Archive | 2:17 pm

Jesus Christ, Novelist

16 Nov

from October 24, 2008

I had three hours plus of time to kill and it was the Department of Education’s fault. I t was open school night and school ended at 2:48. Parent/teacher conferences (A.K.A. “here’s why you’re a-hole kid is a dick” conferences) began at 6:00 and ran to the ungodly hour of 8:30. I say start them at 3:00 and let me go home by 4:15. Anyway, I had a ton of time to kill, and I wasn’t about to go back over the bridge and come back a couple of hours later. I may be a lot of things but I’m not a tease, and I’m sure as hell not going to tease myself by coming all the way home only to have to go back. I’d hate myself in the morning.
I found myself at the Staten Island Mall, home to stores I’m not interested in and people who have nothing better to do than to be in the mall in the middle of the day. That includes the elderly, the unemployable, and people who work in the mall, who may also be elderly and otherwise unemployable.

The place was festooned (Love that word. “Festooned.” Kind of a combination of “festering” and “balloon.”) with big banners the reissuing of classic novels. “ADVENTURE!” they screamed. “EXCITEMENT!” BUCCANEERING!” “SWASHBUCKLEERING!” and other words I swear I saw but may have made up. They looked cool, a whole set of “stories from the golden age,” eighty in all. “DAMES!” “DAMSELS!” “PRIVATE EYES!” “PIRATES!” “XENU!”

“Xenu”?
Yes, “Xenu,” ’cause these books were all written by noted _____ (fill the blank with whatever your favorite synonym for “tool” may be) _____ L. Ron Hubbard.

I won’t go into details about “El” Ron here. I’ll save that for Tom Cruise’s wet dreams. But the guy was a writer and he really did publish books. I’m sure that some of them may have even been on a high school reading level, though the fact Hollywood stars have read them might prove otherwise. He published westerns, mysteries, adventure, swashbuckleering tales, and who cares what else? Not me. But the covers looked nice, even if I’m sure they all had subliminal scientololgy imagery embedded in the artwork, and microchips that shot biorhythmic information about anyone who picked up the book to the orbiting scientololgy satellite piloted by John Travolta.

TRAVOLTA: “Hey, what’s this lever here? It says, Air Supply. That’s like music, right Mr. Kotter?”
GABE KAPLAN: “Vinny! Don’t touch that! Mr. Woodman is on a space walk!”
TRAVOLTA: “What?”
KAPLAN: “That switch!”
TRAVOLTA: “Where?”
KAPLAN: “Right in front of you!”
TRAVOLTA: Flips the switch
KAPLAN: “Vinny! You killed Mr. Woodman!”
EPSTEIN: “Don’t worry. I got a note.”
HORSHACK: “OHHH! OH OH OH!”
KAPLAN: “That’s the same way Freddie Boom Boom Washington died.”

But this brings up an interesting point. The founder of a major religion (snicker snicker) (snort) (HA HA I can’t even type that with a straight face) was a failed novelist. What if Buddha wrote si-fi novels? What if Mohammed wrote a humor column?

And what if Jesus wrote romance novels?
Jesus Christ, the swashbuckleering pirate rogue, ran his rough hands over the lacy bodice of the lusty, young, yet virginal, serving girl.

“But Christ, M’Lord, I am but a poor wench from Jerusalem. I have nothing to offer one such as you,” she said as her bosom swelled and heaved.

The muscles of his bare chest rippled as Jesus Christ’s hair billowed back in the salty sea breeze. He leaned close, his hot breath causing the silky skin of her breasts to tingle in earthly anticipation of pleasures of the flesh.

“Oh M’Lord,” she sighed. “Do with me as thou wouldst. You truely are the King of Kings!”

Seriously, would you trust your religion if that was your savior? But that’s what’s happening.

Here is the description of Elron’s “The Iron Duke”:
American arms merchant Blacky Lee is wanted by nearly every government in 1930s Europe— especially the Nazis. They want Blacky’s head for selling them dud weapons, prompting his rapid (and illegal) escape across the Balkans to the kingdom of Aldoria with his business partner in tow.

Aldoria is well chosen. Years before, Blacky discovered he was the spitting image of the country’s Prince Philip, learned the archduke’s speaking voice and memorized the royal family tree just in case. When Blacky brazenly impersonates the leader, things go surprisingly well . . . that is, until he finds himself caught in the middle of a Communist plot to rig elections and take over.

I’ve seen better plots on helium.com.

Here is a description of “If I Were You”:
Circus dwarf Little Tom Little is the king of midgets, loved by crowds and carnival folk alike. Only he doesn’t just want to be a bigger circus star, he wants to be just like the circus’ tall and imposing leader.

Trouble begins the moment that a set of ancient books containing the secret of switching bodies finds its way into Tom Little’s tiny hands. When he magically trades his small frame with that of the circus chief, he finds himself in a giant-sized heap of trouble— his craving for height has landed him smack in the center ring surrounded by forty savage cats!

Who the fuck is he shitting?

And lastly, “Spy Killer”:
Kurt Reid may be innocent of the murder he’s charged with (and of grand larceny, for that matter), but he’s got no time to be thrown in jail and defend himself. Instead, Reid flees to pre-Communist China and Shanghai, the exotic city of mystery and death.

Reid takes refuge in a tea house where he meets White Russian Varinka Savischna, whom he manages to rescue from certain death. As beautiful as she is smart, she recruits him in her crusade against Chinese intelligence services. Unfortunately, Reid manages to get himself captured by the Chinese and blackmailed into pursuing and assasinating a Japanese spy.

I’ve come to the conclusion that if those Hollywood types are going to take a hack writer as god, they may as well take me. My stuff is as bad as his is. (Or something like that.)

