That's funny, most of these things are on my to-do-list

Dave at Garfield Ridge links to an internet classic that I had somehow missed: the Evil Overlord To-Do-List.

My personal favorites:

4. Shooting is not too good for my enemies.
12. One of my advisors will be an average five-year-old child. Any flaws in my plan that he is able to spot will be corrected before implementation.
29. I will dress in bright and cheery colors, and so throw my enemies into confusion.
53. If the beautiful princess that I capture says "I'll never marry you! Never, do you hear me, NEVER!!!", I will say "Oh well" and kill her.

As a technical writer by trade, I cannot help but appreciate this one:

57. Before employing any captured artifacts or machinery, I will carefully read the owner's manual.

While we're on the subject of internet classics, one of the best is the 213 things Skippy is no longer allowed to do in the US Army. There are also some other submissions by skippy's fans here. A sample of Skippy's list:

7. Not allowed to add “In accordance with the prophesy” to the end of answers I give to a question an officer asks me.
35. Not allowed to sing “High Speed Dirt” by Megadeth during airborne operations. (“See the earth below/Soon to make a crater/Blue sky, black death, I'm off to meet my maker”)
54. “Napalm sticks to kids” is *not* a motivational phrase.
58. The following words and phrases may not be used in a cadence- Budding sexuality, necrophilia, I hate everyone in this formation and wish they were dead, sexual lubrication, black earth mother, all Marines are latent homosexuals, Tantric yoga, Gotterdammerung, Korean hooker, Eskimo Nell, we've all got jackboots now, slut puppy, or any references to squid.
60. “The Giant Space Ants” are not at the top of my chain of command.
66. There is no “Anti-Mime” campaign in Bosnia.
83. Must not start any SITREP (Situation Report) with "I recently had an experience I just had to write you about...."
84. Must not use military vehicles to “Squish” things.
137. Should not show up at the front gate wearing part of a Russian uniform, messily drunk.
138. Even if my commander did it.
167. Not allowed to operate a business out of the barracks.
168. Especially not a pornographic movie studio.
169. Not even if they *are* “especially patriotic films”
177. I am not to refer to a formation as “the boxy rectangle thingie”.
181. Pokémon® trainer is not an MOS.
191. Our Humvees cannot be assembled into a giant battle-robot.
202. Despite the confusing similarity in the names, the "Safety Dance" and the "Safety Briefing" are never to be combined.

Posted by Buckethead Buckethead on   |   § 0

If You Act Like A Duck, You Get Eaten

Pedro Martinez has told the Boston Herald that the Red Sox can keep his ring. His World Series ring, that is, the one that he helped us win. According to Pedro,

"I can live with the business part of it, not being able to afford me, or thinking I'm not that good, but I cannot understand the part where you mistreat my name, or mistreat what I did for the city of Boston because they have to build another image of me....

Oh, boo hoo you whiny little bitch. What part hurt worse? The adulation, or the idolatry? I dunno... was it being the sworn hero of Massachusetts' (surprisingly large and vibrant) Dominican population that got to you? Was it having a ballpark sell out every single start you made, rain or shine? Was it an entire region hanging breathless on every cut fastball as you set up and knocked down the best batters in the game? Was it an entire region's outcry at Grady Little -- not you -- Grady Little, when he kept you in too long? You're a little guy, you get tired. We get that. Or was it waking up one morning a World Series winner, checking your pants, and finding that despite doing everything you could, you still don't crap gold nuggets?

Or was it finding out that business is business? Je-sus. For a dude who has no problem throwing a 95-mph fastball at huge dudes' heads, he sure is a Polly Pissypants. New York can have his prima donna act.

[wik] The original Herald article (rather than the Post excerpt linked above) makes it more clear that Pedro was being baited into badmouthing Boston, and that much of his ire is reserved for the Boston sports press. That's fair; they suck. But Pedro doesn't stop there, and lets himself get goaded into saying how much the fans suck too. Not cool, dude. Not cool like jheri-curl is not cool.

