Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Lies and jerks

Ever notice the little ways we try to hide things from other people? I'm not just talking about that guy you know who can never admit he or she is wrong, I mean the small stuff we all do every day.
Like when someone calls you up and says "Oh, I'm sorry, did I wake you up?" And you lie and assure them no, you're always up at 3:30 am on a weekday. Why do we do that? Are you afraid of offending someone who just dragged you out of bed to tell you that episode of "I Love Lucy" that you like is on. I do it myself, and I have no idea why.
Then there's the people who don't want to admit that they didn't
Or, soaking of the person who can't admit they're setting what about people don't want to admit they don't know something, but are so obvious that they must be doing it in purpose. I used to work with this one woman who anytime she got a question answered, would say "I already knew that, I just wanted to see if you knew." She'd say it with a smile like she was kidding, but if you pressed her, she would insist that she already knew.
Then there was this guy who called my phone and asked to speak to someone who wasn't me, let's call him Phil.
"You have the wrong number," I said.
"No, I don't," he said. The implication seemed to be that he didn't dial the wrong number, I had the wrong phone.
"Yes, you have," I said.
"Are you sure Phil's not there?"
I assured him I was positive, that I didn't even know anyone named Phil.
"Look," he said, "Can you just ask if Phil is there?"
I said "I'm the only one in this car."
He muttered something unflattering about me and hung up.
I read somewhere that people tend to view situations as the result of personality traits in others, but with themselves they consider the circumstances. For instance, if someone is rude to me on the phone for reasons beyond my control, like in the above example, I think that guy is a jerk. But if I was the one venting my spleen on someone who didn't deserve it, I'd say "Well, I've been having a rough week, what with my car breaking down and all the trouble I've been having at work..."
Ever since I read that, I've tried to be more understanding of other people. If someone cuz me if in traffic, I tell myself maybe he didn't see me or is in a hurry for a perfectly good reason, rather than assuming he's a reprehensible pile of filth.
It didn't so me from cursing him out when it happens, though.

-Long days and pleasant nights

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Back, Maybe

I see it's been almost a year since my last post. The two or three people who actually read this thing may be wondering why I've been away for so long. Simply put: I've been busy.

I don't usually discuss my personal life here, unless I'm relating an anecdote or similar. I'm going to break that format for the moment, so I can explain why I've been neglecting my writing, and why I've been the happiest I've been in my life.

Her name is Amarilys Lily, and she is my other half.

I used to think it was hyperbole, or worse, sentimental nonsense when people said thing like that. I used to think I'd be alone the rest of my life. That light at the end of the tunnel starts looking awfully distant after 30+ years. I used to think love like you see in the movies was a pretty fantasy invented by foolish dreamers. I used to think a lot of things.

The last year has been an amazing, dizzying, scary, impossible ride to places I told myself didn't exist. Intoxicating and sobering all at once. I discovered that I hadn't forgotten how to dream, merely forgotten why I should.

So forgive me for being away, and forgive me if I do it again. I'm in love, dammit, and I wouldn't take back a moment of it for anything.

I love you, Amie.

-Long days and pleasant nights 

Friday, June 6, 2014

The Hotel Room


I had an idea for a series of commercials that some chain of hotels, like Holiday Inn or Best Western, could do. It follows the basic format of celebrity endorsement, with a twist that I think will be very successful. Here's a sample run.

EXT. HOTEL

A nice shot of the outside of the hotel, in bright sunshine, with a few scattered clouds

DESK CLERK
Thanks for choosing us, sir.

INT. HOTEL LOBBY
The camera shows a side view of SHAQUILLE O'NEAL receiving a hotel key from a young female DESK CLERK

DESK CLERK
Here's your key. I really hope you enjoy your stay, Mr.O'Neal
SHAQUILLE O'NEAL accepts the key

SHAQUILLE O'NEAL
Thank you, I'm sure I will.

DESK CLERK
Tommy will show you to your room.

DESK CLERK gestures off-screen. SHAQUILLE O'NEAL turns. The camera changes to his point of view to show TOMMY WISEAU, dressed as a bellhop. Cue theme to The Room.

