterday after an 18-year hiatus is even more of a mystery. Until Monday, authorities believed that Natural Causes had himself died. Yet today, the streets of Tinseltown are gripped in fear as Natural Causes seeks out his next victim, as if they weren't gripped enough with the likes of O.J. Simpson and Robert Blake loose.
The Los Angeles Police Department stands by their motto ("To Protect and Serve") in denying that they have minimized the threat to the stars of yesteryear and have never covered up that these deaths were all linked to Natural Causes. A MoCo Lotion exclusive documents for the first time the trail of death left in Natural Causes' wake. Let's have a look:
Episode 114, "L.A. At Last." Eve Arden (cancer, heart disease, age 82, 1990) and William Holden (bled to death after presumably falling headfirst, drunk, into the corner of a coffee table, age 63, 1981). Alright, maybe Holden's a stretch, but in my book, that's pretty much natural causes for Hollywood.
Episode 117, "The Fashion Show." Don Loper (punctured lung, age 66, 1972)
Episode 118, "The Hedda Hopper Story." (pneumonia, age 80, 1966)
Episode 122, "The Star Upstairs." (Cornel Wilde, leukemia, age 74, 1989)
Episode 123, "Lucy In Palm Springs." (Rock Hudson, complications from AIDS, age 59, 1985)
Episode 125, "Harpo Marx." (Complications from heart surgery, age 75, 1964)
Episode 127, "The Tour." (Richard Widmark, complications from fractured vertabrae, age 93, 2008)
Episode 128, "Lucy Visits Grauman's" and Episode 129, "Lucy and John Wayne." (cancer, age 72, 1979)
Monday's slaying of Widmark has left many Hollywood stars on edge, particularly Van Johnson, who is now the only surviving guest star from the Hollywood episodes (Episode 124, "The Dancing Star") . A psychological profile of the killer suggests that he has the mentality of a hunter, and will not be satisfied until he completes his task and adds Johnson to his trophy room, much as Widmark attempted to do with Lucy as she hid under his bearskin rug.
Sleep loose, Van.
MoCo Lotion's calls to the LAPD seeking comment have not been returned.
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
The Great Texas Brisket Chase (Part III)
The expression “those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it” does not only apply to monumental events such as the Holocaust, apparently it also applies to searching for barbecue in the Lone Star state via satellite navigation.
So I took a chance. “Let’s just get off at the next exit and see what’s there.” Sure enough, just off the exit, we came across Bone Daddy’s, a newer place about which Giles knew nothing. True to form, Mom remarked about the size of the place and the crowded parking lot. We managed to secure a rock star parking spot and headed in not knowing to expect, but confident that we couldn’t go wrong with a place so popular.
What we immediately realized was why Bone Daddy’s was so popular. Texas is chock full of attractive young women willing to dress in an outfit that would violate health codes in 49 other states to serve male patrons food, beer and Dr. Pepper. No Hooters location could possibly be big enough to hire all of them, so Bone Daddy’s picks up the slack.
To give my parents and sister an easy way out and prevent embarrassment, I asked if they were too hungry to wait the estimated ten minutes for a table. Nobody jumped at the offer to bail out, and my pseudonym ("Maurice DuBois")'s table was quickly announced as ready.
While I wasn’t able to take the actual measurements to back this up, my ballpark analysis indicates the uniforms at Bone Daddy’s are at least 12.4% skimpier than those at Hooters. Dad, who had experienced a partial loss of vision several weeks earlier, showed signs of a complete recovery.
Guys who go to Hooters find the need to rationalize to one another—not to mention their wives and girlfriends—that the food alone is good enough to justify a visit, always citing the wings. (If I recall, the 3.8 billion of us guys on earth held a secret meeting about 20 years ago where it was decided the excuse would have more merit if we all stuck to universally praising the same menu item.) I offer my apologies to my brethren in advance for spilling the beans, but the food at Hooters truly sucks, including the wings. And if anyone has ever taken the time to actually read them, the articles in Maxim suck, as well.
But at Bone Daddy’s, the food excuse has actual merit. It was the best meal we had the entire trip, including the fancy country club affair that was the centerpiece of the weekend. The smoked brisket wasn’t completely dry, with just the right amount of sauce on top. Again, incredible cole slaw and mac-and-cheese. The service wasn’t great, but that was something we managed to forgive as our server continually dropped things and bent over to pick them up.
