Monday, September 25, 2006

alone and afraid

Even in a “mature” age, I occasionally find myself with misgivings about being alone. A creak, a bump, any sound no matter how insignificantly mundane or ubiquitous can be transformed into something concerning or even shockingly frightening for the tiniest of moments. I freeze in my tracks as adrenaline washes over me… a sensation that passes in the microseconds that span the time it takes my brain to process the experience. I quickly return to a state of ease as I try to ignore that fleeting moment of embarrassment that comes from jumping at the sound of a venetian blind snapping back against an open window in the afternoon breeze.

I like to cook when I’m alone in the house. Not only does it help me relax, but there is something especially gratifying about spending a lot of time preparing and cooking a meal that only you will eat. There are fears that haunt me as I cook by myself. These fears are exponentially more fantastic than those associated with simply being alone. They involve complex narratives that unfold vividly in my mind which is cursed by a hero’s helping of a morbid active imagination, involving atmosphere and characters and occasionally subplots. The most common of these horrific fantasies is most likely a fear that is more common than I like to think.

How many times has this happened to you?

I have spent an evening chopping and prepping a fine bird with shallots, potatoes, and other various accoutrements, and have put it in a perfectly preheated oven. I sit down on the couch to read a book as my meager living space gradually fills with the smells of culinary temptation so splendid that a pathetic wordsmith such as me could never describe them with reasonable justice.

Minutes pass too slowly. The aroma begins to consume my mind from the outside in. Soon it is impossible to concentrate on my reading. It is then that the phone rings. It startles me, waking me from a dream I never want to end. I answer it without hesitation.

“Hello?”

Nothing is my answer. Again, I say “hello?”

Then I hear it. The whispering desperate voice that causes my heart to pound even before I hear all the words it articulates “have you checked the chicken?!”

I just hope the call isn’t coming from inside my own house…

Mr Blunderson is a regular contributor to absolutely nothing… not even his own blog.

Monday, September 18, 2006

this was bound to happen

CNN.COM reports that a body has washed up near where a crew was shooting a scene for CSI: Miami. I guess that is a little irony... kind of like if the Friends cast went and hung out at a coffe shop between takes, or if someone got a parking ticket outside the Law & Order set.

According to the article, this is not the first time this has happend near or at a CSI set. No surprise there I suppose... there must be 8 thousand different CSI spinoffs. Something bad is bound to happen near one of them. That's just the law of averages right there.

Sunday, September 17, 2006

oh hello Mr. Clooney

CNN.COM headline from the entertainment section - "Clooney, Nobel winner demand Darfur action." Will someone tell me what is entertaining about that?

I suppose it might be a well placed story considering that PEOPLE magazine readers could probably take a break from the "usual" and get a taste of what’s going on in the world. Perhaps they will realize there are greater tragedies than missing the latest gossip on Brittney and Kevin or even just George Clooney.

My concern is that this is going to turn me off to reading entertainment news. It's where I go to find stories that will not challenge me, and certainly not be a considered a "downer." Whatever you may think of Mr. Clooney or celebrities who are "getting involved" this story seems like real news to me, and should be grouped thusly. This whole thing reeks of a "you got chocolate in my peanut butter" type situation without the delicious results.

In some REAL entertainment news, I see that Ashton Kutcher is in a movie with Kevin Costner called The Guardian. Apparently, one plays a young man who joins the coast guard to fill a void in his life and is taken under the wing of a gritty hardened yet renowned rescue swimmer, and I can’t wait to find out who plays what.

I also want to know which one will be the “port in the storm” and which will be the “line in the sand.” And I can’t help but wonder if and when this movie bombs at the box office if Kevin Costner won’t jump into Ashton’s face suddenly and shout “I punk’d you BEEOTCH!”

In the real world, I’ve recently been getting really tired of comments made by some of my co-workers at the soulless retailer concerning other employees who they think are beneath them. It’s getting to the point where I might choke on the smug, and that pisses me off. Let me let you in on a little secret: Even if you are better than everyone else at S-Mart, you are still only the best at S-Mart and that doesn’t mean shit.

