Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Tweets from the Future


^Stephen King's horror classic Coach Getting Hit by Soda Cans was unconscionably snubbed at the Oscars back in '87.^

When I read that Amazon was designing delivery drones, I immediately pictured the robotic flying things one day shooting death-rays at innocent people. I got rattled by that level of technology in the works. Was that just me?

Now, I realize there's got to be a sensible reality somewhere between death rays in the sky and the notion that delivery drones are going to make all our lives perfect, but I'm more intrigued by the things that could, hypothetically, go wrong. Amazon's plan is to maximize their already soaring profits by trimming delivery costs—by cutting out the middleman, so to speak. And it doesn't take a genius to see that you can't spell “middleman” without “man.” Humanity could be made less important by the machines we create. That's the anxiety that a lot of science-fiction books and movies try to express.

Of course, not all of the grim prophesies foretold in science-fiction will come to fruition. Even so, if just one of those prophesies really happens, it would be significant enough to impact somebody's day. And then, naturally, that humanoid is going to let everyone and their Foot-Rub-Bots know about it on Twitter.

While we should all hope none of the following Tweets eventually get sent, that doesn't have to stop us from looking at the funny side of what could be a future gone awry.

"I'm so glad Twitter expanded its limitations per entry! Finally, humanity is free to ramble for as many as 539 characters." #FixingAPlotHole

“At Smitty's bar with friends. Not sure which ones 'cause I haven't looked up from my phone since I got here.” #NowToPlayCandyCrush

“On-line shopping is the best! It's so convenient. And since I also work from home and then play X-Box for hours on end, I haven't had to leave the house in two months!” #Shut-InsUniteOnTheWeb

“So grateful to have survived open-heart surgery! The da Vinci Robot performed the operation perfectly. Sure, I'm not crazy about the tattoo it later etched into my chest, which reads, 'Suck it, humans,' but I guess beggars can't be choosers.” #RoboBlessed

“Amazon's delivery drones are the bomb! My Ray Bradbury paperback arrived so quickly I was able to bring it to today's book-burning fest. I got 451 problems, but a book ain't one!” #Pop-CulturePun

“Remember that cop in shiny armor who got in trouble for cracking too many skulls in Detroit? He must've been fired or demoted. We just saw him on patrol at the mall. He hassled me for littering outside of the Orange Julius. When I told him to frig off, he grabbed his gun but kept it in the holster. His lips started to tremble and then he turned his back to us, muttering. And as he shuffled away, we all had to laugh 'cause he walked like he had a carbon-rod up his butt.” #RoboMallCop

“All these decades after the album came out, I can't believe scientists have finally invented an actual Mr. Roboto. They say it's just a prototype and that someday it will serve a purpose, but for now all it does is perform a bunch of God-awful Styx songs.” #WorseThanHoveringREOSpeedwagon

“I appreciate our bomb-disarming Bot as much as anyone else on the SWAT Team, but after it's done its job, does it really have to be programmed to say, 'Suck it, humans'?” #RoboBadmouthing

“We're trying to get back to normal after a day of no electricity. Total chaos! The power outage. Transformers blown. It was tough on everyone in the neighborhood— except for the Transformers. They all seemed to be enjoying themselves.” #OptimusPrimeIsSlime

“Soda machines dispense cans so fast these days! Coach bought Cokes for our little league team, and in no time, they were zipping out of there. The only bad part is that coach got beaned in his crotch and then his head a bunch of times and the paramedic sort of mentioned that he might die or something. Not sure. At the time I was all about savoring that speedy soda!” #MaximumOverdriveClipAvailableOnYouTube


^This scene went on for a solid forty-five minutes, so you can imagine how disappointed the cast and crew were when the Academy failed to acknowledge their work.^


“What's with all this fuss about eating Soylent Green? Personally, I shrugged when they told us that Mountain Dew Kickstart was made from horse adrenaline, and now I don't care if Soylent Green is really human meat.” #YesWeCannibalsCan

“Flirting with a chick at the bar. She warned me to tread lightly since she's a Replicant. I think that means she's got a twin sister, so that's pretty hot.” #UnlessHerReplicantIsADude