TOMMY WISEAU
Oh hai, Shaq!

Camera cuts briefly to SHAQUILLE O'NEAL, looking bemused.

TOMMY WISEAU
So let's go to your room, hah?

INT ELEVATOR
TOMMY WISEAU struggles to get luggage cart into elevator.

SHAQUILLE O'NEAL
Do you need a hand with that?

TOMMY WISEAU
Don't worry about it!

INT HOTEL HALLWAY
SHAQUILLE O'NEAL walks down the hall alongside TOMMY WISEAU, who's pushing the slightly damaged luggage cart.

SHAQUILLE O'NEAL
So then he says, "If I'd known you were on the Lakers, I would have charged you double!"

TOMMY WISEAU
Hahaha, what a story!

INT HOTEL ROOM

SHAQUILLE O'NEAL enters his room, followed by TOMMY WISEAU. The camera is focused on the two actors, not showing the room.

TOMMY WISEAU
Well, here you go!

SHAQUILLE O'NEAL
Thanks, but isn't this unusual for a hotel room?

Camera cuts to shot of the hotel room, which is dressed to resemble the apartment from The Room.

TOMMY WISEAU
It looks just fine to me. Anyway, enjoy your stay in THE ROOM.

Cut to splashscreen of the hotel's logo.

INT Hotel Room

SHAQUILLE O'NEAL fishes in his pocket for something.

SHAQUILLE O'NEAL
Oh here, a little something for you...

TOMMY WISEAU
Don't worry about it! A-hahahaha!

FADE TO BLACK as TOMMY WISEAU continues to laugh.

-Long Days and Pleasant Nights

Monday, May 26, 2014

It takes all kinds to make a can of mixed nuts

A while back, I was reading this "theory" by one of those Young Earth Creationists, trying to pose what he clearly thought was "definitive" proof that dinosaurs didn't live no millions of years ago.

His stance was this. His wife had bought a can of mixed nuts, and he'd been messing around with them, shaking the can. He noticed as he did so that the largest nuts tended to sink to the bottom. He left his conclusions out, clearly as an exercise for the reader. His intent was clear, he was trying to say that dinosaur bones "sank" to the Earth's lower strata, which is why paleontologists think they lived a long long time ago.

I probably don't have to enumerate the problems with that "theory," but I'll give you a random sampling. One, the Earth is not a can of mixed nuts. Maybe if the entire Earth was one big sandy beach about 30 feet deep, with regular Earthquakes spread uniformly across its entire surface, his idea might have some weight. But it's not, and the geological strata scientists dig through to get to dinosaur bones (among other thing) is solid rock, so there's nothing for the bones to sink through. Also, despite public perception, dinosaurs weren't all huge monstrosities that made the Earth quake with every ponderous step. Just like now, dinosaurs (and the other animals alive at the time) came in all shapes and sizes. For his theory to be true, the largest dinosaurs would mostly be at the bottom of the Earth's crust, and the smallest would be at the top. This is not what we find when we go hunting dinosaur bones.

And perhaps most importantly, what this man did was not a scientific experiment. It was what's commonly known as "grasping at straws." Anyone can take some random observation and make a wild generalization based on it. Here's a few examples.

1) I threw a ball at the ground, and it came back up. How can gravity exist if the ball is allowed to travel away from the Earth?

2) I took a rock and threw it as hard as I could. It didn't travel to Miami as I expected, it instead landed not too far from me. Therefore airplanes cannot exist.

3) I own two dogs, and they mated and had puppies. Extinction can't be real.

4) I once climbed to the top of a tree, and I could still breathe. All those pansies at NASA don't have to waste my tax money building spacesuits, they should just cowboy up and breathe space air!

See? It's fun.

-Long Days and Pleasant Nights

Friday, January 24, 2014

EXPECTO BENGHAZI!

Has anyone noticed that to the 15 or 16 die hard fanatics out there who just won't let go of it, the word "Benghazi" is like a magic wand that can be waved to end any partisan debate. And to those determined to turn it into a scandal if it's the last thing they'll do, they'll find a way to shoehorn it into any discussion of politics.