So prepare world, Blogtology is coming! Prepare to believe!

*WARNING! CATASTROPHIC ERROR!*

16 Nov

from October 19, 2008

I’ve never had a problem with email. I love it. In fact, if it wasn’t for email I’d have to talk to people and that would just make me miserable. But email had a problem with me.

It’s grade time in the NYC school system, and you know what that means: fail ’em all! Fail ’em if they’re stupid, fail ’em if they’re ugly, fail ’em if they passed every test. Just fail ’em.

Usually they fail themselves but try to convince them of it.
“Mister, why you fail me?”
“I come everyday.”
“I took notes today.”

I used to love the bubble sheets. No one else did but me. All you had to do was bubble in the right spots and you were done. I’d give the kids some work and while they were on task (ha) I’d bubble in their grades. Then I’d just throw away their papers because it was just busy work anyway.

But no no no. No. That was too hard. (Somehow.) Let’s make it all technological and stuff. Let’s do it with a computer. Let’s email the grades. Because no one has ever, in the history of man, had a problem with a computer. Even HAL simply needed to be rebooted. C’mon people- didn’t anybody ever see WarGames? I know it had Matthew Broderick in it but it was still a good film. (And yes, that is the proper spelling. I checked. Who says I need an editor?)

Trouble started when Jeff, our programmer and all-around laid back dude, tried to email me the files for my grades. He couldn’t explain why, and I doubt Bill Gates could either, but the “system” wouldn’t accept my DOE email and would not send me my files.

I smelled Twilight Zone. That’s how it starts. First the computer doesn’t recognize you, then your friends don’t recognize you, then you find Rod Serling recording an introduction in your bedroom and before the final commercial you cease to exist.

He gave me the files on a floppy disk and asked me to return it by Friday, 1 pm. This was Thursday but entering grades only takes a few minutes so that deadline really wasn’t bad.

Due to this and that, and some other stuff, plus the fact that I am a derb, I got home at 10:30 that night. I zipped over to the computer and popped the disc into the drive. It banged into the USB port.

Hmmm. That’s strange.

I reinserted it and it stuck in the DVD drive.

Odd.

By the time I had tried to jam it into the vents in the back I realized that my computer doesn’t have a floppy drive. This is the computer I got from my Dad, brand new in 2007, and there simply isn’t a call for floppy drives anymore. No worries, I thought, I’ll just use the laptop.

You know what’s coming.

So both of my home computers were out. I’d have to do it between classes at work on Friday. Schools are the last bastion of obsolete tech. Just last week I recorded some notes on a reel-to-reel Wollensak that took up half the room.

I turned on the computer, ignored the damage the kids did, popped in the disc, and tried to open the file.

Nothing.

I stopped everything, opened Excel (the files were Excel files) and tried to get Excel to open the files. Nothing happened at all, for awhile. Then my computer stopped responding and I had to do a restart. When it was ready, I tried to open the file again and got this message:

Warning! The last time you tried to open this file a serious error occurred. Do you wish to continue?

Oh Hell yes I did. What’s the worst that could happen? It isn’t my computer anyway.

I was disappointed that there was no smoke, no high-pitched whine of agony from the processor, not even a cool flashing warning symbol. It simply shut down.

I had two more classes to go and by the time I got down to the program office it was after noon. I explained the whole situation, and after he got through laughing (and calling me “Doctor,” for some reason) he gestured to my flash drive and said he’d put the files on there.

He popped it in and waited. And waited. And, yes, waited some more. The computer, though sending power to the flash, wouldn’t recognize the flash. Kind of like how I ignore people I just the day before had a long conversation with. He popped it back out and tried my other drive. For no real reason I carry two around.

Same deal, no worky.

It turns out that his DOE computer will not recognize any drives with security enabled. Despite the fact that I have used my drives in many such computers, this particular was a stickler. It was the Felix Unger of computers. (Not to be confused with the Doris Unger of computers, which would be a very confused computer indeed.)

Let’s stop and recap. A medial summary, if you’ll forgive me for sounding like a teacher.
Email had failed me.
Three computers had failed me.
Two flash drives had failed me.

The logical solution was, of course, to give me bubble sheets and I’d be done in fifteen minutes.

However, no. This is the DOE. Mr. Programmer put the files on his own flash drive and let me take it home over the weekend.

Remember what I said about schools being the home of obsolete tech? This flash drive, I swear, looked to be straight out the 1970’s. It was big, square, and bulky. I’m sure it had a dial on the side and a UHF antenna. It had to be analog. This drive was black, but had been handled so much that it worn grey spots. The part that goes into the drive was bent. It didn’t even fit comfortably in my hand. There were sharp edges, a small tin plague peeling off (“—rop–ty of Ne- York -ity Boar- of ——-on”) and it was bigger than a bread box.

Still, I was relieved that I’d be able to do it at home. When I got home I put it in my computer and, rubbing my hands with anticipation, waited for it to open.

It didn’t.

You see, this particular computer doesn’t have Microsoft, er, stuff. When I want to open a Word file it opens it with WordPerfect. Any other type or Microsoft file gets some kind of equivalent. And the Excel equivalent didn’t open the file. (Did I mention that I would have had the bubble sheets done two days before?)

But my laptop came through! YES!

But not right away.

I don’t use the laptop too often, and when I do I have to sit through updates to this, scanning for that, restarts, destarts, and upstarts, before I can use it, typically two to three hours later. When nightfall came I had the file opened and saved to my desktop.

And as of this writing, Saturday night (Sunday morning if you prefer) I have not yet entered the grades but I’m sure I’ll be able to do it tomorrow.

What can go wrong?