Posted by Johno Johno on   |   § 0

Match Point

And so it comes to an end. Weeks of bloody and humiliating combat culminating in this, the final round. Much like actual war, this has been a painful and harrowing experience, fought for dubious purposes and to uncertain ends. Unlike actual war, no one gets killed and bystanders are rarely bombed. But like war, it is not without moments surreal and grim humor.

The true dork nature has many aspects. Ineptness, lack of social graces, monomania, unjustified arrogance, obsessive pursuit of minutia, vainglory, well-timed bad luck, and fear are the names we give them. No dorkish pursuit affords so many opportunities to indulge in so many of these facets of the dork nature as role playing games. And so I return to the rpg for the final round with two soul-searing tales of role playing madness.

[See the earlier rounds here and here. ]

Blackballed by God

Those who have been following this competition closely will remember my nemesis the fundamentalist Bill. This is the story of why he was my nemesis.

In the dark days at the end of the Carter administration, I was a young boy of eleven years. I had finished with cub scouts and webelos, and had moved on to the big leagues, the Boy Scouts. I went on camp outs, learned to make fire by rubbing matches together, and observed some of the older scouts playing a mysterious game late at night. That game was Dungeons and Dragons. My dork mind was afire with the concept. You could be a wizard, or knight, or elf! How fricken’ cool is that? Of course, I was as low on the dork feeding chain as you can be and still live. I didn’t know how to play the game, had no one to play it with, and didn’t even have the rule books. I burned to play. I found out that my best friend in the whole world, Jeff, (now a rocket scientist at NASA) had a rule book. And was playing with some other kids – some I knew, some I didn’t.

Jeff was a peculiar kid – and kept his friends strictly sorted by venue. There were church friends, school friends, camp friends and as far as he was concerned, there was no need for friends in one set to even know of the existence of the others. As we moved toward junior high, this segregation began to break down. I met Rance in art class in the seventh grade, and we were shocked to discover that we had both known Jeff since we were three – but had never heard of each other since we went to different elementary schools. Similarly, I met my future nemesis for the first time in Boy Scouts. Future Fundamentalist Asshole Bill was a long time friend of Jeff (FoJ) from church – and the troop I had joined was sponsored by Bill and Jeff’s Methodist church. (I was there because it met on my mom’s night off.)

Despite the fact that our group of friends was growing tighter as we all met in the great melting pot of Medina Junior High, and despite the fact that we were all interested in this magical game, somehow I remained on the outside. I never found out about when they were playing until afterwards. My inquiries received vague and increasingly strained excuses and evasions.

So, I convinced my mom to buy me the rule books. I studied them. Well, damn near memorized them. I made characters. Designed worlds. But I was excluded from the only game I new of. I would occasionally catch them talking about their campaign, and there’d be an embarrassed silence when they noticed me.

What I didn’t know, and wouldn’t know until my Junior year, was that Bill was plotting against me in secret. Whenever someone brought up the subject of my joining the game, Bill would blackball me. He’d say that I wasn’t right for the game, that I’d mess it up, or any number of excuses. And the rest would went along, since Bill seemed so committed to the idea of keeping me out.

Meanwhile, to my face, Bill was he soul of amity and comradeship. While I trusted him, asked him to speak for me so that I could gain entry to the forbidden garden, he jealously kept me out because he believed I was a dire threat to his friendship with Jeff. For two years while we went on campouts, school activities and even when he invited me over to his house, he kept me out of the game.

In my dorkish lack of insight into interpersonal relationships, I was blind to what was happening right in front of my nose. I was rejected even by my friends from the one thing in the world that I most wanted.

Ten-Second Ted

Years later, I had eventually worn down the resistance of the others, and was admitted to the game. We gathered in Jeff’s basement and geeked out on Mountain Dew, Cheetos and D&D. There was one other group of D&D players at our school, people we knew and liked. Some of them were even in our boy scout troop, but somehow we never played D&D together. One member of the other group decided that time had come for a D&D tournament, to decide who was the best of the best.

