Ew!

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

ACK. I Just Did It AGAIN While Trying To Think Of A Title.

Okay, screw it, I'm totally lost as to what to do here.

I pick at my eyelashes. All the time. It's my nervous habit, my bored habit, my distracted habit, my daydreaming habit, my unconscious habit, my "Hmm, how do I explain to people about the eyelash-picking... what to say, what to say..." habit. If I'm sitting on the couch or at my desk or in a screening, or even at a freaking meal or at church, odds are I am, I have, or I am about to reach up and twiddle my eyelashes on my forefinger or with my thumbnail. Sometimes I will even do both eyes at once, with my left hand -- thumb on left set, ring finger on right set, blinking furiously into my flesh. It's not pulling them out; it's bending, crinkling, crunching, and ultimately, speck by speck, breaking.

This is messed up.

Well, fine, so on The Freaky Shit Scale, this doesn't even really rate. It's just a dumb fiddly habit, but I REALLY want to break it. Desperately, in fact. I know right now my eyelashes are growing back, but what if one day they don't? They're all different lengths. I bet I'm capable of having long eyelashes all across, but in the middle they're as short as my lower lashes (which are longish by the standard, but still not long enough to be actual EYELASHES), and on the edges my lashes are slightly longer, but the effect is totally uneven. And it's probably not that noticeable, but I notice, and the lady who did my makeup for the Grammy thing we did noticed (in a kind way), and really, I need to stop picking at my effing eyelashes.

In fact, I just paused, and up flew my hand to my face. STOP IT, hand.

My mother used to say, "Think eyebrow, not eyelash." That was ten years ago. That obviously was not the fix, although I admire the effort, and anyway, should I be pulling out my eyebrow hair? Granted back then, I had a lot more of it, and a brow-pulling fetish might've come in handy and saved on some waxing fees. But, we cannot go back, only forward, and no, dammit, I don't really want to pull on my eyebrow hair.

I wonder why I have this eyelash obsession. I can't really pinpoint what it is. It's not really fun. It's not exciting. It's not an adrenalin rush. It's not attractive. It's not secretly going to make me rich (well, unless somebody wants to pay me loads of money to quit my job and be their lab rat in a totally safe, non-toxic environment, in which case, I totally take checks). When I was younger, I remember sitting there folding over the ends of my lashes between two fingers unti they were all crinkled, and then I'd run them under my finger nail and then pull the nail away and feel it catch on my lashes.

That's lame, you guys. I felt like I was in the middle of a funky fetish film just writing that last sentence. I don't do that thing now, but I'm clearly still kneading and picking and folding. How did this start? What the hell is up with that shit? Couldn't I be obsessed with laundry instead? Could I be folding my sweaters, and not my eyelashes? Cruel, cruel fate!

Plus, let's not ignore that I have a phobia of bad things happening to eyes, so my fingers have NO BUSINESS being all up in my ocular grill.

How do I quit? I can't paint something disgusting over them, like you (theoretically) can if you want to quit nail-biting. And I can't really wear sunglasses all day. Or a blindfold. Should I rotate an eyepatch all day, thus creating a temporary blocker to half my lashes at a time? Should I flog myself? Lop off the offending digit? I can't afford to pull out any hair (more on THAT little drama later -- I am upset with my hair). And my nails, well, we already have a tenuous relationship at best. I could try to bite them at all times, to keep my hands busy and thus alleviate the fear that I will break off all my lashes one day, but "save the lashes by murdering the nails" seems like a bit of a pyrrhic victory.

Any advice out there for a freak like me?

Tuesday, January 03, 2006

[Insert Real Meat Here] Noodle Soup

The chunks of chicken in Campbell's Chicken Noodle Soup are very, very disturbing.

I'm staring into a massive bowl of it right now, willing it to cure me of the raging head cold I've got, and I just scooped up a spoonful of broth, noodles, and one giant brown-pink chunk of something that looks NOTHING like any piece of chicken I have ever made. And I know it's a lot to ask for top-tier chicken, since the can of soup was very cheap and you make it by adding water and that's part of its charm, but... I can't bring myself to eat the Chewy Cube portion of today's lunch. Just can't.

Wednesday, December 08, 2004

Dear God, WHY Can't Death Be An Option?

Idly, I accidentally came up with a truly challenging Death Is Not An Option conundrum. And so I present to you:

Death is not an option, so would you sleep with Brandon Davis, or Kevin Federline?