"Hey, the ACA enrollment numbers are up. Some commentators are saying they may reach their goal for enrollments."
"Millions of insured people are nothing compared to fpur dead Americans in Benghazi."
"No, I guess not, but look. Three more States are considering expanding Medicaid coverage."
"Medicaid wouldn't have saved the lives of four dead Americans in Benghazi."
"I don't see how that applies, but I suppose it's a true enough statement. But hey, how about Chris Christie? I bet this whole George Washington Bridge thing is hurting his popularity."
"If you think I'm going to let some real scandal distract me from four dead Americans, you can Benghazi my Benghazi."
"What about Bob McDonnell? Looks like there's a lot of trouble brewing with the GOP right now."
"No cuz Benghazi."
"Or Dave Agema. So far the Republican Party has had a rough year."
"BENGHAZI! BENGHAZI BENGHAZI BENGHAZI!"

Edit:

On further reflection, I think "Reductio ad Benghazium" would have been a better title for this blog.

Second edit:

Another point that I wanted to make, but forgot to include in the original entry, is that I find the language these few true believers use to be very interesting. Whenever they talk about the attack, they always say "four dead Americans." Not "four innocent lives," or "four people died." It's as if the important part isn't that four people died. The important part is that 'Merica. One gets the impression that if the only people who died in the attack were, for instance, four Libyan groundskeepers, nobody would care. "They should have thought about that before being born in Libya," people might say.

Perhaps the Left should adopt this strategy, and instead of talking about "America being plunged into two wasteful, pointless wars based on a lie," they could instead talk about "6,795* Americans dead" in Iraq and Afghanistan combined.

* Number obtained from figures at http://icasualties.org/

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Exercises in Authoritarianism

Where I live, you can't park on my side of the street on Mondays so the town can do what it laughingly calls street cleaning. By this they mean some guy in a modified zamboni sprays water on the street and rotating brushes push the dirt around some. There are signs posted on every street, saying you can't park on this side on a certain day, between 9 am and 4 pm. The police, having nothing better to do, watch this like hawks, ready to swoop down in an instant so they can temporarily relieve themselves of the stultifying boredom of policing a town that has roughly 5x more patrol officers than it could ever possibly need.

Sometimes, I forget about this, and park in front of my house on Monday.I did so back in November, and received a ticket, probably the instant I was out of sight. The ticket used to be $25, but it's apparently been bumped up to $50 now, since the government always keeps up with inflation, except where wages are concerned. That or someone's been on their backs to crack down on this epidemic of people parking inconveniently. There was a court date on the ticket, set for later in this month. I suppose there's such a backlog of felonious reprobates such as myself that it takes that long to get down to me.

I went back and forth over whether I would attend the court date or not, and today I decided I might as well just pay the ticket. The last couple times I'd paid in person, the police dept. was kind enough to reduce the fee to roughly half. So like a responsible citizen doing his civic duty, I went down to the police station. When I went in, there were two officers chatting behind the counter. One broke away and approached the foot-thick bulletproof glass that separated him from the dangerous world outside. He asked what I needed, and I explained that was there to pay a parking ticket. He informed me that the Village Hall now handles parking tickets. I thanked him and left.

Maybe it was the blast of cold air, but the moment I stepped outside I was filled with dread. The police in this town are hardly shining beacons of public servants, but they are occasionally able to tell the difference between a hardened criminal and a simple mistake. But the soulless automatons of Village Hall are a bunch of pencil pushing, by-the-numbers, unbending bureaucrats if ever any existed. They weren't going to be doing me any favors. I'd be lucky if anyone there stepped around me if I accidentally stood in one of the ruts they'd worn into the floors during their daily routine.

But being that I was out and about already anyway, I headed down there. The power games began the moment I approached the counter. Like the police station, there were two people standing around talking when I entered. However, all similarities ended there. No one stepped away from their chat to see if they could help me. In typical government worker, neither of them so much as acknowledged that I was in the room. I imagine had I been naked, on fire, and pronouncing their doom in the voice of God, I would have gotten the exact same treatment. At one point, a third person approached and joined the conversation. She managed to enter the room, talk, and leave without even pointing her body in my general direction.