This tournament was simple in outline. Every player would receive a large amount of gold pieces and experience points with which to create and equip their entry. Let your imagination run wild, subject only to the basic rules of character creation. Also, every player would get several random magical items – and if you received something that was completely unusable by your character due to your choice of character class, you could roll again for a different magical item. Everyone was to contribute ten dollars for the winner-take-all prize.

I labored for almost a month preparing for the tournament. I considered and discarded hundreds of different ways of spending those experience points. Fighter/Mage? Assassin/Illusionist? Straight-up Paladin? Druid? Elf, Dwarf or Hobbit? I ignored sleep, schoolwork and meals as I pored over the manuals looking for the perfect combination, and for loopholes to exploit. I pondered what equipment to take. I added and crossed off items from my panoply, honing and perfecting the list. Can’t take too much, or you’ll be too slow. Do I get a pack horse? Hirelings? What kind of armor, what weapons to take? Will I need rations?

Finally, I settled on a stealth approach. A human illusionist-assassin. A couple levels of Illusionist for some useful concealing spells, and all the rest on assassin – because a simple dice roll can kill even the most powerful character, and if I botched it, my stealthiness would allow me to beat a quick retreat. Sneakiness was to be the order of the day.

Once everyone had created their entry, and tossed ten dollars into the pot, we were ready to go. Everyone materialized in a giant hall. I had my plan of action set – immediately run for the nearest exit and begin my hunt. We rolled for initiative, and I would be going third! Excellent! Maybe I could even get in a hit before I split.

The Steve N. went first. He disappeared. Ah! somebody thinking like me – I’ll have to be wary of him. Then Thad was up. A donkey over toward the side of the hall sprouted a five foot long rod on its back. From the rod’s tip shot immense balls of magical fire. Lots of them, right into the center of the rest of us. The DM, Brian, called out, “everyone save vs. magic.” I missed my roll. I was hit by three different fireballs. I took seventy points of damage. I was crispy before I could even move.

Ten seconds into the tournament and months of labor was wasted, along with my ten bucks. An Illusionist/Assassin has about the lowest average hit points (ability to take damage) of any possible character class except for a pure mage. And I hadn’t rolled well. The only ones who survived that initial holocaust were a couple fighters and one cleric. Who were all killed the next round by the invisible mage behind the donkey. Who was eventually killed by the Assassin who disappeared. The final battle apparently took seven hours, but I was long gone by then, having left with my tail between my legs shortly after having been carbonized.

[wik]

Buckethead has spoken; Johno must now rebut. The war of ages careens toward its grim end. This is our Pelennor Fields, our forest moon of Endor. Our Aigincourt, our Yorktown, our Flanders, our Carthage, our Waterloo.

Two dorks dug into their metaphorical trenches. Two dorks, exhausted, dirty, and suffering from encroaching swamp-ass. Enervated, disheartened, and completely out of ammo they hunker in the rain, scrabbling in the mud for sharp rocks to hurl at the enemy in lieu of the lethal measures that so far failed to strike true. Everyone else went home for supper long since; they remain, though whether out of dedication, petulance, or sheer bloody-mindedness it is hard to tell. Two dorks, hands red and chapped from slap-fighting and bleeding from innumerable paper cuts (those rule books, you know!), panting toward the finish.

Hopefully I will finish my final tale of dorkdom sometime early tomorrow morning for you to enjoy. In the meantime, I will repeat here what I told Buckethead at the end of last round: "Bring that weak shit again and I will beat you so hard you'll be crapping twenty-sided dice for a week."

Stay tuned to see if my threat of dodecahedral excrementia comes to pass.

Pass. Get it? "Pass?"

[alsø wik] Having used all my good gaming ammo on prior rounds, I am left with nothing in that genre except dull and pathetic little vignettes which would gain me nothing to tell here. Buckethead has agreed that I don't have to parry with gaming stories, and to be perfectly honest I have already shared my best dork-in-groups stories (viz. Penguin Patrol and Space Camp, and I suppose my Magical Mystery Tour of England would qualify). The Space Camp story was my nuclear option; I needed it just to stay alive to get this far, having also used up a lot of ammo putting GeekLethal down. So, in a final attempt to "win" this competetion, I need to fechez le vache, load up the catapult with whatever will fit, and fling it in the direction of my elderberrically paternoscented opponent.