For those of you who have stayed mercifully free of the former's face, he is the hulking, sweaty, oily guy who's dating Mischa Barton. He looks like he hasn't met a shampoo he didn't shun, probably built a bedframe out of bricks of cocaine, and appears to have a permafunk around his person.

But The Fed is... well, The Fed. He's got horrendous pubic fuzz on his chin, wears sneakers the size of Venus and pants big enough to wrap three times around his bony butt, and is a chronic knocker-upper who reportedly had a communal fuck-swing in his and his roommates' swinging bachelor pad.

They seem to be the best examples of celebrity skankitude -- the poor taste our starlets exhibit in deciding which brand of hot dog belongs in their buns. And indeed, judging these books by their covers -- which, really, is the best and most fun way to do it -- an actual hot dog would be a preferable sexual experience to being thrown a bone by either of these two bitches.

I can't even choose.

Jessica pointed out that she'd probably choose The Fed, because she could pretend he was Brian Austin Green gone manorexic. Of course, she then had to type the stomach-turning phrase, "I'd fuck The Fed." But I think that's probably where I'd go, too. Brandon Davis just looks like he might have maggots.

But... damn. Britney's boy-toy? I just don't know.

What would you do?

Monday, September 22, 2003

In Which Nature Bites Back At My Bedroom

Nothing this weekend quite went as planned.

Football mojo? Gone. Both Notre Dame and UCLA lost their respective football games, the former because of crap-on-a-stale-cracker officiating and the latter because it played the No. 1 team in the nation. And then yesterday, the San Francisco 49ers choked like a midget whore on Ron Jeremy's jock, losing to the Cleveland Browns and removing me from my suicide pool. I would make a sweeping declaration like, "I will never pick the 49ers again," but sadly such statements are moot when there's no more pools left in which to play.

And the capper was last night. As I gathered up the clothes to do my laundry, I picked up a hoodie that was lying casually on the floor in front of my corner bookshelf -- its choice, not mine. Naturally if I had any control over my garments, it would have been hanging neatly from a hook or hanger somewhere. At any rate, when I bent down to scold it for its sloth, I noticed something completely disgusting: Bugs. Everywhere. It was covered in black critters.

And so was my bookshelf.

Termites. Fucking termites.

They gorged themselves on the blond, unfinished wood of the IKEA corner shelf that I always meant to varnish but was too lazy to actually do. They burrowed in and ate, dusting the shelves with wood shavings and the nasty little wings they seem to shed. They cohabitated on the carpet near the sliding glass door. They made sweet termite love on my Bad Kitty hoodie and then basked in the afterglow on the Abercrombie shorts that had magically migrated to the floor to keep my sweatshirt company.

As it turns out, they really like Harry Potter. A bunch of them ate their way into the Chamber of Secrets -- if only Harry had known it was so easy! -- and a pack of others gulped greedily from the Goblet of Fire. Hardbacks, both ruined. Luckily Bill still has my copy of HP 5.0: Now With Five-Hundred Percent More Adolescent Angst.

Lauren helped me clean up, vacuuming the dead bodies from the carpet after I donned rubber gloves and checked the remaining books for trespassers.

My paperbacks seem fine. They didn't tuck into any of my trip journals, either. But they might have attracted company: Out on my balcony, while I stood tipping this monstrous shelf off the ledge to scrape the termites into oblivion, I noticed a really strange-looking giant oblong bug that creeped me out considerably and which I hope has since fucked off and died.

The apartment manager says the termites came from a tree outside that's been problematic for a long time, but which I believe the city won't help remove, or somesuch. Basically, whoever's in charge of the tree -- whether it's Los Angeles or the building next door or Chester, King of Our Jolly Forest Friends -- won't fix the problem, and as a result, the termites had time to find swish new digs.

This is a message to that person: Suck it long and suck it hard, Chester. The white-hot fire of a thousand suns is nothing compared to the heat with which my hatred is scorching you this minute. Seriously. I would really enjoy ramming that tree up your welcoming anal canal, depositing a wealth of healthy and hungry termites up there to feast upon your innards before emerging to gnaw on your crotch wood, reducing your genitals to a pulpy, grainy mess of sexual ineptitude that even Viagra can't cure.

Lauren and I don't handle bugs well under normal circumstances -- an invader here, a doomed spider there (where? AHHHH!) -- so the whole experience left us incredibly squicked out all night. Any time anything tickled my skin, be it an air current or an errant piece of hair dropping from my head, I would frantically slap at my skin, certain a creepy-crawly something was trying to burrow down in search of a late-night snack.