“Yaaawwwnnn. Another boring night of work at Skynet HQ. I don't know why they need so many security guards to protect these fancy computers, but if it means getting paid to phone-ogle 'This Week in Cleavage,' I'll play their game. Wait a sec. A scientist, a punk-kid, a buff woman, and a Dolph Lundgren-looking biker-dude just walked into the lobby. What is this? The setup to a joke? And why do they have duffel-bags? I'll bet they're selling office supplies door-to-door. LOL, gotta go deal with some bozos.” #DefinitelyNoGunsInThoseBags

“Kinda sucks to be plucked from high-school and picked for this whole fight-to-the-death-in-the-forest thing, but at least they let me keep my phone. Gonna snap a pic of some dork perched on a tree branch aiming that stupid bow and arrow.” #Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

“Tonight's episode of The Running Man was a real letdown. I get that the show is all about gladiators hunting national disgraces, but it was way too easy for Captain Freedom to chase down Rush Limbaugh.” #HeartAttackWasVictorious

“I have a couple questions about this little outbreak of the flesh-eating undead. First off, is it OK if we call them 'zombies,' or is that a faux pas for some reason? Secondly, can our proton-packs be used to destroy them, or do they only work on ghosts? Finally, do the walking corpses ever have to go number-two?” #EverybodyPoops?

“Will everyone please chill out about this 'Matrix' hoopla? Look, ever since we found out football was a hoax after those pro wrestling refs decided that Packers-Seahawks game, is it really a big surprise that reality itself is a hoax and we're mere human batteries used to power our machine-overlords? Heck, I saw it coming.” #NowToPlayCandyCrush2

“Wow. I just glanced through this farmhouse window and saw pigs standing on two feet around the same dinner table as some men. They put their game of cards on hold, a man made a speech, a pig made a speech, and then they shared a toast in celebration. Now I've seen EVERYTHING...Just like Big Brother!” #OrwellianEnding

Thursday, December 5, 2013

The Anti-Golf Club


Though I don't have much on the compliment-front where golf is concerned, it is certainly worth noting that not all golfers are jerks. Some golfers are delightful, modest people, while most of the others are at least tolerable. The main thing they all have in common and the source of my gripe, however, is that they all seem to be OK with how much land is monopolized by their beloved hobby.


The amount of scenic, verdant land that gets hogged by golf courses is a big disappointment to those who can think of at least 18 outdoor activities that unmercifully kick the living shit out of golf. Games that involve running, catching, throwing, kicking, jumping, and physical-contact are unspeakably more awesome than cranky old men barking for total silence before they putt. Lying on a blanket and feeding strawberries to the inviting mouth of your significant other is so much better than launching into a temper tantrum within the sandpit of a par 3. Silently cursing the world and everything in it because some tiny ball you just clubbed did not ultimately roll where you wanted it to a hundred yards away is decidedly sadder than a husband pushing a stroller, flanked by his wife and older child riding bicycles on a beautiful day.

Golf courses waste more space than a billion clones of Honey Boo-Boo moms. Golf courses stand as further proof that rich white guys are no good at sharing land.

Now, before any kind of a “golf is for capitalists, parks are for commies” argument can be misconstrued, I want to make it clear that I believe in a free-market economy and I fully accept the individual's right to own private property. Sure, a whole lot of selfish, compulsively greedy white snobs happen to own that property for golfing purposes, but ultimately, free market equals free will and I can deal with that.

All I'm asking is that you consider this surprisingly sane plea to convert a golf course here and there into a vast open space that could be used to please a multitude of people with a wide array of hobbies. Is that so crazy? I'm about to mention stuff like trampolines, dogs, sports that require fast movement, and French-kissing, so if I still seem crazy, I don't know...go watch the Golf Channel and rub one out for all I care.

Here are 18—COUNT 'EM—18 different outdoor activities that are quite possibly superior to one (1) game that involves little athleticism or strategy and even less teamwork.