Buckethead wrote,

The true dork nature has many aspects. Ineptness, lack of social graces, monomania, unjustified arrogance, obsessive pursuit of minutia, vainglory, well-timed bad luck, and fear are the names we give them.

In this, he is dead right. However, he is wrong that role playing games in and of themselves are where dorkiness achieves its apex. I would argue that truly dorky behavior - ur-dorkiness - is carried out in public, outside of the circle of your dork friends, as a result of striving for greatness and failing thanks to the staggering limitations you didn't even know you had. With that counter-argument in mind, I offer the following.

If You Want To See Me Pull It Out, Just Wear Your Cub Scout Suit With The Butt Cut Out (with apologies to Mr. Chuck E. Weiss)

I wasn't always the snazzy dresser I am now. Today, for example, I'm sporting charcoal grey Italian wool slacks with a richly colored red shirt and a dark tie with red and grey stripes (and blue and bronze and black and brown) that is juuust this side of ugly. My hoofs sport Italian leather monkstraps. It might sound fey and overdone on the page, but people, I gotta tell you... I look good today. Not GQ good (too broke for that!), but good. I've come far.

For years - in fact until I was well into my twenties, I dressed like a colorblind retard. This in itself is not so remarkable, and many potential voters will already be scrolling to the end to cast their votes for Buckethead. Not so fast. What makes this saga dork-tragic is the inordinate pride I took in trying very hard to dress in a clever, cool, and generally awesome way for much longer than common sense and abundant evidence to the contrary would suggest - all the way through college, in fact.

In a previous round, I alluded to some of the various wardrobian missteps that mar my personal past. In and of themselves, they are not so bad. Plenty of people have agonized over what to wear only to make bad decisions. But I remind you of these incidents here to set the table for a rich tale or two about managing to publicly, even enthusiastically make a big dork of myself thanks to what I was wearing, once over a period of years.

Scene The First: Crass Times At Ridgemont High

The year: 1988. George Bush was challenging Michael Dukakis for the Presidency. Me, I was in the ninth grade and my nascent political views were shaped entirely by Time Magazine and Bloom County, both of which I read religiously. God, I loved Bloom County. I used to read Bloom County compilation books in the lunchroom and laugh out loud at the timely antics of Portnoy, Milo, Steve Dallas and that crazy, lovable lug Opus. Sometimes people would ask me what my problem was, at which time I shut up. Other times, they would ask me what was so funny, at which time I showed them a couple strips and then they shut up and went away.

At some point during Reagan's second term, I had obtained a t-shirt with a picture of the Bloom County character Bill The Cat, an American flag, and a slogan that read, "Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Bill The Cat!" I treasured this shirt dearly. By the time the '88 elections rolled around, it had seen better days. It was now a size or three too small, the fabric had worn thin (did my nipples show?), the graphic was starting to wear off, and since it was white my 30-year-old mind is sure that there must have been visible pit and food stains. Nevertheless, with this clever garment I was determined to make my wit and savvy known to all when Election Day rolled around.

On the appointed November day, I crammed my pudge into the prized shirt and set out for school. All day, I made a point of walking around with my chest out, saying to teachers and students, "Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Bill The Cat!," assuming that since most of the teachers and Seniors would be voting, this would go over as a trenchant yet wacky commentary on the ludicrousness of our modern American political system. To my great consternation, nobody seemed to think this was half as funny as I did, and I in fact got a lot of perplexed and irritated responses. Never one to let a good joke die young, I persisted. Toward the end of the day, I did the whole routine for my friend Kevin and, trying to stay cool about my incredible sense of topical humor, let it drop that, yeah, I'm wearing this shirt because it's election day and I think it's a riot. Don't blame me!I voted for Bill The Cat! Kevin gave me a... look... and changed the subject.

