Archive | 9:39 am

Dear Sir (or possibly Madam?)

11 Nov

from May 27, 2007

Dear Sir (or possibly Madam?)

I am writing to clear up a grave misunderstanding which occurred in your store last week. Normally, I would not shop in a store specializing in formal wear for the full figured woman (I usually call them fat, but it’s your store.) but due to certain circumstances beyond my control I found myself browsing through your “mother-of-the-bride boutique” and this is where the incident took place.

I should start from the beginning. I was driving home from the movies. I had read a very strange review online of “Superman Returns” and went to satisfy my curiosity. The reviewer had implied certain things about the Clark-Jimmy-Superman relationship, as well as certain peculiarities between Kevin Spacey and an old woman. (It is a long story, find the review yourself.) All I’ll say is that the reviewer was full of it.

Anyway, it was raining and I decided to pull over and wait it out. I had planned to listen to the radio (the Slappy and Wapppy show on 98.5 WLAZ “Where You Win Stuff By Listening”) when all of a sudden a woman ran smack in front of my car.

Well, since I had already pulled to a stop and parked, it didn’t much matter, but it did distract me from Wappy, who was asking listeners to call in with their favorite breakfast cereal stories. The woman kept going and I never saw her again (too bad- she was cute.) but I did see a man with a gun enter your store.

Like any good citizen, I sat there and took out my camcorder.

Soon, I saw other people enter the store. (And let me say that a store for fat formal women certainly has interesting customers.) People came out and it seemed like nothing was going on. Eventually the man with the gun came out. OK, to be honest, it wasn’t a gun, it was an umbrella. But I thought it was a gun. I already said it was raining pretty hard. It was impossible to tell a gun from an umbrella.

All this is to explain why I was sitting in my car looking at a videotape of people entering and leaving your store.

I was pretty bored. Slappy and Wappy had gone off and The Mike Callous Show had begun. His guest was C. Emory Watson from the Coalition for Taxable Income, so I turned it off and rewound the videotape I had shot and started watching. (I do intend to get a digital video camera soon. That would eliminate all the problems of rewinding, but it didn’t really matter. It was still raining and I was still sitting there waiting it out.)

After a few minutes I thought I recognized one of your customers. I could swear that I had videotaped former First Lady Barbara Bush going in. (Let’s face it. She is a large woman from good-Midwestern stock. Probably grew up punching cows or something.) Who wouldn’t be interested in that?

Well, after the mistake with the man and the gun, I wanted to see if I was right. If I was, maybe I could get an autograph, or maybe even get to party with those drunken Bush twins. If I was wrong all I would see would be another big homely lady wearing pearls and I’d leave.

That’s why I went into your store- to follow Barbara Bush. It was all very logical.

Sir, (or Madam? No offense, but you could go either way.) I didn’t plan on anything that followed. Honestly, who could have foreseen that “Barbara Bush” was really Estelle Gordon from Passaic? Or that her son was working in the stockroom? I didn’t intend to assault his mother, nor did I intend to get assaulted by her son. It was all so innocent.

I do admit that I must have looked really out of place in your store, especially when I went into your “mother-of-the-bride boutique” and browsed through your “Bea Arthur Collection.” I am also sure that I attracted some attention when, to look inconspicuous, I put on a large pink feathered hat featured in your “Boudoir Dreams” display. (And this brings up a good point- what was a large feathered pink hat doing in a boudoir display? I really think you need to do something about that.) I even admit that, with my camcorder stuffed down my pants, I did have a  suspicious silhouette, but c’mon, would you like to be caught with a camcorder stalking Barbara Bush in a women’s clothing store , especially when she was going into the dressing room? I told you this was all very logical.

Please be clear- when I entered the next dressing room and peeked over the wall, I was only peeking far enough to see her face. Believe me- I have no interest in Barbara Bush below the pearls. And when I stretched and the camcorder fell from my pants, how was I to know that her son was standing a few yards away and thought I was videotaping his mother as she changed? It was all so innocent.