1:) Picnics: The first portion of the overhauled course, rechristened the Outdoor Smörgåsbord, features a 35,000 square-foot expanse with picnic tables and benches running along the spine of what used to be a fairway. The gently sloped, wooded fringes lay bare for blankets to be sporadically laid out by those from the general public willing to pay a minimal fee to enter the Outdoor Smörgåsbord for the day. Socializing with other groups is encouraged but not required. Some making out is tolerated, but nudity and full-fledged humping are not. Citizens are free to bring their own food in coolers, and as a bonus, a quaint restaurant that serves burgers, ice cream, pizzas, and pastries will be placed where some shitty putting green used to be. The little hole at the far end will retain its importance as the spot where a public toilet feeds a pipe that leads underground into the sewage system.


2.) Tennis: Once you get past the fact that the absolute coolest tennis player, John McEnroe, was a winy grouch, tennis isn't all that bad. Granted, like golf, it is a tad aristocratic, but it has three qualities that make it superior. First, rapid movement is required to play tennis well. Maintaining volleys and then scoring entails speed, agility, hand-eye-coordination, and endurance. Second, it's common to play tennis with a partner, in doubles-matches, and teamwork is more rewarding than snobby individualism. Finally, tennis courts are much more judicious in their usage of land; one golf course occupies as much space as a dozen-plus tennis courts. And to reestablish the theme here: taking up all those acres in order to feel superior even though little athleticism is required of the sport is what makes golf such a bloated nuisance.


3.) Basketball: From the adjacent tennis courts, it's a short drive for the cement-mixing trucks to the basketball area. Basketball is probably the premier team sport because it won't bore you as much as baseball's lulls nor inflict all that concussive head-trauma like football. Up-tempo, smooth, alive with rhythm, and physical but not brutal, basketball poses the ultimate challenge of the athlete's ego clash with the team's success. (Excluding Michael Jordan. He's the only one who could have both.) Its lone detriment is its bias against short people like me, but hey, Spud Webb proved a 5'7” guy with genetics better than mine can still win a dunk-contest. (Odds of becoming like Sud Webb if white: Impossible.)


4.) Mini-Golf: In this area, indignant golfers who roam the Smörgåsbord in a devastated stupor can at least receive a reprieve from a golf-less abyss. The mini-golf course is placed strategically after the basketball courts so that the bigots who golf won't immediately be driven to suicide by the sight of all those high-leaping black guys. In addition to its Tetris-like ability to compartmentalize space, mini-golf caters to couples on dates with the seriously silly competitiveness it instills. It is a game rife with outlandish obstacles and gaudy scenery. If you can tell your trash-talking date to hush up before draining a putt that zips through the spinning arms of a windmill that's as big as a vending machine, you're more of a champ than the solitary grouch who wines about the untimely gust of wind that blew his tiny ball into some sandbox type of thing.


5.) Skateboarding: An individual's sport that represents golf's antithesis, skateboarding is the perfect outlet for rebellious teens who want to risk injury without all that authoritative barking from coaches. With its quarter-pipes, half-pipes, and elongated pipes used for what the kids call “grinding,” skateboarding provides plenty of overt nods to paraphernalia sure to keep teens cackling through coughing fits. A huge sign adorned with Kenny Loggins' unsmiling mug painted above the words “Danger Zone” will warn skateboarders of the need to sign a waiver denying all culpability of the Smörgåsbord for injuries incurred. Such stern litigiousness will be offset, hopefully, by granting free admissions to anyone whose Youtube clip of a “dude eating shit” on the pavement exceeds ten-thousand views.


6.) Kickball: In keeping with the juvenile theme, kickball hearkens back to grade school playgrounds smeared with chalk and buzzing with frenetic youths. For whatever reason, the day we become aware of our lost innocence is the same day we retire from kickball. The game doesn't mesh well with adulthood, but with its playful mishmash of baseball, soccer, and dodgeball, kickball excels in the fun department. Plus, when a kickball is kicked for kickball purposes, the solid thump of a sneaker into a bounding, rubbery sphere yields the sound: "Poont!" That onomatopoeia alone should be enough to make us forget about going pro in some “real sport” and give kickball a reboot.