The exterminator is coming -- well, soon. An emergency message has been left. And in the meantime, I'm just hoping one of them won't turn up in the living room, where the wood bookshelves actually mean something to me and are nice. Cross your fingers.

Let's hope next weekend will be 100-percent critter-free.

Db_1

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Saturday, August 23, 2003

Oh, Danny Boy

There's really no graceful way to say this, so I'll just blurt it out: Last weekend, I lost my Danny Gans virginity.

Danny Gans has long been something of an enigma to us. The first time we went to Las Vegas as a group, his picture was plastered everywhere -- on buildings, on taxicabs, on the marquee for the aptly named Danny Gans Theatre, and probably on the ass of an opportunistic hooker or three. Danny Gans seemed like God, towering over us with his gleaming smile, his ethereal Xanadu-esque glow, and his flexed forearms. He won Entertainer Of The Year, Show Of The Year, Personality Of The Year, Comedian Of The Year, and undoubtedly Coif Of The Year. (We don't know for which year, but given the reverence with which people discussed him, we'll assume it's in perpetuity.)

The trouble is, we'd never heard of Danny Gans. How can this man be bigger than Celine Dion, yet be totally unknown outside the harsh neon glow of Las Vegas Boulevard? What does the man do?

"He's magical," breathed my friend Omar's taxicab driver, but when pushed for information, all the man added was, "He does... he's brilliant," prompting Omar to wonder if Danny Gans performs sweeping and potent mind control exercises on his unwitting audience.

Nobody seemed to know. Lauren's parents finagled tickets, and could only report that he was "fantastic" and "did impressions, and things." We were concerned.

Ergo, when I had to miss the most recent Vegas jaunt because a nasty sore throat had me clinging to life by a wee thread, my fabulous friends picked up a little souvenir video for me that was guaranteed to cure whatever plague afflicted me: A Danny Gans tape.

For ages, it sat untouched in my living room, awaiting just the right moment to crack it open. I decided that on my birthday, during our ritual pre-bender consumption of In-N-Out burgers, we should all pop in the tape and prepare for some unadulterated insanity. We were thrilled. Excited. Downright atwitter.

All for naught. The performance was abominable. Hilariously, painfully terrible.

The video should come with an NC-17 rating and a warning for small children, because it opens with a no-holds-barred blow-job.

"We hear he's just amazing," said one excited ticket-holder. "We see him every time we go to Las Vegas, and I'd never want to miss it -- he's the best entertainer in the entire world," a man averred. A woman who'd been waiting in line for ten hours proclaimed that getting tickets was the absolute best thing that ever happened to her, because Danny Gans is a complete genius.

How very self-effacing of Danny Gans to include this in his video. Truly, he hasn't let success get to his head.

Next, we see people filing into the theatre. This shot is a curious choice, because after the five minutes of anticipation and shots of long lines and throngs of people desperate to drink in Danny Gans, all we see as the lights go down is that there are empty seats sprinkled around the auditorium. I don't think we're meant to notice that, but honestly, people, he must've sold out at some point -- go shoot a pickup and splice it in so that you don't make him look like a moron.

He will take care of that himself. Because his impressions are not just bad -- they are awful. Each time he did a voice, he'd say, "Hi, I'm _________," which is the first hallmark of a bad impressionist -- having to identify who you are so that people will oooh and aaaah in recognition.

Sometimes this doesn't even help. Apropos of nothing, he threw in an impression of Al Pacino's character in Scent Of A Woman, and no one got it until he shouted, "HOO-AH!"

He either speaks or sings as each person, sometimes he throws in props -- Hats! Glasses! Clothing! Wigs! -- and occasionally he shits all over the music by writing his own lyrics to famous songs so that they're "witty" and "irreverent" and self-referential. During his Michael Jackson impression, he rewrote "You Are Not Alone" so that it said "funny" things about Michael Jackson and his weird face and life, and then the music stopped and he huddled down, covered his face and wept, "I'm forty years old and I sleep with a llama!" The audience roared with laughter. We simply gaped.

Half the time his jokes didn't even make logical sense. When he was acting like Stevie Wonder -- an impression our refrigerator door can do better simply by squeaking whenever we open it -- he said, "This one's for my friend Shirley MacLaine!" And he sang, "I just called... to say... I was you!" We were aghast. Lauren might have actually gasped audibly. For one thing, it didn't even make sense. Isn't Shirley MacLaine the one who would say that, because she thinks she was reincarnated so many times? And also, why would either of them say that, if neither is dead? I don't understand. Jessica was particularly perplexed by this one, until I assured her that Danny Gans had not in any way bested us with brains, but rather confused us with careless hijinks.