Enclosed is a check for the damages to your front window. I really didn’t stop to look where I was going as I fled from the pummeling I was about to get, I just wanted out. (But you have to admit that the silhouette I punched out of the glass as I ran through it was pretty funny.) I have also enclosed a sum to pay for the pink feathery hat I was still wearing at the time. You may like to know that the hat currently sits on the top shelf of my closet- hey, you never know. (I may even come back for the matching garters.)

Lastly, Sir and/or Madam, have it as you will, I would hope that you would see fit to return my camcorder. There is nothing else of interest on the tape, except for some footage of my junior high school reunion and a few minutes of Superman Returns I secretly filmed.

Thank You Very Much

This Is The Future, Right?

11 Nov

from May 12, 2007

This is the future, right? I mean, when we were little kids, the 21st century was it. IT. Flying cars, robots, atomic supermen, that sort of thing. Criswell said it best- “We are all interested in the future, for that is where we shall spend the rest of our lives.” And damn if he wasn’t right, ’cause I haven’t managed yet to live in the past, at least not for real.

I was reading an old Ray Bradbury story that was set in the far-off future year of 1978, and I hate to complain and pick on such a “legend,” but man, was he wrong. I’m sorry Mr. Sci-Fi Legend Guy, but I’m not living on a Mars colony. And my “atomic-powered short-wave radio” doesn’t exist. So what’s the deal?

I’m very well-read and I’ve seen tons of movies. I know what I’m talking about. I want my ray gun! I want my personal robot! I want my own jet pack, flying car, and combination space radio-slash-TV! My hat is supposed to protect me from atomic fallout and my food is supposed to be in pill form. I should commute to work by rocket and my personal computer should be about the size of my bedroom and have the computing power of thirteen abacuses.

But I know that old movies and TV shows can be somewhat unreliable when it comes to showing things as they are. You just have to be selective. For example, I don’t really take The Jetsons seriously. How can you? It is so phony. I think that show has the worst special effects I have ever seen. That car folding into a briefcase? I can see the CGI. And the actors? I don’t know who played George Jetson but he was so weird looking! He had a head that was about as big as his torso. I’ve tried reading the credits, but they don’t tell you who played any of the Jetsons. It may be for their safety- can you imagine how many stalkers Judy Jetson had? I must have written her thirty or forty letters when I was a kid and she never wrote back. I was so stupid back then- it took me until I was 23 to realize that she lives in the future! She hasn’t gotten the letters yet!

Movies do a little better job. I like Abbott and Costello Go to Mars. These two goofy delivery guys get mixed up for scientists and, somehow, end up piloting a ship to Mars, with two bumbling crooks along for the ride. Now it may sound silly, but the film has a rather complex inner-logic and the use of soft-focus cinematography is particularly effective, especially in the sublimely genius sequence when Costello is blasting people with his freeze ray. If any film could be held up as proof of the auteur theory of filmmaking, this is certainly it. Subtle in its satire and carefully nuanced in the use of pre-Marxist Soviet propaganda, my only problem is that how can these be the same guys who played janitors who met Frankenstein and Dracula in a previous film? That part I could never figure out- when did they change careers from janitors to delivery men?

At any rate, that future was clear- men would travel to Mars and meet a race of giant dogs, as well as mechanizing the Statue of Liberty so it can duck when a rocket flies too close overhead. We would all have freeze rays and we would wear spiffy space suits. I want my spiffy space suit!

So far the future is not all it was cracked up to be. I blame Congress. They keep holding up all those laws I want them to enact. Just last month I sent Congress my Bill For The Construction Of Lunar Radium Mines. And what did they do? Sent an FBI guy with a search warrant to my house. It’s like they don’t appreciate all my help.

I sent Congress my ideas for a Rocket-Man Brigade to protect us from Interstellar Plutonian Ice Hounds and all they did was pass some sort of dopey Iraq troop-funding bill.

So as I get older I’m resigning myself to the fact that maybe I won’t be getting that robot any time soon. I may not live on the moon or have a Martian space-dog as my pet, but at least I have my fifth-grade imagination. And maybe I don’t have a jet pack or own a space-yacht, but I know that I will someday. Flash Gordon said so!