7.) Baseball: Possibly on the cusp of resurgence due to all the compounding baggage that seems poised to drag down football's dominance, baseball is the perfect sport for athletes who'd rather live longer, happier lives and not run all the time. Sure, some of the all-time greats have played the “I can't answer your steroid-question because I just forgot how to speak English” card and others were rotten-to-the-core racists who gambled their wives away in drunken poker games, but when played with true passion, persistence, and discipline—the way Hammerin' Hank, Joltin' Joe, and the nickname-less Greg Maddux played it—baseball is subtly sublime. And if that sales pitch doesn't sway you participants in Smörgåsbord baseball will be allowed to use performance enhancing drugs. Hell, if you're willing to drop hundreds of dollars on pills that will turn you into a demonic Incredible Hulk just so you can hit a ball over a fence and impress a pregnant blond on maternity leave from Hooter's, we're not going to stop you. Less leniently, however, would-be players who suggest the games should include Designated Hitters will be banished from the park just like the no-good goat that cursed decades of futility on the Chicago Cubs.


8.) Soccer: The eternal frustration of soccer is that it requires so much motion and endurance in order to achieve the bare modicum of points, but the cardiovascular exercise redeems much of the game's tedium. Two soccer fields could be placed within the confines of one hole of golf, and compared to golf, I really don't have many complaints against soccer; it's a legitimate sport that is about as watchable as a Queen Elizabeth sex tape. Players whose games end in scoreless ties will not be punished by the Smörgåsbord but they will be encouraged to seriously reassess their choices in life.


9.) Football: There are an abundance of knocks against football—especially since scientific research on the repercussions of concussions has emerged to conclude that the constant mayhem and ferocious collisions are probably bad for one's physical and mental well-being. American football—the kind which favors the use of hands for passing, carrying, and catching and disfavors the elfish men who reduce themselves to actually kicking the ball—is a gladiator-like show of swagger and brutality. But to a lot of Americans, including me, football is still awesome in spite of its obvious and glaring faults. Football is a fantasy—an unbelievable and exciting fantasy. It's the fun and irresistible vixen who pays her way through med school by pole-dancing-fantasy. It's the misunderstood bad-ass who'd make a perfect husband for one lucky lady if only he wasn't so committed to his biker-gang-fantasy. Football has so many downfalls that are overcome by its enthralling mix of athleticism, brute force, and strategy. Two football fields are to be placed consecutively within the smörgåsbord—one for flag and the other for tackle—and while I realize those who excel at the latter are undeniably more impressive virile, I'd rather swipe at flags, spin away from grabby hands, and not get my head drilled. Two decades of coolness and staggering sex appeal may not be worth an athletic afterlife burdened by violent mood swings, memory loss, and depression—but if you see otherwise and you can play football at a high level, locally or internationally, I'll get my popcorn ready, say thank you, scratch my head, and wrack my conscience all at the same time.


10.) Playgrounds: Moving right along past the cotton candy and ice cream stands on the threshold of the previous area's end-zone, playgrounds sprawl across the next plot of land. The playgrounds mark a moral threshold for those indignant golfers still stalking through the Smörgåsbord; if they can't at least stop scowling at the sight of happy children being bedazzled by swingsets and monkey-bars, they have revealed themselves to be monsters festering amongst mere everyday jerks in Polo shirts. For a fleeting moment, a cute toddler can convince just about anybody that the twisty-slide is the most awesome thing ever made. The Smörgåsbords playgrounds are also replete with merry-go-rounds, Four-square courts, bouncy castles, treehouses, fireman poles, balance beams, trampolines, sandboxes, wobbly wooden bridges, a model pirate ship, and—for the little hellraisers with steely nerves—a jungle gym. For safety purposes, that newfangled rubbery flooring will spread across much of the playgrounds—so as to convince kids that falling down never actually hurts in real life. Rubbery flooring will be provided by Playground Surface Bounce Back, not Playground Rubber Kids Kushion since the latter is but one “K” word away from being super-racist. And unlike certain golf courses, we're trying to avoid that sort of prejudice.


11.) Frisbee: These plastic discs of the anti-establishment may very well be flat because they are so often tossed by those who have had their lofty spirits flattened by power-mad aristocrats. Ironically, the same ilk of freethinkers who once challenged the accepted notion that the world is flat are also responsible for asking, “Why do we always have to throw round things?” through an exhalation of pot smoke. That mind-altered musing launched the Frisbee, and all these years later, the Smörgåsbord will thrill its players by dividing a field into thirds for games of catch, ultimate Frisbee, and for a long-range challenge, one (1) of those baskets that somewhat resembles a broken birdcage. If that seems insufficient—look—mini-golf is already available and if the layout overindulges in disc golf, too, then the golfers win, and if the golfers win...we'd be left to confoundedly wonder how the terrorists would feel about that.


