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April 30, 2009

Baby and Bucky

Self storage units. The late afternoon sun broiled the self-storage units' flat rooftops. A mirage effect created the illusion of a cool lake floating atop wide, low block buildings. Bucky leaned back until his plastic deck chair quivered on the blacktop.

"Why do they call it late?" Bucky said to Baby and no one in particular. "It's here at the same time every day, more or less."

Baby's hair permanently screened her right eye like a curtain of fine blonde steel wool.

"You are the mighty oak that shades my babbling brook, King Dynamite," she said with a yellowish smile. "I dream constantly of your stout trunk and overspreading limbs."

Leonard "Bucky" Sawtooth was not handsome, unless he stood in a crowd of ugly men. Bucky did not seem to be particularly intelligent, unless he was packed into a room full of idiots. He was tolerated and mostly adored by his common-law wife, Doreen Shaker. Bucky called her "Baby."

Continue reading "Baby and Bucky" »

March 17, 2009

Midlife Banking Crisis

Convicted swindler Bernie Madoff, New York, December, 2007 Special Report -- Here's why I should start my own bank:

I appear very trustworthy and can project an image of calm reassurance that I combine with the illusion of giving a rat's ass.

You should see me when I'm wearing a suit jacket and without my body jewelry. Seriously, you won't know whether or not I mean what I say! If the bank venture doesn't work out I can apply my faux social skills to the restaurant or hotel industries.

Continue reading "Midlife Banking Crisis" »

March 05, 2009

Excerpts from the Future Testimony of Harriet Miers and Karl Rove

Am I thinking about doing Lady Justice? Guilty as charged. MS. MIERS: I have no recollection of that conversation.

MR. ROVE: Could you repeat the question, Congressman?

MS. MIERS: I don't remember.

MR. ROVE: Are you referring to the first President Bush or the second?

MS. MIERS: Sounds familiar but I can't say one way or the other.

MR. ROVE: At this point I would like to invoke my Fifth Amendment rights.

Continue reading "Excerpts from the Future Testimony of Harriet Miers and Karl Rove" »

February 16, 2009

Fashion Week: As Luck Would Have It

Shoe vs. poo: we need more boots on the ground. Special Report -- I wore my lucky shoes today.

It's been close to fifteen years since I paid thirty dollars for those black cross trainer/walking shoes at El-Bee Shoe Outlet. Inexpensive, amazingly comfortable, go-with-everything footwear. My back never hurts when I wear them, even when I have to walk on or stand on concrete floors all day.

Those shoes were on my feet for many grueling stage productions. Lots of trade shows and factory visits, too. I wore my lucky shoes to China in 2005 but didn't walk all the way there -- I sat inside an airplane that flew over the North Pole.

My lucky shoes are casual enough to wear with jeans, yet smart-looking enough to complement dress pants. I wore them once with shorts and ankle-high black socks. It was a long day outside in the summer but my feet felt great. I don't think people in Ohio dress like that, though.

Continue reading "Fashion Week: As Luck Would Have It" »

January 30, 2009

Brush Off the Fuzz and Dig In

America's obsession with treacherous food: sweet, sticky, and deadly. Peanut butter and jelly sandwich shown above. Special Report -- Today's special: salmonella 'n' jelly sandwiches and tainted milk. Your choice of side dish includes cultured mayonnaise rind, fruit roll-up kimchee, or refrigerator-blackened cherry tomatoes.

Is the nation's food supply at risk or are people just belly-aching?

A lot of perfectly good groceries are thrown away simply because of paranoia, misinformation, and perversely conscientious eating habits.

Although sensational stories of pathogenic contamination grab headlines, some experts are still reheating debates as old as last Thanksgiving's turkey carcass.

"Expiration dates are for the weak-minded," according to food archivist Denny Frisch. "Food Nazis want you to think it's wrong to leave tuna salad on the kitchen counter for more than seventy-two hours in July."

Continue reading "Brush Off the Fuzz and Dig In" »

January 26, 2009

You're Full of It, Says Manure Industry

Rush Limbaugh's powerful mojo sways the weak-minded and politically lazy. New York, NY -- What a load. Hits the fan. Runs downhill. A lying sack of it.

Enough is enough, according to manure processors and resellers. Image is everything when it comes to marketplace perceptions, and the much-maligned poop business has decided to litigate for respect if it can't earn it.

"It's impossible to turn on the TV or use a computer without being bombarded by flawed examples harmful to our hard-earned brand equity," Manure Trade Association president Raymond Tonewell said in a press release. "Gov. Rod Blagojevich, former Merrill Lynch CEO John Thain, indicted broker Bernard Madoff -- calling one of these guys 'the biggest pile of feces' damages our product's reputation."

"For the record," Mr. Tonewell added, "the world's largest mass of solid waste resides in our museum: a 900 lb. bat guano sculpture of the late hotel heiress Leona Helmsley. Rush Limbaugh can't hold a candle to that, and he shouldn't because it's highly combustible."

Continue reading "You're Full of It, Says Manure Industry" »

January 20, 2009

Unreleased Songs and Forgotten "B" Sides

U2 lead singer Bono (not his real name) often performs for free, just like your band. From the vault. The archives. Rejected singles. Hidden treasure. Secret hits. Basement tapes. Forbidden melodies.

"March of the Damned" -- John Philip Sousa

"Razor Blades, Broken Glass, and Model Airplane Glue" -- Alison Krauss

"That's Not a Roll of Quarters in My Pocket, Darling" -- Irving Berlin

Continue reading "Unreleased Songs and Forgotten "B" Sides" »

January 15, 2009

The Sucker Punch of a Brighter Tomorrow

Bikini Girl Katrina Darrell: Just when you thought American Idol couldn't possibly get any better. Special Report -- I awake in the 4:00 AM gloom, unable to breathe. A bearded, brown-eyed Cyclops wearing a feathery plumed hat lies on my chest staring at me. My Indiglo watch's pale luminescence reveals the intruder's identity: cat #27 nuzzling my pajama pants drawstring again.

I am by necessity a cat rancher. Felines are useful for their varmint-hunting prowess, pelts, and milk. A dozen or so can keep you warm when no other heat source is available. Milking them is not an enterprise to be underestimated, but I have small hands so no problem there.

I'm enjoying my time above ground. Most of it, anyway. It's hard to sleep at night -- I have trouble resting because every day ends with a sense of unfinished business. I can't relax. And then those effing cats come around again.

Continue reading "The Sucker Punch of a Brighter Tomorrow" »

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