What's Your Number?
I'm hampered by a high-ending SSN. And with no regular tax refund coming this year (which I'd normally take via direct deposit), it looks like it'll be Ramen noodles and ketchup until July 4th in our house.
Monday, March 17, 2008
The Great Texas Brisket Chase (Part II)
(This is Part II, click here for Part I, or risk becoming total disoriented)
Having packed my suit and my portable GPS navigator (“Giles,” as I’ve nicknamed it thanks to the British accent on which it's now set), we took an early flight Friday morning, arriving in Dallas around 10 a.m. and picked up our rental car. Our internal clocks were still on Eastern time, and we hadn’t eaten since grabbing something at the airport at 6 a.m. Between my dad’s diabetes and the uniquely Jewish proclivity to always have your next meal planned, lunch became priority one—it was the main topic of discussion while eating our breakfast in the airport. What was the name of the place where we had the good barbecue on our last trip to Dallas many years earlier? Oh, yeah! Sonny Bryan’s! It was in the city, but we’re headed out to the ‘burbs. The opposite direction from where we needed to be, going into the city during the workweek didn’t appeal to me.
So just for smiles, after powering up Giles and acquiring satellites, I typed in Sonny Bryan’s, and was excited to find they’ve expanded from their one or two locations downtown. And there’s even one along our route. So off Giles led us onto the Texas highways. My children (whom I wisely left at home with MoCoSpouse) have reached an age where they no longer do incredibly annoying things as backseat passengers, but in a warped circle-of-life realization, I've found Mom has somehow managed to pick up the slack. First, she felt compelled to call out the name of every business along the 20-mile commercial strip of highway and remark on whether or not it was one we had back home. And how big everything in Texas was as we passed by...from the width of the highway, to the McDonalds, to the carwashes built to accommodate pickups, to the roadkill.
Mom and the automobile always had a funny relationship. To the outside world, we were this normal ‘60s middle-class suburban family. But we harbored a dark secret that few people to this day can fathom—Mom had neither the courage nor desire to drive, so she never had a car nor license to drive one. In conjunction with Dad's grueling work schedule that often made him unavailable until evening, we somehow managed to get to all the things kids needed to get to. And even at a fairly advanced age, Mom still manages to get wherever she needs to via a network of friends who can still drive and public transportation when Dad is unavailable to play chauffeur.
What Mom lacks in courage to get behind the wheel, she makes up for in her confidence as a navigator. Mom’s navigational skills (I refer to her as Dad's GPS—Global Positioning Spouse) are not based on abstract concepts such as north, south, east, west, or maps—they are based on instinct. Dad is the stereotypical stubborn won’t-ask-for-directions guy who still goes to AAA for Triptiks and traveler’s checks.
I also stubbornly refuse to ask for directions, but have the advantage of being the technogeek who was the first in our family to embrace Mapquest in the mid ‘90s and satellite navigation in the current millenium. Put the three of us together in a rented Grand Prix in a strange place, and it's "fasten your seatbelts—it’s going to be a bumpy night."
For years, I’ve been extolling the wonders of GPS to Dad with the hope that I could convince him to get his own, thinking it would be especially easy since prices have come so far down in the last year or two. No go. He still refuses on principle, but I know that he respects the technology and I'll catch him sneaking a curious glance each time Giles announces the next maneuver.
Mom, on the other hand, has little patience for technology. To her, answering machines were an evil invention specifically designed for the sole purpose of allowing children to screen their mothers' calls in the days before Caller ID and cell phones. She would refuse to “talk to a machine,” and then we'd get an earful the next time we'd call for not being clairvoyant enough to know that she had tried to call earlier. Giles is apparently just as evil, and Mom believes she can somehow do better. She continually asks over and over if I know where I’m going on this strange, big highway in this strange, big state. “Not a clue,” I tell her. “But he does,” I add, cockily pointing to Giles on the dashboard. Mom is skeptical.