12.) Washer Box and Bag Toss: These two games involve lofting small things at a bigger thing from a distance of 15 feet or whatever the hell your stoner-stickler friend keeps insisting it is, and they cater to the masses who have both limited square footage in their backyards and a drinking problem. More specifically, washer-box challenges its players to throw metallic rings into a square, wooden box with a short pipe at its core to permit extra points, while bag toss will test one's knack for softball-pitching a grainy sack onto an inclined, rectangular platform with a hole close to its far edge to permit extra points. They're both turn-based, with a pair of stationary sets straightforwardly opposed to each other, and a two-on-two format is typically employed—unlike a lot of the games' elite players. Washers and bags blur the line between loafing and competing. The ratio of beverages consumed to total steps run while playing washers and bags is something like five-trillion to zero. One hole of a (former) golf course could squeeze in dozens of both games. Arguments about which of the two is the superior game will not be tolerated—for the benefit of the Smörgåsbord as well as humankind in general. Quick footnote: Bag toss is known by another term, too, but I just couldn't think of any jokes to crack about “Corn Hole.”


13.) Paintball: If you've ever had the urge to reenact a session of Call of Duty in real-life, or, more morbidly, go on a shooting spree without all the actual consequences and carnage, paintball will splatter a red dot on the bullseye in your heart. The tougher alternative to laser-tag, the Smörgåsbord's paintball course will necessarily be confined by steep walls to preserve the eye-sockets of the other patrons. Within the walls, a vast scattering of disused theater sets, haystacks, barrels, abandoned buses, and various other hiding spots will satisfy passive bloodlust in pacifists and provoke war flashbacks in vets. Paintball is the only pseudo-sport to pair guns with balls, which is a ballsier move than anything golf has ever done—with the possible exception of allowing that incorrigible Happy Gilmore on the tour back in '96.


14.) Volleyball: Like basketball and—well, life—the tall are favored in volleyball. But volleyball differs from basketball in that it's more readily played by unfit commoners inside a bar's annex that has a dank warehouse feel to it. Hell, I've even played some volleyball, capably enough, in a bar league, albeit as a substitute. My most vivid memory was of jogging toward a borderline serve and judiciously letting it sail out of bounds—where it smacked an onlooking little boy in the face. He bawled spasmodically and ran to a mother that suddenly hated me. She swooped him up and consoled him with assurances that they would both scowl into the depths of my wretched soul throughout the rest of my one and only stint as a volleyball scab. Hopefully the Smörgåsbord's attendees will have volleyball experiences more akin to that athletic duel among the buff pilots from Top Gun—only not necessarily as homo-erotic.

15.) Dog Park: Inserting a plot-twist into this rather thorough outline, there have been three tracks—both five yards in width—running alongside of the Smörgåsbord the entire time. The outermost one is a grassy path suited for trotting mutts leashed by the owners that love them. The path leads to an expansive dog park which features tunnels, hurdles, teeter-totters, some A-shaped ramps that the pompous pooches seem to like, and furry butts to sniff for as far as their color-blind eyes can see. Plenty of space will be alloted for the lazy dogs who just want to nap in the shade. They're my heroes. Dog-banging will only be tolerated if both pets and their respective owners reach a consensual agreement. The Smörgåsbord's policy on dog-oral is more lenient. Removal and disposal of dookie will be the duty of owners and repeat offenders from the baseball zone who lobbied for the DH rule.


16.) Running: Recalling the tracks mentioned in the previous entry, the middle one provides a less poop-littered route to a plain on which people can run around in circles if that feels awesome to them for whatever reason. The beloved sport of ectomorphs doubles as torture for the overweight, and on the Smörgåsbord, athletic marvels are free to tote around a pigskin or a glove if that makes clod-hopping seem more worthwhile to them. Honestly, there might be room for more jokes in this entry, but running is so fucking self-explanatory I'm just going to be concise here.


