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Going Down

September 26th, 2007 | Posted in Anecdotes, Blog Posts |

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Every morning I use the elevator in the building across the street from mine, taking it down to the parking lot so I can walk across the sky bridge to my office. (If this seems needlessly complex, keep in mind that the area of Seattle I call home is built on top of a mountain that engineers sliced the top off of in the ‘30s and sold as real estate. This means you’re constantly on the look-out for elevators and sky bridges that obviate the need to inch your way down steep 200-foot embankments—inchings that, if it’s early enough and you’re not paying attention to the task at hand, can easily become a pants-peeingly terrifying, rapidly accelerating two hundred-footing.) 

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The N-Word

September 24th, 2007 | Posted in Anecdotes, Blog Posts |

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I lived in a fairly integrated neighborhood in New York and would often overhear black teenagers using the n-word in casual conversation. When I say “using” I’m understating a little. These guys were giving the n-word the most exhaustive workout I’ve ever heard, substituting it for adjectives, verbs, punctuation and proper nouns in ways it was never meant to accommodate. Taboo, incendiary, upsetting: the n-word is many things. What it isn’t is versatile.

At one point in the conversation, for instance, one of the teenagers turned to another and said “N—–r was goin’ to the n—–r, n—–r, but n—–r n—–red it up on the n—–r.” I’m not joking. That’s a direct quote. I spent the better part of five minutes walking quietly behind them parsing through all the name and place substitutions, but eventually gave up: I had no idea what the hell this kid was talking about. His friends seemed to grasp his meaning, though personally, I like to imagine the opposite is true: that they, like me, were completely lost. Their enthusiastic overuse of the n-word had started as a loud and provocative public exercise meant to embarrass guys like me and establish them as “screw-you” teens with a healthy disrespect for social mores. But it had somehow managed to get away from them by the ten-minute mark, and now they could only soldier on, helpless, none of them wanting to be the first to admit their conversation had descended into a hopeless gibberishy mess composed of a single word.

Come on now, though: “N—–r was goin’ to the n—–r”? As a swearing connoisseur, I’m sorry, that’s just lazy. If we were walking down the street and I turned to you and said “Motherfucker was going to the motherfucker, motherfucker,” I’d like to think you’d have the decency to pull me aside and tell me how ridiculous I sounded. “Your heart’s in the right place, motherfucker, but you really need to learn to swear properly before you try and do it in public, bitch.”

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Private: Apologies to the early adopters…

September 17th, 2007 | Posted in Blog Posts |

Turns out my website looked perfectly normal on all but the absolute latest versions of Firefox and Internet Explorer, where for some reason it telescoped the first half of the site, header graphics, titles and all, into a big ugly mess.

I updated my laptop to the latest version of Firefox, propped it up next to my PC, and dicked around with the code until the site looked good on both. Apologies to those of you with cutting-edge browsers, wondering why you’d suddenly become dyslexic. Profuse apologies to those of you with cutting-edge browsers and dyslexia; I can’t imagine what you poor bastards were going through.

Getting There…

September 15th, 2007 | Posted in Blog Posts |

Still plenty to tinker with, of course, but at least the blog looks vaguely like something I’d have designed myself now. I seem to have reached a point where, for better or worse, all the stylistic choices I randomly decided on over the course of a weekend, drunk, six years ago are now permanently associated with the look and feel of the site. I briefly courted a complete overhaul, with a sweet gothy all-black look and a background image of Trent Reznor weeping with sorrow, for instance, but it just didn’t feel “Pinkertony” enough. Subsequent experiments with Hello Kitty themes and l33t-style “hacker” fonts yielded similar wizened, inedible fruit. Looks like we’re stuck with the baby blues.

At least I managed to get my body copy back to a simple left-alignment. I realize it’s a small thing, but that boxy justified alignment always looks better than it scans, with its alternations of buncheduptext and w i d e a s s  c o p y; it’s like trying to read something and constantly forgetting how to in mid-sentence.  