In addition, Mr. Danny Gans committed the cardinal sin of doing a bad Elvis impersonation in the town that's arguably Mecca for Elvis impersonators. You could probably stumble into one on the street that could do better. He imitated George Burns and had the crazy audacity to make fun of -- get this -- his age; Louis Armstrong; Nat King Cole and Natalie Cole singing "Unforgettable"; Jerry Lewis; some woman I didn't know even after he said her name and sang; Billy Joel; and Frank Sinatra. This is to name only a few -- the montage went on for about twenty-five minutes, and it was all clips and bits and bites from his show.

I knew for sure it was terrible when I looked at Doug. Normally, when he's not impressed with something, his expression is totally impassive. But here, he wore a look of abject horror, his features frozen in shock and disgust and fright. One of the shots of the audience they kept cutting to featured an equally bored-looking man, the one stone-faced viewer in a crowd of cheering, clapping imbeciles.

Danny Gans made us want to cry. And stab things.

Of course, there was that one very special moment where Danny Gans broke it down. He laid it bare. He kept it real, homeslice: He sat down, smiled, and asked if he could just sing as Danny Gans for a second. Cold terror washed over me.

"Oh, God," I choked. "I forgot... I went to his Web site... he's a Christian singer, too."

Now, if you like God, that's cool, and if you want to exalt him in song, you go right ahead. I probably won't listen, because it's not my bag, but free speech is all good and it's Danny Gans' prerogative to croon about whatever inspires him. But based on the quality of what had gone before it, I just knew this wasn't going to be anything but nauseating.

And sure enough, he launched into the most pedestrian pro-God tune I've ever had the misfortune to hear. One of those "When I'm by myself and things look really bad, I like to pray to God and he makes me less sad" type of asinine rhymes that sounds like his kid wrote it in Sunday School class -- like when the Family Circus creator would let his kid draw the cartoon for a few weeks. It was a total nightmare.

At the end of the tape, the audience pours out of The Danny Gans Theatre and sings his praises. "Oh, he was amazing," crowed one woman. "When he sang 'Unforgettable' as both Natalie and Nat King Cole, it was just? oh, I got goosebumps," wept another. "He really is the most brilliant man," lied someone else. And on and on. Five minutes of testimonials.

Ours were a little less charitable.

"I'm going to make sure my father knows that he can no longer throw stones at me for liking Pirates Of The Carribbean. Because he said he really liked Danny Gans. I think that makes us fucking even, don't you?" -- Lauren

"Oh my GOD! It turns out that Danny Gans is incredibly untalented!" -- Jessica

"That was AWFUL." -- Doug

So as it turns out, Danny Gans is not the paragon of talent we assumed him to be.

The early review was, how could he do this to us? Danny, all we did was love you. We championed you. We saluted your posters and we clutched your tape to our collective bosom and stroked it and cooed. We even incorporated you into our lingo. They're not "shenanigans" any more -- they're "shedannygans." We got you in the lexicon, bitch! Suck our left jar!

Then we came to our senses. Yes, we miss the time when we looked at his cocksure posture and thought, "Wow, we can't wait to see how great he must be," but in a way it's almost more fun to look at his blinding smile and see the incompetence behind it, like we're the only ones clued into his lunacy because we evaded his mind control tactics. It's our little secret what a flaming pile of ass his show seems to be.

Everyone needs to see it. Pick up the video at The Mirage in Vegas. Download his stuff. You will laugh and cry, but not for the reasons he hopes. Still, you'll be making noise, and maybe it will drown out some of the really painful stuff he does.

Db_1

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Thursday, June 12, 2003

"Dear GOD, what IS that THING?"

To this day, my mother thinks that the badge of my worst drunk experience actually came from an allergy attack.

That's the beauty of mothers: They don't like to believe that you're really, truly capable of even half the stuff you've actually done.

And this one, she'd be alarmed to discover, was a pretty shameful whopper.

It was the spring of 1998. Final exams had just ended, and as such, all of campus and its clusters of nearby off-campus apartment complexes had erupted into enormous, debauched, beer-sodden bacchanalia. All was right in the world.