Later that afternoon I got home from school eager to spring my jollies on the easiest of audiences, my parents. I set it up by 'casually' asking my dad who he'd voted for. He paused, cocked his head, and said "John, the election's next week."

Scene The Second: "False Consciousness, Punk Mock, and the Semiotics of Green Tape: Johno's College Years, 1992-1996."

Lest you think the Bill The Cat incident was my nadir as fashion plate I hasten to assure you that my aggressive wrongheadedness continued on into college. Toward the end of high school I grew my hair into a mullet and shellacked the top down good with generous squirts of "The Dry Look" hairspray. It was only halfway through my freshman year at college that I came to understand that this hairstyle, which was de rigeur where I grew up, was considered in college an act of tonsorial gaucherie. Clearly, if I was to become a Kool Kollege Kat I was going to have to make some big changes.

I first compensated by clipping the back and growing all my hair out into a sort of helmet-mushroom-shag shape that became greasy about an hour after washing and which absorbed ambient static electricy at a furious clip.

I then made some changes in the way I dressed. Grunge was big then, and indie/skate punk was making a big resurgence on college campuses. Out went my treasured university sweatshirts, acid-washed jeans and white K-Swiss. In came very baggy jeans, gigantic t-shirts, several red plaid flannel shirts, a leather biker jacket, a pair of black 10-eyelet Doc Martens, and a baseball cap from the Alien Workshop skate company. The plastic size tab thingy at the back of the cap quickly broke: I repaired it with a few turns of green electrical tape. I insisted on always wearing the hat backwards in the theory that wearing caps the right way around brought the hick-ness latent in my facial structure right to the surface, so the whimsical accent of green tape was ever-present in the middle of my forehead.

All these efforts, plus a summer spent wrangling 300-lb railroad ties, combined with the midnight pizzas of the mythic "freshman fifteen," transformed my appearance from "pudgy high school dork" to "hulking punk rock fashion plate." My metamorphosis was complete! Goodbye small town, hello college cool! Dork no more! I was most pleased.

The cap became my especial friend after I tried to change my haircut again. A girl in my dorm had cut my hair at the end of my freshman year into a sort of skater-boy shag that made me look even younger than I was but was, it was generally agreed, pretty darned cute. That summer, I mentioned to a (former) friend of mine that my hair wanted cutting, and she volunteered to do it, assuring me that she had cut plenty of hair. Did I mention that this person was later revealed to be an actual for-real pathological liar? My first sign that things would not go well was when she made her first cut and said "oops." My sign that I should have heeded the first sign came when I felt the cold steel of scissors against my skin as she cut a line all the way across the back of my head down to the bare scalp. My stylist/liar paused, took a deep breath, and in a more definitive tone said again, "Oops."

Rather than do the smart thing and go to a professional to salvage what remained of my crop of hair, I chose to wear my Alien Workshop cap backwards every single day for one year. I didn't cut my hair once in the entire time. Meanwhile, I wore my updated cool wardrobe religiously, joined a punk band, wrote the music column for the school paper, and generally considered myself quite the Big Man On Campus In A Punk Rock And Certainly Cool As Hell Way. I was in my element! I was awesome! Look at this jacket! These boots! This hat! Punk Fucking Rock, Baby!

It was in my senior year that a new term was introduced into my vocabulary: "The Uniform." "The Uniform" came up one day when most of my clothes were dirty and I was late for class. I picked out some random items from the back of the closet, threw them on, put a hat over my dirty hair, and went out the door. Later, at lunch, someone commented to me that today was the first time in a while that they'd seen me wear the uniform. The what? "The Uniform. Jeans, red flannel, giant t-shirt, Docs, and that gross hat with the green tape on it. What you're wearing. Everyone always called that 'The Johno Uniform.' Why'd you used to do that, anyway?"