I’ve also now learned the hard way not to type entries directly into the WordPress posting page, as it has an alarming tendency to suddenly wipe clean of all content mere seconds before you click SAVE, meaning you get the opportunity to see yourself erasing a page full of writing in realtime. 

Honestly, to hell with MovableType

September 14th, 2007 | Posted in Blog Posts |

…or maybe MovableType’s the shit, and my hosting package just sucks. Or maybe my hosting package is tits and I’m just functionally tech-illiterate. I refuse to quibble over semantics. The point is that I’ve spent the better part of three weeks trying to get MovableType (my old blogging software) rocking at my new, non-Cracked-hosted home, to mounting frustration and zero results. I’ve now got so many contradictory trouble tickets in with my hosting provider that I’m growing concerned about all of them getting resolved at once, resulting in my website becoming sentientat which point I have little doubt it would hunt me, tramp-like, for sport in retaliation for my lack of updates.

So this is the middle ground: a new-car-smell, right-out-of-the-package WordPress blog, with my previous site available as a static archive. Honestly, to hell with all this tech nonsense: I’ve been itching to get back to a regular blogging schedule, and it gives me a migraine that I’ve ejaculated all my free time these past few weeks into my metaphorical own face with all this noodling around with templates and cgi-bins. If you want the old site, it’s there. If you’d like actual updates, tadah.

Granted, it doesn’t look like much at present; this is pretty much the default template WordPress hands out to any sub-literate with a desire to set the record straight on what Buffy character they most resemble. With any luck I’ll have it looking suitably me-like over the next few weeks.

I’ll also be starting up a columny-bloggy-type thing at Surreal Game Design, a designers’ blog written by all my new-car-smell, right-out-of-the-package coworkers at Surreal Software. I’m currently their game writer, meaning I write all the cutscenes and dialogue everybody tends to skip over to get to the next cool bit in the game. As you can imagine, this puts me somewhere between the janitor and the guy who delivers the sandwiches on the staff totem pole. I’m sure I’ll be writing plenty of navel-gazing wank about the state of storytelling in video gamesor if I’m feeling particularly lazy, making a few easy jokes about fucking something small, furry and defenseless and calling it a night.

Alright, off to figure out how to make this blog template not look like shit. Talk to you soon!

Marvel Comics vs. Science!

July 31st, 2007 | Posted in Archives, Blog Posts, Off-Site |

A new article of mine’s up at Cracked, dissecting the various origin stories of Marvel Comics’ most popular superheroes. I humbly propose you read it, if you’re not too busy and have the inclination:

In Which I Exhaustively Discuss Batman

June 19th, 2007 | Posted in Archives, Blog Posts, Off-Site |

An article of mine’s up at Cracked right now, devoted to a topic close to my heart: Batman. It’s a pretty big article; apparently I have a lot to say about Batman. (Keep in mind this is the trimmed-down version. In retrospect, I should have just written a book.)

Diving Into Traffic To Avoid Puppies, And Other Tips For Children

May 16th, 2007 | Posted in Anecdotes, Blog Posts |

Like most sane people in their twenties who don’t get married out of high school and start families before they’re allowed to buy beer, I maintain a healthy dislike of children. Oh, I recognize the need for children on a purely biological level, certainly; I’m just glad it’s not me having to lug screaming miniature idiots around to restaurants and supermarkets just so I can keep my bloodline in the gene race. Children: they’re cute at first, sure, but they’re also loud, destructive, not very bright and frankly horrible conversationalists. I don’t adopt retarded, violent midgets and invite them into my home for decades at a time, either, and I fail to see the difference in principle.

The only time I get face-time with children, then, has been at family reunions; and since my cousins have all since grown up into adults, I’m in a comfortable little child-free pocket of time until one of them gets married and decides to breed. (Jason, if you’re reading this, have you considered recent advances in vasectomies? All the cool twenty-somethings are getting them.)