17.) Biking: The innermost dirt-track eventually leads to an expanse consisting of hills, curves, and roundabouts. Bikes are like motorcycles for people who enjoy exercise and feel no need to announce to the neighborhood, “Asshole comin' through!” Ever since Lance Armstrong was exposed as a deceitful cheater, the sport has reverted back to its unwatchable origins. (Lance had a similar effect on the movie Dodgeball, by the way.) But a lot of activities can be enjoyed by those involved even though they're no fun for spectators. Elderly sex, for instance. Keep that in mind the next time you go for a bike ride.


18.) Go-karts: Somewhere between the fantastical glee of Mariokart and the drive-in-a-circle-'til-you-forget-how-to-read monotony of NASCAR exists go-karting, and that's about as happy as a medium can get. On a go-kart, one can viscerally experience speed and competition on the open road, along with those winding variations and figure-8's that the NASCAR pioneers could never wrap their heads around. It's also more dangerous than sitting on a couch with cramping hands, but not so dangerous that your corpse will be treated like a hero for taking on a senseless risk. Golfers who still feel implacably furious after beholding all 18 of the Smörgåsbord's attractions are welcome to park their running go-kart in a tool-shed until their living nightmares start to fade away. Then one of the Smörgåsbord's employees will rush in and save them, maybe even treat them to a pep-talk and a free caramel apple. We don't condone malice at the Outdoor Smörgåsbord, and besides, if you think about it, parking a running go-kart inside a tool shed is really more of an indoor thing.



I remain confident that a compromise can be reached between me—a golf-hater who's clearly coping with more abnormalities than the average person, golfer or otherwise—and a small contingency of caddy-shackin' ball-whackers who'd be willing to give up a few of their less prestigious or possibly downright shitty courses. And if I live to see but one monopoly of pristine land converted into an Outdoor Smörgåsbord before I drunkenly choke on a folded slice of pizza six months from now, I'll consider the anti-golf club a success.

Monday, December 2, 2013

Down with Santa (edit)


^What a crock of shit this is.^

At the age of seven, I became a Santa-atheist. It wasn't by choice. As the youngest in a family of Catholics, I was, by consequence, the last of the true believers in Santa. Months before Christmas, my older brothers got struck by a mischievous whim; they joined forces and exposed the truth about the fat man in red to me. When my mom was called into the room and she somberly nodded that yes, what they had told me was true, I was crushed. I whimpered and wept, which was as enthralling to my older brothers as a fireworks display.


Devastated and disillusioned, my wounded imagination connected the dots to other figures of dubious existence. In no time, flying reindeer, the Tooth Fairy, and Johnny Appleseed were defrauded, too. My faith in God wavered. I put the Man Upstairs on notice. Adults forever lost a great deal of credibility.

There are other ways to learn the truth about Santa. My sister, for instance, found out while playing a home-game of Family Feud. The survey was “Make-Believe Characters.” An older cousin unassumingly guessed “Santa Claus.” Survey says? Ding! They won that round but lost their childhood innocence. Well-played, Parker Brothers.

A more common debunking occurs when kids walk in on their parents scattering presents around the tree. This can be unpleasant, too, and it can become disastrous if dad and mom also got sidetracked role-playing as horny Santa and drunk Mrs. Claus.

Since the Santa mythology pretty much ruined my whole outlook on life, I've come up with some suggestions to parents when the time comes to dispel the fib they really didn't have to tell in the first place.

Parents who love science-fiction flicks are advised to hold out their hands and offer their kids a choice between gobbling a blue Sweet-Tart or a red Sweet-Tart. Tell them that the blue Sweet-Tart, unlike the Santa-colored one, will allow them to see the true nature of life and reality. If they choose the blue candy, go Morpheus on those kids and reveal the truth about the Santa-Matrix. If they choose the red candy, consider disowning them.

Moms and dads who voted against Obama should let their children know that Santa wears red because he's a communist, a slob with a bleeding heart who dodges income tax at the North Pole and only works one day a year, a pinko who runs a not-for-profit business, and a 47-percenter whose very existence should be denied. (Truth be told, I stole this idea from Rush Limbaugh.)

More Stories, and Additional Stories is the name of that eBook.