Saturday, September 16, 2006

adventures in sleep deprivation

you know that you are not getting enough sleep when you try to put these on -

shorts

but then you realize you have actually put on this -

skirt

at least there were only about 15 people who witnessed this...

Thursday, August 10, 2006

did the circus ever not suck?

Maybe I haven’t given the circus enough of a chance, perhaps I am too dense to grasp the finer nuances but in my limited experience I can tell you I truly believe the circus sucks massive ass.


And by circus I mean all circuses.

My first experience with anything circus related was the movie Dumbo. What I learned from Dumbo is that most circus animals are dicks. I may have been a little sensitive to the treatment the little elephant got in the early portion of that film since I grew up short, or perhaps I’m projecting all over the place... All of that aside, I can't with a clear conscience support animals that are dicks.

Also as a wee lad I recall watching Circus of the Stars with my family on that one special Sunday every year. Even though I was young I was well aware that it was a total crap fest. The obvious appeal of the show was the possibility of disaster. I was always hoping someone got mauled, but a fall from a tight rope or similar circus apparatus would have been equally satisfying. Although it may have been sad to lose one of our precious celebrities, it's not like they are hard to find. I can't think of a single person I would have felt too bad for if they had messed up even a little… except for Eric Estrada. He was fucking okay in my book.

My first time going to an actual live circus was while I was in grade school. Barnum & Bailey made a stop at what was then the Salt Palace, that lovely hat-box of a building that no longer graces the Salt Lake City skyline. It was pretty amazing, but a 3 ring circus of that magnitude can only exacerbate ADD. It certainly did mine and I don't even have ADD. The biggest problem with the show was spectacle or not, the damn thing went on and on and on for so long that the “ooh and ah” factor gave way to the “can we go the hell home?” mindset well before it should have. I was a kid under the age of ten at the time and kids never want to leave anything, except maybe vaccinations.

Twice in my high school years I stopped and ate at the Circus Circus buffet. I really wish I could tell you that one of those occasions was not a marching band trip, I really do. And I know this isn’t a real circus or remotely related to an actual circus, but I would like to put in my seven cents regarding buffets anywhere. What is the big deal? What is so great about food that’s been picked over by everyone in the line in front of me. What is so appetizing about looking at steaming trays of so-called food through the windows still clouded by the breath of the people that were standing there just moments before. And do you really expect me to believe that I’m getting some crazy good deal on the food when technically I’m doing most of the work?


But I digress.


A summer or two ago a Circus who’s name I can not remember came sweeping through town. They had a big tent, they had ponies and tigers, and the kids got in free. The adult prices were enough to send us into the poorer house but they didn’t post that information until we were so close to the show that our children were frothing at the mouth for camel and tight rope related entertainment. In other words, we were pretty much fucked.

We forked over the cash and found some seats in the tent… which was only about 8 Beellion degrees inside. I may have lost 10 pounds just sitting through that show—which was perhaps the most lame form of entertainment that I had paid to witness since I shelled out six bucks to “feel the earth shake” on fisherman’s wharf back in 1989 (that will teach me to sit on some strangers lap).

Like the Barnum & Baily Circus, this show was way too long and this time it had the added bonus of being exponentially less spectacular than the B & B show I had seen in my youth. There was a magic act that disturbed the children (involving a burned corpse gag), there was the highly touted white bengal tiger (the poster for the show said “tigers” but it is the circus and humbug should be expected) that was in the arena for 57 seconds and did nothing but sit on a stool and wave its paw before being ushered back to it's holding area. “Wild animal spectacular” my ass.

Don’t even get me started on the clowns. The clowns seemed to be putting in a less than half-hearted effort, resulting in not being funny or entertaining at all… but that may have been because I was suffering from heat stroke at the time. I do remember every few minutes a clown was trying to sell me something. That is what annoyed me the most. It was like being put on the top of the “please call me” list for telemarketers.

All in all there were a few impressive moments, but not enough to overcome the heat and how long and how lame the damn show was.