Even though I work hard to keep any meet-and-greets with the under-ten set brief and infrequent, whenever I meet children I tend to get a reliable litmus test for whatever the country’s most terrified of this month, based on what they’ve scared the hell out of their kids into believing. (Ten years ago, for instance, I gathered that anti-smoking paranoia had hit its stride in America’s public schools when a child ripped up my cigarettes in front of me and told me I had cancer. What an adorable rascal.) Based on what I’ve noticed since becoming a dog owner, then, I’m convinced that children today are being taught that all dogs, regardless of their size, temperament or breed, are vicious, fanged killing machines who will dive through their chests and feed on their still-beating hearts as soon as look at them.

It sounds like I’m exaggerating—and, of course, for comic effect I am—but truly, you’d think I was walking around with a four-legged bomb on a leash the way the kids melodramatically dive for cover in my neighborhood. I saw one little girl flatten herself against the wall in mute, wide-eyed terror as I walked my dog past, unable to move until we were safely past the block. Another little girl just last week actually ran into traffic to avoid getting within ten feet of my dog.

Childen accompanied by parents are even worse: the kid’ll look up at Mom and Dad and ask if they can pet my dog, and—without conferring with me or even acknowledging my existence—the parents will loudly scold them into silence at such a ludicrous suggestion, explaining that I’m most likely a pervert who feeds my dog human steaks through a cage. This morning I witnessed a mother accidentally (and hilariously) bean her child off a lamp post in her flailing efforts to prevent her darling from getting his hand licked by a puppy. When I walk my dog in the park, I’m accosted now by roving packs of eight-year-olds who want to pet my dog, surreptiously asked in the same hushed, guilty tones they might use to score weed. Apparently Playing With an Adorable Puppy is the new Climbing on Abandoned Construction Vehicles for childhood rebellion.

Keep in mind, I’m not for a second suggesting the parents and teachers are in error here: it’s not like children can be trusted to use their own judgment on a case-by-case basis, since they’re idiots and don’t have any. If you want little Taylor to understand he can’t put his arm in the mouth of a foaming, rabid Rottweiler chained to a rusted-out Buick in the junkyard, you’re going to have to make a blanket rule that the little moron can’t go near any dogs at all. And you’ll probably want to make up a bunch of ridiculous lies to instill fear in the kid too, because God knows common sense is going to sail right over his dirty little skull.

No, I’m merely pointing out the effects of this strategy: that children are running into the paths of cars and getting headbutted into poles to avoid ravenous, flesh-hungry beasts like my dog:

Frightening just looking at him, isn’t he? Those are the black eyes of a killer.

Perhaps I’m just out of date, and there’s been a recent scourge of puppy attacks on children lately. Based on how kids play with my dog at the park, I believe it. (Yes, I let my dog play with kids at the park. Kids are in better shape than I am, and my dog needs exercise. When an angry parent approaches, looking like she’s about to chew me out, I usually fake a cell phone call and talk into a dead receiver while beating a hasty exit.) Typically the kids will approach my dog with fear, which as I’m sure you can imagine, puts him at ease immediately. There’s nothing like having three complete strangers encircle you while stage-creeping around with their arms out to put you at your ease.

Once the kids are satisfied that my dog’s not going to kill him, they’ll terrorize him, because—I hope I’ve made this clear by now—children are dim, evil-minded little bastards. They’ll chase him around, usually while holding tree branches or other threatening-looking implements, screaming at the top of their lungs like the sticks are swords and they’re the loudest, stupidest ninjas ever. My dog’s tail will immediately tuck between his legs and he’ll hide behind me, looking up at me imploringly as if to say, “I don’t know if these are friends of yours or what, but this needs to stop.”