As Giles tells me we’re within a mile of Sonny Bryan’s, my mouth is watering. “Arriving at Sonny Bryan’s on the right,” he proudly announces. Except that there’s no Sonny Bryan’s on the right, just a few chain restaurants along the ring road encircling a huge shopping mall. I intentionally make a wrong turn onto the ring road, hoping Giles will automatically re-route me to the correct location. Sure enough, he re-routes me, but to the same incorrect location. As an experienced car GPS user, I’m not incredibly frustrated as it’s not all that unusual for this to happen. Usually it’s one of two reasons:
1) Sonny Bryan’s used to be there, but I’m too cheap to cough up $100 for a database update
2) When you’ve got an address that’s not exactly at an intersection, Giles (as well as web mapping programs) gives an approximate guess as to where an address is located. Sometimes this is way off. Sonny Bryan’s is likely buried in the food court of the gargantuan shopping mall where every business shares the same street address.
Mom appreciates that I’ve taken the time to explain this, but doesn’t particularly care and counters with her trump card, the last thing any GPS user wants to hear from a backseat passenger:
“There’s a gas station, go ask somebody.”
All the while, Dad knows to remain quiet and uninvolved, held captive in a navigational Switzerland.
Refusing to swallow my pride, I called an audible. This is Texas, there’s got to be barbecue everywhere. Sure enough, I ask and Giles shows me all the barbecue places near our current location and there's one 1.2 miles away with a really good, rednecked name that happens to escape me at the moment. This time, all the restaurants are along the highway. But once again, no barbecue. Mom’s patience and Dad's blood sugar are both approaching alarming levels. We'll try for one more before settling on the readily visible TGIAppleRubyChilisFridays dotting the landscape.
This time I wised up, and called the phone number Giles provided of the next-closest place to ensure they were still in business and easily accessible. Lo and behold, we land upon Dickey’s Barbecue Pit, a cafeteria-style chain currently expanding nationwide, right where it’s supposed to be. Mom sees the empty parking lot and has concerns about going into a restaurant that's empty at the 12 noon lunch rush; I explain that it’s 11 a.m. and she should think about setting her watch back an hour in a new time zone. She never did; "too much work" since she'd just have to change it back again at the end of the weekend.
Dickey makes a pretty darn good brisket (along with a portion of smoked turkey), sliced to order, damp but not swimming in juice, fork-tender and slightly sweet. I chose some great sides (cole slaw and mac-and-cheese) to accompany my platter, and the first of the many Dr. Pepper I would consume over the long weekend. Unlike other parts of the country where Dr. Pepper is just another choice on the soda dispenser alongside Sprite, it's a culture all its own in Texas. Dr. Pepper was born here, and it seems to carry the same sort of marketing clout as Coke or Pepsi, with its own branded machines and restaurant signage.
We made our way to the hotel, exhausted after the 4 a.m. (Eastern) start to our day, and got some much needed rest before the first official event of the weekend, a (non-barbecue) dinner for the out-of-towners. In the interim, Giles led me back to the airport to pick up my sister, who flew in from another part of the country for the weekend festivities. The best was yet to come.
Next up in Part III: Brisket...with an added bonus
Thursday, March 13, 2008
The Great Texas Brisket Chase (Part I)
In spite of my apparent Judaism, I’m not exactly kosher. I’ll justify wolfing down a few slices of bacon or a sausage every now and then by claiming an oversight by those who wrote the kosher rulebook 6,000 years ago--forefathers who didn’t have access to a really good hotel breakfast buffet with piles of greasy, crispy bacon just waiting to be rescued from atop a piece of bread in a steamer tray. But I draw my kashruth line in the sand with "pure" pork or ham.
Beef is perhaps my biggest dietary guilty pleasure. If eating it three or four times a week somehow shortens my lifespan by a few months, in the end I’ll be able to say it was well worth it. And in my book, there’s nothing you can do wrong with a beef brisket, whether it’s served braised, sweet and wet (as is tradition for each of the 437 major Jewish holidays that occur each year), smoked and on the dry side when it’s barbecued, or chopped/pulled and mixed with a nice, rich sauce for a sandwich.
The good news on the beef front arrived in the mail back in January in the form of an invitation to a family event in Dallas. Ahh, Texas. When you say “barbecue” in the Lone Star state, beef becomes the default, the main attraction. Images of cattle herds on the endless prairie danced through my head…cattle with no purpose in life but to sacrifice their briskets for my insatiable need for red meat. I could barely contain myself. If enjoying good barbecue could be considered sinful, then just think of me as Eliot Spitzer headed for the Chicken Ranch with an Amex titanium card. And much as I love barbecue, I don't get to see my Texas relatives all that frequently and looked forward to that, as well. I’d have to figure out the details to make it all work.