Doug's apartment complex had a courtyard in between two rows of buildings, and it enabled a property-wide party where people wandered in and out of people's places without much care for who they knew there. Everyone had kegs. Everyone had music. Everyone had drinking games: Drunk Driver, Circle of Death, Asshole, Three-Man. The works. (Because when you're an undergraduate in a terrible town like South Bend, you learn to make your own fun until you turn 21.)

My favorite game (besides Asshole, which lets me indulge my tyrannic side when I'm president, which is often) is Cups, in which two teams face off across a table, each with a plastic Solo cup half- or a quarter-full of beer. When the race starts, the first person in each line downs their beer in one gulp, rests the empty cup on the edge of the table, and flips it until it lands cleanly, face-down. Then the next person goes, until one team beats the other.

This somewhat ridiculous process has the dual effect of getting you drunk quickly, as you are effectively doing shot upon shot of beer, and making you noisy and extremely combative.

I am particularly good at Cups.

I rarely miss on my first attempt, and I play into the competition almost immediately. I talk a lot of trash, I cheer a lot, and there is much unexplained dancing.

On this particular night, the keg was Icehouse, which is strong enough to be a very poor choice as a chugging beer. The Cups matches began in furious earnest, and my newspaper pal Shannon and I quickly emerged as the obvious ones to beat. We embodied all the truly hideous qualities inherent in the best Cups players: We were excellent, we were unstoppable, we were loud, we were boisterous, we were dragging people onto our team when others started to defect, and when people didn't seem that interested in playing us just for fun and bragging rights alone, we began rudely challenging their skills and calling into question their very manhoods.

Naturally, we were trashed. When 1 a.m. rolled around, Doug caught Shannon and I as we were plunging toward rock bottom: drunk, slouched, weaving, and trying to play cups against each other, because we'd steamrolled the competition and driven away any potential opponents with our total Icehouse-fueled competitive arrogance.

"Grab a cup, Doug, I'm gon' tip my cup over and you won't have tipped yours and the win will be won," I slurred.

"Um," he said.

Then he escorted me back to his bedroom. "I love you, too, honey," I mumbled, falling onto the bed. "That's nice," he said. "But that?s not why we're here. You need to pass out."

"I need to RALLY," I shouted, standing up with my finger aloft in triumph.

Motion was not my friend. I immediately fell back onto the bed, gnawed on my lower lip for a second, and pointed out, "But I should puke first, just a super quick vomit, and stuff. Real fast."

That "real fast" turned into "real hard, and for about an hour." Eventually I passed out, but not before some pretty painful heaving and the forcible expulsion of most of what I'd eaten that day, and possibly the day before, and likely anything I'd even thought about consuming the next day.

When I woke up the next morning, I shuffled into the bathroom, my head pounding, my throat burning, and my stomach still lightly churning. Splashing water on my face, I exhaustedly looked up in the mirror... and yelped.

"What is it?" Doug mumbled, rolling awake and facing the bathroom.

Horrified, I shuffled out with my hands over my face. I peeked with my left eye between my fingers.

"It's bad," I said.

He sat up. "Nothing is as bad as all the real fast vomit last night, is it?" he teased.

"Having a souvenir? Worse," I trembled, revealing my face.

Doug recoiled.

Or at least that's how I remember it; the details are hazy, as I was otherwise occupied by moaning, "OH MY GOD I LOOK LIKE GODDAMN FUCKING SATAN."

I had burst a blood vessel in my right eye. The very force of my reverse peristalsis, the heft of my heaving, actually popped a vessel that stained the entire inside corner of my eyeball a pure, deep red.

There was no white to be seen on that half of my eye. This was not a subtle hue, a discreet little fleck of scarlet that could be passed over by the casual observer. This was a giant, honking patch of shiny red death, and it practically assaulted anyone who got within a mile of me. You could actually see it coming before you could make out the rest of me, and it looked ready to kick a little ogling ass.

The eye captivated and horrified everyone whose paths it crossed. "EW!" screamed my friend Sarah. "Oh my GOD, HAC, what the hell? That's disgusting!" gasped MB. "Nice," Doug smirked repeatedly. "Mommy, what's that? Why is that girl evil?" whimpered small children. "Yeah, I'm not with that one," shrugged my left eye.

Baseball caps didn't cast enough of a shadow. Paper bags didn't give me enough air. I tried walking around with my head down, but when the cute senior basketball player from my acting class passed me in the dining hall and said, "Hey, Heather, how are you?" I just instinctively raised my head and smiled and said, "I'm just fine, and you?" At that point, he threw his tray in the air and fled.