One of the kids, swinging his tree branch experimentally, will puzzle this new information out for a bit, and say, “I think he’s scared.” The others will flatly refute this, on the grounds that it’s a dog and they love it when you attack them with sticks. If I wasn’t there for my dog to hide behind, I’m sure at some point he would have bitten them. I know I was close to committing some form of violence—but then one of their mothers showed up, red-faced and fat, and I hurriedly faked a cell phone call while walking swiftly in the other direction.

Hello Again

April 19th, 2007 | Posted in Blog Posts |

Our former IT guy dropped by the office this morning to say hi. He’d left earlier in the year for a better-paying job, but had the day off and was in the area, so thought he’d stop in.

So I’m sitting at my desk watching him walk in and receive excited greetings from everyone, and I’m totally confused, because I remember incredibly clearly that he’d already dropped by this week: he’d even stopped by my desk. We’d shaken hands, I’d asked him all about his new job. We’d had an elaborate, detailed conversation for upwards of fifteen minutes.

Or wait… had we? Doubt set in. Had I just dreamed it?

It was possible. The memory of it seemed incredibly lucid. On the other hand, I routinely have stultifyingly boring dreams about going to work: commuting in on the subway, returning email, laying out articles for the web, goofing off online. Often I’ll have gotten almost a full day’s work done and will just be returning a few final phone calls before calling it a day, when I’ll wake up suddenly and realize with mounting depression that I now have to go to work and do it all over again.

Not wanting to come off rude, I walked over to our former IT guy to feel out the situation. If we’d already talked this week, my greeting should obviously be more subdued; after all, we’d caught up with each other two days ago. I’d look like a callous ass if I came off like I’d completely forgotten about our conversation.

On the other hand, If I’d dreamed it, that would mean we hadn’t actually talked in over four months. Casually waltzing over with a cursory head nod and a “What’s up?” would come off pretty rude. The situation would require tact and delicacy if I wanted to come off non-crazy here. I thought for a minute about what my best opening volley should be.

“Hey! So, did you already stop by this week or did I just dream that?” I ended up going with, because to hell with tact and delicacy. It’s not like I’m not intimately familiar with looking like an idiot in social situations. As regular readers of this site might remember, you’re reading the website of a guy who’s been caught masturbating by construction workers. Once you walk away from shame like that, admitting you can’t separate dreams from reality to work friends is a cake walk.

Our former IT guy’s confused, slightly frightened look told me everything I needed to know: I had in fact dreamed his previous visit, and, yes, now sounded like a dangerous, unbalanced psychotic. Hoping to rally the situation, I immediately ramped up the enthusiasm level and greeted him, now confident we hadn’t seen each other in months. “Heyyyyyy!” So how is everything?” Then I sat back and listened—feeling more than slightly pissed off, however unreasonably, about getting locked into the same goddamn conversation twice. I didn’t want to be rude. It was simply that from my perspective, however caked with lunacy it might be, this entire reunion was pretty redundant. In my head I kept thinking, “Damn it, we just did this! I want to get some lunch.”

And so, after ten minutes of catch-up, I did just that. (Luckily I didn’t wake up at this point. I have a bad memory and lucid dreams, it’s not like I’m living in a Twilight Zone episode or anything.)

Action Hero Showdown

April 13th, 2007 | Posted in Archives, Blog Posts, Off-Site |

It is widely recognized in academic and scientific circles that I have gifts. Powerful gifts involving prose, and its crafting. With this burden in mind, I decided it was damn well time I gave back something to the community: hence an article exhaustively analyzing which ’80s action movie hero is the hardest badass.

I must point out: this article was written at no great personal risk to me, and was written in my capacity as an authority on absolutely nothing. By this I mean to say that this article should be read as its author intended: as unvarnished, objective fact. If you disagree with the article in any way whatsoever, it is important that you understand this is your moral or intellectual failing, and that with proper counselling you can be brought back from the abyss of improper views on Rambo, and rejoin society as a fully functioning person with correct views.

Click Here to Read
“Action Hero Showdown”
(at Cracked.com)