I should at least give the circus… people… props as I realize they scrape out their living by putting their lives on the line for cash and admiration. I have no idea what kind of bank they pull in but I can make a few guesses since I never once saw the inside of a circus performers house on “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous.” Come to think of it, I don’t think I even saw the outside of a circus performers house on that show.

Oh who am I kidding? I never watched that show. In those days I was too busy trying to get a peek at the Solid Gold dancers, and I couldn’t even watch them at my house if my mom happened to be home.

What is my point? The point is that I am bitter because even though I am a lowly peon for a soulless retailer there isn’t a day that I work where I don’t put my life on the line for the cash and admiration… (except for the cash—its not the worlds best paying job—and since I work graveyards while the store is closed there isn’t really anyone who can admire what I do) but still, you don’t see anyone giving me a big parade when I roll into to town.

Shit, I’d settle for a thank you note.


Update - I forgot to mention that a Google search of George Bush and Circus gave me more than 3 Meellion results. George Bush and fucking clown only came up with 6. Who would have thought?

Sunday, August 6, 2006

I am so bummed

For a very long time I had considered taking a picture of the sign this particular business had up at their car lot but I never did. I tracked them down in the phone book but its just not the same. For whatever reason they have now changed their name. This is a move I wholeheartedly support, as I was always a little disturbed by the old name:

Worst business name ever

Was this simply an effort to be… klever that resulted in a tasteless miscalculation? Was it someone trying to be funny… another case of tasteless miscalculation? Or was there something more sinister going on here? Should it bother me that this place only sold white cars?
Should it concern me more that they changed the name to FAIR DEAL?

Then again, maybe its just one of a million crappy used car lots and I should move on to thinking about something really important. Speaking of which, does anyone know if Tom Hanks has cut his Da Vinci Code
hair yet?

Friday, August 4, 2006

Good Bye

I can't believe I forgot to say goodbye to Clean Flicks. Those filthy self righteous sanitizing bastards no longer have a store in my little town or anywhere, thanks to a judge in Denver who ruled in favor of that crazy little thing called... what was it? Oh yeah. THE LAW.


My only regret is that I failed to say "good fucking bye you fucking pricks" so many weeks ago when it would have been relevant.

Thursday, August 3, 2006

you know I live in a small town when...

Today I popped in the grocery store by my house for a few things for dinner. I totally blew the guys mind when I asked for hummus. He stood there looking at me as though he couldn't decide whether I was making something up as if to fuck with him or if it was okay for him to admit he had no idea what I was talking about.
"I have no idea what that is," he finally told me before asking me what the hell hummus was.
I explained to him what it was, but that didn't really seem to help. The guy got this vacant look in his eyes and said "I have... no... idea what that is."
I should cut the guy some slack. This is Springville, Utah after all. He could probably go another 35-40 years without getting that question again.

update - a Google search for "hummus" results in about 5,730,000 pages. I only looked at one in my deep research for this blog entry, and that was a wikipedia entry. One thing I often do after I search for anything online is do another search for that thing (in this case hummus, obviously) and George Bush. Always good for a laugh (well... usually) but today I found this site http://flickr.com/photos/camera/1697539/ which seems to indicate that although he sucks as a president, Mr. Bush tastes great on a cracker... or a pita as the case may be.

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

what is wrong with people?

this is how you know the world is fucked:

..."Oh no I don't watch television anymore--it will make you stupid so I simply do not watch it at all. Well, I do watch the Simple Life. It's really good..."


this was spoken by a woman behind me in line at the supermarket to a friend in part of a conversation lamenting the decline of intelligence in America. I guess she didn't stop watching TV soon enough.

Saturday, June 3, 2006

eh?

While at work for the soulless retailer, I noticed we were selling packages of flash cards that contain state trivia. Funny thing though, there are only 36 cards. I didn't have a chance to look inside, but I can't help but wonder why they didn't include 1 card for each state. Is it possible that there are 14 states that are simply not interesting enough to be worth one factoid printed on a card?

The other thing I wonder about regards the lear jet that crashed that happened to be registered to Pat Robertson. Should someone start taking bets on how long it will him to blame gays and atheists for the tragedy? I'm putting 20 bucks on a week to the day.