Actually, he made nice, then walked away really, really quickly. But it's the same effect: I was a repulsive creature.

I had no idea what to do. I couldn't tell how long the eye would remain red. I had a summer internship at the Austin paper to begin in three weeks. Would I show up looking like a crazy junkie whore? Or some demented patriot with her blue eyes, white eyeball, and blood-red stain of shame?

And what the hell could I tell my mother, who would be picking me up at the airport in Florida in a mere ten days? Would Visine earn its slogan and indeed get the red out?

In the end, no. At least, not demonstrably. The Eye of the Red Death shone bright, a beacon of infamy, for a full week. But suddenly, as if by magic, as if strolling through God Quad back to my dorm each night had somehow had the Holiness By Osmosis desired effect, the red patch started shrinking. By the time I'd driven from campus to Austin, parked my car, and flown home for a quick vacation before returning to begin my internship, the inside corner of my eye boasted nothing more than a yellowish blotch on it.

That wasn?t enough to dupe my mother, of course. She mother peered at it, confused, not entirely sure if she should say anything, as if I had an enormous pustule on my face and was blithely pretending it didn't exist.

"Did something..." she began carefully. "I mean, is that something in... What is that?"

"Oh," I sighed, shaking my head. "I had the worst allergy attack when we moved out of the dorm. I sneezed so much, I burst a blood vessel in my eye."

She stared at me for a second. "Oh, all the packing must've kicked up a lot of dust," she then cried, hugging me with great pity and affection.

"Yeah," I sighed, smiling devilishly over her shoulder. "Yeah, Mom, it was so awful."

I got away with it. But even now, every time I'm so lucky as to be hanging my head over a toilet bowl praying for either sweet, beautiful death or a sudden and non-explosive end to my nausea, I wonder for a split second if lightning might strike twice -- if the Eye of the Red Death might be looking for a return engagement.

I wonder.

But not enough to put down my drink. Cheers.

Db_1

In that vein, we put together a wacky little Web site to chronicle The Summer Of Excessive Drinking And Inappropriate (But Eye-Approved!) Behavior.

Drunky But Funky is still in its nascent stages; we'll be adding more embarrassing photos, for sure, and adjusting our indivudual pages as we continue to embarrass ourselves throughout the summer.

We'll update it with whatever inane and insane shenanigans develop when we hit the bottle and it starts hitting us back. Drop by, say hi, join the movement -- but most importantly, have a good laugh at our expense. We'll drink so that you don't have to -- but, you really should, you know.

Db_1

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Thursday, April 17, 2003

It's Time: Take It Back

At first I thought it was just ER, with The Powers That Shouldn't Be and I bound by a sick psychic connection that lets them unwittingly inject my most grotesque nightmares into each episode. But then I watched the most recent Buffy episode, and there it was: Eye Jiggery-Pokery.

And in the case of Buffy, the jiggery may have been merely implied, but the pokery was literal.

I don't understand this new phenomenon. Has the eye become somehow offensive? Are TV executives making a subtle statement about the lack of respect they have for the tastes of the viewing public, and how they're not afraid to butcher our sensibilities? Or is befouling the ocular cavity, and all its glories, the stuff of everyone's nightmares -- to the point that creative types seeking an easy scare will fall back on eye abuse? "Slit throats are so late-90s," a snooty producer is probably saying. "And no one is doing grotesquely embedded objects any more."

If this becomes a trend, I may be forced into a life of cultural seclusion, kept abreast of the world only by watered-down synopses of show plots and magazines pre-screened by my friends and family. Because the last thing I need is to turn on a show about an uptight skinny bitch fighting the apocalypse, expecting to see her craptastic underlings stabbed but instead seeing her doughy good-hearted friend get a thumb deep in the... you know what... before I can shield my own.

Couldn't the evil priest have given Xander a really nasty paper cut instead? That chaps my ass mightily when it happens to me. And he could've poured vinegar on it for good measure. Or, judging by the amount I swear when I stub my toe, I don't see why it wouldn't be equally torturous for the priest to ram Xander's foot into a door, or the bedframe, or that nasty little bastard that masquerades as the leg of a chair but which is really some kind of expanding, invisible block of doom that leaps out in the path of every passing pinky toe.

Of course, the ocular abuse could just be Joss Whedon making a statement. The actor who did it was on the spectacularly horrible, failed Firefly; although that show did figuratively poke us in the... you know... without mercy, Joss was probably using that scene as an allegory for the fact that he thinks Firefly could beat up Buffy in a bar fight. But that doesn't mean we have to see it happen.