Two of those details were my parents, both of whom are approaching an age that, in my mind at least, magically separates folks from being "older" from "elderly" the moment the age odomoter turns over. 80 is not the new 70 in the way that 50 is the new 40; at best, I figure 80 is the new 77. Mom called the day the invitations arrived to see if I had any interest in going. I could tell by her tone that if I wasn’t going to be there to do the driving and help with other travel assistance, they probably couldn’t make the trip and would be sorely disappointed. How do you say “no” to the woman who went through hours of labor (and has it in her DayTimer to remind you of this daily for 44 years), providing tons of great brisket throughout your life? My RSVP was back in the mail to Texas that day as we booked our flights.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Who's the REAL Mr. Know-It-All?
I'll always tackle the Kakuro first, then move on to the Sudokus. If I'm having a really good morning early in the week (when the Sudokus are rated as 1* or 2* on the 5* difficulty scale), I can get well into the crossword.
A few weeks ago, a "perfect storm" of circumstances turned me into the puzzle king for a day. Two 1* Sudokus. A nice delay on the Red Line lengthened my commute by 10 minutes. 54 milligrams of Concerta allowed me to focus and tune out the various concerto coming from the supposedly "personal" audio devices across the train. (Here's a hint, folks. If I can hear what's playing from your headphones halfway across a noisy subway car, my guess is it's too damned loud and you'd better learn how to work the closed captioning on your TV).
So, for the first time in my personal commuting history, I finished all four puzzles. Okay, I didn't quite finish the crossword--but I fully evaluated every single clue, and there are some things you simply don't know, or only know from being a crossword fanatic (which I'm not). So sue me for the five squares I left empty.
Then, I noticed something at the bottom of the puzzle page—a new feature, or new to me at least, since I'm usually engrossed with the puzzles. "Mr. Know-It-All."
"Mr. Know-It-All," it turns out, is a syndicated column appearing in newspapers nationwide. MKIA, as I'll call him, answers trivia questions that apparently are keeping folks awake at night or causing huge rifts in their closest relationships.
MKIA's biography gives his qualifications as a Know-It-All. I'm not sure how a career stocking shelves at Kresge's is somehow relevent, but from the looks of it, he's just an average guy with an above-average interest in trivia. A guy being fed questions that may be 102 mph fastballs when you need to provide an answer off the top of your head, but become slow-pitched softballs when fed through a search engine like Google.
In two weeks of reading MKIA, I've found no questions that couldn't be answered by viewing one of the top two returns on Google, more often than not the Wikipedia entry. Often, the answer is shown in Google's brief blurb, and you don't have to actually open the link.
MKIA apparently provides a valuable service by saving his readers (who've apparently been living on Mars since the mid-'90s) the trouble of doing the heavy lifting for themselves, often giving answers and insight remarkably close in content to sites like Wikipedia in the process.
Just for smiles, let's look at a few examples.
Q: My grandfather loved baseball. I'm told that, in his youth, he was an incredible player who was destined for the major leagues, but a farming accident ended that dream. When he passed on a few years back, I inherited many boxes of baseball memorabilia, including 100 autographed baseballs and bats mostly from the early 1920s to the late 1930s. His favorite was a baseball signed "Hack Wilson 1930." I'm not sure about the first name. What can you tell me about him? I know little about early baseball. — W.B., Madison, Wis.
A: His name is Lewis Robert "Hack" Wilson (1900-1948), and he roamed the outfield from 1923 to 1934 for the New York Giants, Chicago Cubs, Brooklyn Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1979. In 1930, he drove in 191 runs for the Cubs — a record that many believe will never be topped. He also hit 56 home runs, led the league with 105 walks and had a batting average of .356. This was possibly the best season ever by a hitter. Sadly, alcoholism cut short his playing career — and his life.
Okay, W.B. from Madison, Wis. Try putting "Hack Wilson" into Google (or ask your grandson to do it), and see what comes back. Real tough, huh? I'm sensing Wilson isn't the only "hack" involved with this column. Let's try another.
Q: Many years ago, there was a major earthquake in the United States. I believe it was in the Midwest. Do you have any idea where and when this occurred? — O.E., Bangor, Maine
A: Between December 1811 and February 1812, four earthquakes, estimated at 7.0 to 7.9 in magnitude, hit the area of New Madrid, Mo. These earthquakes were among the largest ever recorded in North America.