Eventually, the conversation ended, and the two women retreated to their desks. Moments after that, one of them said "I'll be right with you, sir." I thought the "sir" was a nice touch. It seemed to say "We couldn't care less about whatever stupid reason you have for darkening our doorstep, but that doesn't mean we don't respect you." Granted, for all I know, she was speaking to her stapler, since she didn't even look up from her desk when she said it.

A while after that, the other woman approached, fixed her gaze on something over my right shoulder,  and asked what she could do for me. I held out the ticket and my checkbook, and said that I wanted to pay a parking ticket. She asked someone in my general vicinity if I could take it out of the envelope it had been placed in. I did so, and though she didn't ask me to, I unfolded it for her as well.

Having an excuse to stop pretending to look at me, she took the ticket and examined it. She evidently didn't actually read anything on it, because she asked me how much it was for. I told her I thought it was for $50, and she said that sounded fine. Too bad I didn't say I thought it was for $10. I just might have gotten away with it.

I explained I would be paying by personal check, and she told me who to make the check out to. I asked for a pen, and she shot an invisible person next to me a dirty look and gave me one. As expected, she didn't even offer to reduce the fee.

As I left, she thanked me. She actually thanked me. Her actual words were something like "Thank you very much," but what I heard was "Thank you for bowing meekly to our draconian authority. Next time be prepared to pay in blood, mortal." And these people wonder why "bureaucrat" is a dirty word.

-Long Days and Pleasant Nights

Monday, September 30, 2013

Think, People, Think!

I've been waiting for an excuse to break out my old "Think, People, Think!" series of blogs, but I hadn't found anything worthy for a long time. I even managed to convince myself that people weren't just blinding believing any old thing they read on the Internet.

Well, silly me. There's a new hoax out there, one that people who napped during critical thinking lessons in school are falling for. Though the merry pranksters coming up with these merry pranks are getting smarter. This one wasn't posted as an anonymous facebook post or chain email, this one was lovingly crafted to look like an actual ad.


It doesn't surprise me that someone made this. There's always someone out there pathetic enough that they think inflicting chaos for the sake of chaos is some sort of twisted social darwinism. And I guess I shouldn't be too surprised that people fell for this baloney. Apple has carefully cultivated a reputation as miracle workers for decades, striving to make themselves appear so advanced that any other comparable product is still in the Stone Age.

So I can accept the fact that people looked at that ad and their first thought was "Oh, wow, that's cool." What does surprise me is that their second thought wasn't "Wait, how could that possibly work?" The problem comes from the fact that the average computer user has absolutely no idea how technology actually works, and assumes their phone, tablet, etc, runs on magic.

It's like the old Three Stooges gag (seen here at about the 5:30 mark) where Curly drills holes into a sinking boat. When Moe asks Curly why he did that, Curly explains that he's "letting the water out." We laugh at Curly's stupidity, because you don't have to be an engineer to understand why his plan won't work.

Yet with a computer, you can apparently say "This software update will make your hardware waterproof," and folks will believe it. The obvious solution is to increase our understanding of computers so that trolls can't make people throw their brand-new phones in the bathtub. But there's a simpler solution, use your own (lack of) knowledge to your advantage.

It goes like this: you read about how the new ios7 can make your phone waterproof. Stop for a second. Can you think of any way that could be possible? Of course not. That makes the information suspect. Question it. If you can't answer for yourself if that sounds real, do some research. It won't kill you.

So, that's my advice. Remember the old adage, "If something sounds too good to be true, it probably is." Similarly, if you read something that stretches your conceptions of what's possible. question it. Even if it doesn't, question it. Never stop questioning. Asking questions and seeking answers is what made us humans what we are. The houses we live in, the cars we drive, the iPhones we throw into bathtubs, all down to asking questions. Never stop asking questions. Never.

-Long Days and Pleasant Nights