Posted by Buckethead Buckethead on   |   § 21

Sick Humor. No, Actually "Sick." But "Sick" Too, Part II

As the United States plumbs its collective auras and penumbras in search of the magic point where tactful yet topical humor intersects with a disgusting fascination for the filthy, someone has gone and cut right to the chase.

The craziest part? There's comments on that blog. Discussions. What the hell is wrong with people?

(I actually just had my auras plumbed last week by the way, and let me tell you! I'm walking taller, sleeping through the night, and - wouldn't you know it - my pants fit better! Make sure to have them warm the plumbing thingy first, is my advice.)

Posted by Johno Johno on   |   § 2

Just What the Doctor Ordered

In a move likely to crush the grandest aspirations of PETA agents, vegan crystal-grippers, gun-banners, and hippies of every age and stripe, Ted Nugent is about to get $100,000 richer. That kinda scratch buys alot of arrows.

The long-time purveyor of red-meat rock-n-roll has had his day in court. In what I hope is not an April Fool's joke, A MI jury (and, I like to believe, Double Live Gonzo fans) found for the Nuge in a suit brought against promoters who, in essence, fired him for making racist remarks.

As the trial room emptied following the decision, Mr. Nugent was overheard to say, "Yank me, crank me" to the defendants.*

*Ted Nugent was not overheard to say, "Yank me, crank me" to the defendants.

Posted by GeekLethal GeekLethal on   |   § 0

Dubious Hono(u)r

NASA is going to start training astronauts in Labrador in preparation for a return to the moon. It seems that Labrador contains a lot of the common moon rock (and uncommon Earth rock) anorthosite. And nothing else.

My father in law was stationed in Labrador during Vietnam, an assignment which though blessedly short on black-pajamaed guerrillas bent on killing him, was also blessedly short on warm weather, sunlight, entertainment, or distractions of any kind. As he says: "In Labrador, there's a good looking woman behind every tree.... Trouble is, there ain't no trees in Labrador."

Posted by Johno Johno on   |   § 0

I wonder if they had to Mirandize the placenta?

On her way to the hospital to have a baby, Debbie Coleman of Kettering, Ohio had to stop at a filling station to, um, deliver the child. She then sped toward the hospital to recieve whatever care she could at that late hour.

The Dayton police received a call about the incident and somehow concluded that "squirting forth her issue upon this earth" meant "she stole a van." Later, a driver called 911 to report a woman trying to throw a baby out a van window. The Dayton police, seeing "commendation" and "this gonna be on COPS" written all over the incident, made sure to have their guns drawn when they pulled Coleman over.

Then everyone had a laugh over the misunderstanding and the cops went back to their cars and escorted her to the hospital while the credits rolled and the theme played. You can't make this shit up. Ohio: I love you.

Hat tip to Edog, who also notes the sad passing of comedian/junkie Mitch Hedberg.

I got an ant farm. Them fellas didn't grow shit.

Last week I helped my friend stay put. It's a lot easier than helping someone move. I just went over to his house and made sure that he did not start to load shit into a truck.

I got my hair highlighted, because I felt some strands were more important than others.

I had a stick of Carefree gum, but it didn't work. I felt pretty good while I was blowing that bubble, but as soon as the gum lost its flavor, I was back to pondering my mortality.

I want to be a race car passenger: just a guy who bugs the driver. "Say man, can I turn on the radio? You should slow down. Why do we gotta keep going in circles? Can I put my feet out the window? Boy, you really like Tide."

I got in an argument with a girlfriend inside of a tent. That's a bad place for an argument, because I tried to walk out, and had to slam the flap.

I type a 101 words a minute. But it's in my own language.

I don't have a girlfriend. But I do know a woman who'd be mad at me for saying that.

I'm against picketing, but I don't know how to show it.

I was walking down the street with my friend and he said "I hear music." As if there's any other way to take it in.

At my hotel room, my friend came over and asked to use the phone. I said "Certainly." He said "Do I need to dial 9?" I say "Yeah. Especially if it's in the number. You can try four and five back to back real quick."

My lucky number is four billion. That doesn't come in real handy when you're gambling. "Come on, four billion! Fuck. Seven. I need more dice."