Google query: "major midwest U.S. earthquake."
Q: I just received an e-mail trivia list stating that Dick Clark’s wife gave Chubby Checker his stage name. Is this true? — B.H.L., Flagstaff, Ariz.
A: It’s true. Ernest Evans (1941-), who popularized the song “The Twist” in 1960, was raised in Philadelphia. He attended South Philadelphia High School and called future teenage heartthrobs Frankie Avalon and Fabian classmates. At the time, Dick Clark hosted the incredibly popular TV show “American Bandstand,” which originated in Philadelphia. Clark’s wife suggested the stage name Chubby Checker as a spin-off from another popular singer of the era, Fats Domino.
Hello, Wikipedia.
Q: A long time ago, I read a book about the life of Marcel Marceau, "the master of silence." Marceau was not his real name, which is not unusual for performers. What I'm trying to recall is whether there was a reason he changed his name. Do you know? — B.H.L., Flagstaff, Ariz.
A: Marcel Mangel (1923-2007) was born in Strasbourg, France. At the outbreak of World War II, he changed his last name to Marceau to hide his Jewish heritage.
Wait a minute. Marcel Marceau was Jewish? As my Nana might have said, "Who knew? To me he doesn't say a word."
Here's a Wiki for you Nana, wherever you are.
So here's what I envision as MKIA's typical day. He's up 'til 3 a.m. partying. At 10 a.m., his private secretary, Susan Camille McNamara, calls to wake him.
Phone rings. MKIA rolls over, badly hungover, knocks the receiver off the hook.
Susie: Wake up, sleepyhead. Max is looking for this morning's column, it was due at 9:30.
MKIA: Uh, oh, yeah. Where is it? I left it around here SOMEWHERE. [hacking cough] I was up all night doing some major editing, let me get right back to you.
By 10:02, MKIA has opened his e-mail, and randomly selected the first few questions.
10:03, the keywords have been selected, Googled and Wikied.
10:05, links opened, copied and pasted.
10:07, a few sentences are restructured and synonyms employed to disguise any relationship to the source material.
10:09, the day's column is sent to the editor, and a call is placed back to Susie.
MKIA: Tell Max this one was a major chore, but it's done and in his inbox. I'm seriously thinking Pulitzer on this one. [Takes a drag off a Marlboro, muting phone so she can't hear him snickering.]
Susie: You know, there's an editorial staff meeting at 1:30 today, they're expecting you.
MKIA: Uh, yeah. Can't make it. Max'll understand. L.R.S. from St. Cloud, Minn. wrote in and needs to know the state motto of Nevada. Can you call travel desk about the tickets to Vegas? I think I can wrap this one up in three, four days, tops. I've got a guy there with some inside information.
Susie: You got it. Word just came down from corporate, you'll have to fly economy. And the Bellagio is out, you've got to do the Palace Station. Per-diem only, no "entertainment" this time.
MKIA: I guess you do what you gotta do. You're the best. Can you transfer me to payroll? They screwed up my direct deposit.
Ka-ching!There was a time before the 'Net was readily accessible to most homes when I was a genuine know-it-all, the guy in the bar or over the phone who could tell you off the top of his head the name of Lumpy Rutherford's little sister, Archie Bunker's street address, or Gerald Ford's golden retriever. Granted, my know-it-allness was limited to certain specific areas of interest, but these generally coincided with the general interest trivial things folks wanted to know—movies, television, U.S. history, geography. Classic literature, ancient Greeks, Picasso's blue period, not so much so. So while I may not be able to quote Cyrano de Bergerac word-for-word, I can easily tell you off the top of my head of at least a half-dozen sitcoms that borrowed the plotline in the '60s and '70s.
None of this is to say that the supposed MKIA couldn't have given me a run for the trivia money in the '80s and early '90s. But it is to say that MKIA's "talent" is incredibly unimpressive if he's not demonstrating it in front of Alex Trebek or sitting at a barstool, untethered to technology.
What I find most astonishing is that MKIA even encourages folks to send him questions via email in addition to snail mail. Listen up, folks. If you have the ability to e-mail, you most likely have something on that computin' machine you're using that's known as a "web browser" and access to the "Internet." Before you go looking for Mr. Know-It-All, ask the real Mr. Know-It-All—the kid next door—to show you how.