It has to stop. We have to take back the eye.

I?m not sure how to do that, though. A rally? A angry mob outside major studios with faux-witty puns burped up onto bright signs -- "Eye am watching you" and "Don't look now, or you'll cr'eye'" and "F.Y.Eye: You all suck" and "Mine Eyes Have Seen The Glory... Of Shows That Aren't Yours," and other such abuses of language -- and singing theme-appropriate songs like, "Somebody's Watching Me" and "Eye of the Tiger" and "Can't Keep My Eyes Off Of You" and a ditty called "Please Sweet Jesus, Make It Stop," which is probably an existing hymn, but if not, I will pen that song for the occasion.

And if we are tear-gassed, we will know the whole thing is a giant conspiracy to bring down the world's powers of sight. Production values can plummet. Christopher Walken can be as high as he wants during Saturday Night Live. And Charisma Carpenter could get pregnant and hideous again and we'd never know the difference.

That's not acceptable. I want expensive special effects and costumes and sets. I want Christopher Walken to read all his lines off the cue cards without even trying to pretend he's not doing it. And I want to be able to sit on my couch eating chocolate while ribbing on Charisma Carpenter for being the only pregnant woman in history to be uglified by the glow of pregnancy.

I shouldn't have to curl up in a ball on my couch every time a TV show ends, rocking back and forth and babbling in tongues. It's just not necessary.

Take back the eye. Or at least find another object we can advance as the next trendy injury/object of torture du jour.

Evil Mystery Terrorist could slowly inflate Kiefer's appendix. That's scary. Or The First Evil could strap Buffy down and give her a hangnail. The possibilities are endless; my tolerance for eye tomfoolery, less so.

Please make it stop.

Someone got here by searching for: Caramel the famous booty Reading: Nothing. No time. Eating: Rather a lot of cottage cheese lately, actually.

Tuesday, January 28, 2003

Please Don't Talk To Me II: Seriously, Dude, Please Don't Talk To Me

I've never been so delighted to exit a cab in my life.

Saturday morning, I left New York for a week-long stay in Maryland with my sister, her husband, and my niece. My cabbie seemed friendly at first, asking me if I'm from New York and how I enjoy the city, and what I do for a living. Incidentally, in the interests of simplicity, I lied about my occupation. I told him I am a technology reporter, which would have been true if I'd said it to him two years ago; generally, I prefer answers in these situations that require a minimum of explanation. It's just quicker and easier.

Sadly, conversation wasn't to be avoided on this day.

CABBIE:
So, you don't live in New York? Where are you from?

HEATHER'S BRAIN:
Keep it simple. Or, lie.

HEATHER:
I'm from Texas.

HEATHER'S BRAIN:
Nice cover! Not true, but technically not false.

CABBIE:
Do you have a boyfriend in Texas? What kind of boys do you like?

HEATHER:
I don't think I have a type, other than that my serious relationships have tended to be with guys who are comfortably taller than I am. But that's...

CABBIE:
You want to get married when you're 35?

HEATHER:
I want to get married someday, yeah. Definitely. I want a family. I don't know when; I'm not into planning that stuff. If it's right, it's right, no matter...

CABBIE:
Are you going to have kids?

HEATHER:
Definitely. I...

CABBIE:
Have you ever seen childbirth?

HEATHER:
Oh, no, actually. Not in person, anyway. Once I...

CABBIE:
Oh, it is painful-looking. That is not a big hole! It is very small!

HEATHER:
I'm sure!

CABBIE:
Not so good for pushing out a big baby!

HEATHER:
Ouch!

CABBIE:
It's only good for pumping, yes? Yes! Ha ha! It's good for pumping!

HEATHER:
(laughs politely)
I... um.

CABBIE:
SO GOOD! For pumping!

HEATHER'S BRAIN:
Save me, Jebus.

CABBIE:
So when do you want to get married?

HEATHER:
Oh, I...

CABBIE:
You want to wait a few years, no? Have several men at once before then! How big do you like it?

HEATHER:
I...

CABBIE:
Eight inches? Ten? You like big?

HEATHER:
I don't... um... I couldn't really say...

CABBIE:
I think ten inches for you! You like inches! And do you like Texas? You live in a safe neighborhood?

HEATHER:
Yes, very safe.

CABBIE:
You don't have trouble with people? You are so beautiful, you are not scared at night?