I love blackjack. But I'm not addicted to gambling. I'm addicted to sitting in a semi circle.

I don't own a cell phone or a pager. I just hang around everyone I know, all the time.

I used to do drugs. I still do drugs. But I used to, too.

The thing about tennis is: no matter how much I play, I'll never be as good as a wall. I played a wall once. They're fucking relentless.

I would imagine if you could understand Morse Code, a tap dancer would drive you crazy.

I went to the park and saw this kid flying a kite. The kid was really excited. I don't know why, that's what they're supposed to do. Now if he had had a chair on the other end of that string, I would have been impressed.

Posted by Johno Johno on   |   § 1

Deathwatch

I'm not talking about Terri Schiavo, nor am I talking about the Pope (who, being Polish and therefore tougher than leather probably has a good twenty years left in him no matter how grim things seem now). I'm talking about the passing of sometime Ministry commentor Patton of Opinion8.net from blogging. Disgusted by the dorky slap-fights generated by the Schiavo affair (about which he posted in typically thoughtful manner), he's done.

But like Mr. Lileks, I've grown weary of it. Always one to check the pulse of his audience and act on it, Ace (also linked to your right) created "The Flame War Thread". The purely made-up invective slung about on that thread was cathartic enough (though I didn't participate) to distract me from the sinking feeling that, for some time to come, commentary on the internet is going to be dominated by precisely the form of crap of which Lileks despairs.

I'm with Lileks. Watching otherwise agreeable folks arguing as though they know the answer to an utterly unanswerable question has convinced me that it's not worth waiting for the invective to quit flowing. A bunch of folks whom I thought could rationally discuss their way to agreement, or at least to a polite consensus on how to avoid unpleasantness, have proven to me that my judgment was flawed. Too many folks, though thankfully still a minority, are taking this "new medium" thing way too seriously, becoming pompous and pronunciatory, and seem actually to believe their own shit.

While Lileks will be back sometime later in April, I won't, other than as a reader of the excellent sites listed to the right. Mr. Lileks' piece triggered the realization for me: I just don't care to add to the chum already in the water. I've never had pretense to knowing it all. Damned if that doesn't put me out of place in the slice of the 'sphere I've been hanging around. Some other day, in some different forum, about different subject matter, perhaps, but no more for me in this one. The internet will soldier on just fine, even absent my sporadic commentary, just as the creators intended.

Many thanks to those of you who've been kind enough to read, comment, and link.

I hope he decides at some point in the future to return. He doesn't write much, but he writes so well. Good luck to ya, you Ohiotexan jerkwad.

With affection,
The Ministry

Posted by Johno Johno on   |   § 0

Poetry Slam

Imagine you are a British poet moved by the Muse to pen a verse to the Prince of Wales and his longtime consort on the eve of their wedding. Imagine you wish to fete them with all the powers at your disposal.

What do you do? Sonnet? Rhyming quatrain? An epic? Blank verse?

Try an inadvertantly bitchy and unspeakably banal acrostic.

Valentine Fit For a King

C is for Charles our future King
H is filled with happiness he'll bring
A directs Cupid's arrow and her bow
R is for the ring, sparkly and fine
L languishes love, I hope he's sure this time
E brings eagerness now to marry
S unites special sons, William and Harry

C is for cheers and congratulations
A an able Duchess fine
M means marriage for a second time
I instils invitations, maybe flowing wine
L denotes the love I hope she feels for him
L is for logistics, she needs to say her grace
A arrange the future in this manic human race

God bless Charles and Camilla.

Do you think she meant to call into question the sincerity of their love for each other (twice!), or was she just filling out the meter? She's no Amiri Baraka , that's for sure.

Either way, she sure got a nice thank-you from Charles' office, and that's more than the State of New Jersey ever gave its poet laureate!

(link thanks to bookslut.)

[wik] Wait... Cupid's a chick now? And who knew about 9/11? I'm so confused...

Posted by Johno Johno on   |   § 1