HEATHER:
No. Really, I'm very fortunate. It's completely safe, but I am still careful.

CABBIE:
No one's ever tried to rape you?

HEATHER:
Excuse me?

CABBIE:
You've never had a man try to rape you at all? Not once?

HEATHER:
No!

CABBIE:
Really? But you're so beautiful.

HEATHER'S BRAIN:
Oh my God, I am about to die.

HEATHER:
Um... but, no. I am very lucky that I've never had anyone try something so horrible.

CABBIE:
Yes, yes. But it's so hard sometimes, no? Men see a beautiful girl and they can't help themselves.

HEATHER:
Well, but...

CABBIE:
It's in our natures.

HEATHER:
It's a disgusting thing to do to someone.

HEATHER'S BRAIN:
This is the creepiest line of questioning in the world... Better up the ante.

HEATHER:
But I carry pepper spray, just in case.

By this time, we'd reached LaGuardia, and never has an airport looked more like sweet, sweet utopia. I got out, threw some cash at him, and bolted into the US Airways terminal without looking back.

Db_2

Someone got here by searching for: "Donna Martin graduates" Reading: Still The Dirt: Confessions of the World's Most Notorious Rock Band Watching: "Sesame Street" with my niece. Awww.

Sunday, September 09, 2001

The Bog of Eternal Stench

Strange things are afoot in U.S. waters.

Take six shark attacks in Florida, add one off Virginia Beach, one in North Carolina and another in Miami, and you get one very timid Heather when it comes to dipping my feet in salt water. But the more immediate problem is the Red Tide -- and no, it's not estrogen-related.

A Red Tide is a rare and deadly algae bloom that, when it hits, instantly wipes out the fish population in the affected area. Currently, a Red Tide is sweeping up the Gulf Coast of Florida, and just before I arrived, it reached Sarasota. This means fish cadavers wash up anew each day on the beaches, or break the water's surface and just float until decomposition begins.

Ergo, I live in a sewer.

This city reeks. Quiet, scenic Sarasota is besieged with the funk of 1,000 years, the stench of Satan's britches, the aroma of a landfill doused in year-old milk and then puked on by an onion-sucking yak. Or, in more relatable terms, it smells like rotten fish. Everywhere.

When we drive anywhere farther (further?) away than ten minutes, our eyes start to burn and we cough -- both typical human symptoms developed in the wake of an algae bloom like this one. And on the news, we're treated to stunning, highly appetizing photos of decaying fish skeletons, all blood and guts and bone and melting skin, complete with buzzing flies and beachcombers helpfully holding their noses and pointing, as if to inform the ignorant, "Hey, look! Something smells a tad funny in that 6-foot pile of rancid death!"

So much for spending time outdoors, although Mother Nature would've prevented that anyway, what with the incessant rain and dark clouds she's sent to our sleepy little coastal town. My sister Alison didn't really digest the news the first time; after Mom told her, she passed the phone to me, and Alison said, "I can't wait to get Leah out there -- you'll love seeing her in the water, swimming." To which I said, "Um, you ARE aware that it smells like a giant festering stink-pit?"

As this happens so rarely, no one can say for sure when the haze of putrescence will lift and let us breathe again. But rest assured, as the Red Tide passes and continues blazing its crimson trail of pestilence, I will indeed forget my suffering and offer up a big, mocking, "nyah, nyah," when the stench hits farther north in Florida.

Reach Out and Touch Me

July 2008

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Pages To Turn

  • Jaclyn Moriarty: Murder Of Bindy Mackenzie

    Jaclyn Moriarty: Murder Of Bindy Mackenzie
    Really liked it -- I enjoy her creative framework, and the carryover of characters from "The Year of Secret Assignments" was fun. This is based on a girl who is in one of my favorite chapters from that book, actually. I knocked this off in just a few hours because she has a way of getting you to want to do nothing but turn and turn and turn the pages.

  • Andrew Morton: Posh & Becks

    Andrew Morton: Posh & Becks
    Sigh. You at least expect an Andrew Morton book to be dishy, but it's so loosely reported and written. It actually feels like all the legal teams combed through it and took out anything interesting, and what's left is a bland retelling of their lives mixed in with him flip-flopping between calling them caring parents and exploitative, desperate hypocrites. Boring.

  • Alexander McCall Smith: Morality for Beautiful Girls

    Alexander McCall Smith: Morality for Beautiful Girls
    And, Book 3, which I also enjoyed.