Saturday, September 13, 2014

Historia de Objeto Inanimado



Having grown up in America, I realize I am biased in what I'm about to state, but here it is, anyway: I'm still completely baffled by the way foreign languages have both masculine and feminine nouns. It remains a ludicrous idea to me. In Spanish, for instance, the restaurant is a man but the library is a woman. What? Who made the official ruling on that? And more importantly, why? It's nonsense. Restaurants and libraries are places, not people or animals.

The ultimate saving grace of our system of writing and speech is that we only have one way to say “the.” When you consider how much other languages over-complicate saying “the,” we have a wonderfully simple system. It's realistic, too, because it's kind of insane to constantly think of inanimate objects—lifeless things like shoes and spoons—as having male and female sex parts, and maybe I'm being too literal about it, but clearly, they don't.

I'm sorry if that seems insensitive or xenophobic, and it should be noted that every once in a while I do act like a buffoon, but I have never heard a foreign language teacher (or anyone else) explain the need for masculine and feminine nouns in a convincing fashion. German, French, and Spanish should all drop at least one “the.” Ultimately, I think other languages just have a weird, lingering tradition of smooching and banging scissors and hammers together as though they are Barbie and Ken dolls.

That got me thinking—in as much as it made me paranoid. If, by some miracle, I'm wrong in my criticism of masculine and feminine nouns, then the inanimate objects inhabiting my very own apartment could secretly be experiencing self-aware, gender-influenced lives—just animals with a pulse, like us. For all I know, the pencils, lamps, notebooks, lighters, books, computer, and desk so familiar to me might become sentient and stage raging debates about gender inequality and sexism when I leave my residence—kind of like Toy Story, but with a pencil, an oscillating fan, and a computer instead of Woody, Buzz and Bo Peep.

Let's explore what would happen if that were the case. Only kidding! This actually happened.

After reheating some cold pizza in a toaster oven and devouring it, I departed my apartment and leave for work. To translate in Spanish, this means that I ate some pizza—which is feminine, mind you—left my manly apartment, and departed for my masculine job.

By the time I pushed through the effeminate door on my down the macho fire escape to my dude-reminiscent car, the inanimate object population of my apartment became abuzz. Everything I owned had an important meeting to conduct. My computer, a female, turned on and voiced an announcement.

“All things small and portable, gather in the living room for today's debate...”

My refrigerator, a cold and robust woman, exclaimed a protest.

“What about me? I way 300 pounds and I can't move!”

“We can hear you from the kitchen, Mrs. Refrigerator!” my computer snapped. “We can't risk you coming here and scratching the linoleum floor. Ever hear of a security deposit, you buzzing old...”

Slinking toward the gathering of objects at the base of the masculine desk and the effeminate computer, my cozy wool blanket interjected.

“Ladies, please, let's not bicker amongst ourselves. We're in this together, remember?”

“Thank you, Miss Blanket,” my computer said. “You're right. Now, in regard to today's long-awaited debate on gender inequality, Mr. Pencil asked—no, DEMANDED—to have opening remarks. So much for ladies first, I suppose. Your remarks, Mr. Pencil?”

My pencil waddled on its eraser and stood upright to address my possessions.

“Woman, you might be due for a virus scan, if ya catch my drift.”

This boorish remark was met mostly by the jeers it deserved, though the radio and the desk, with their obvious machismo leanings, still voiced their audacious approval.

“Only kidding, dames!” Mr. Pencil laughed sleazily. “Any-hoo, in all my years as a sliver of wood with a graphite-tip, I have never heard anything so absurd as the accusations of Mrs. Computer here that my brotherhood of inanimate objects and I are in any way, shape, or form sexist.”

Overhearing this, my dishwasher disagreed.

“You said my place was in the kitchen!” she accused.

“Anyone think we should have a dishwasher installed in the living room?” my pencil asked in a facetious tone. “Does that make sense to anyone? No. OK, and mind your manners, Mrs. Dishwasher. That's one topic done. You got any other bright ideas for complaints in that big, Pentium processor or whatever-the-hell-it-is brain of yours?”

“You pig,” my computer said.

“Pigs are masculine, so thank you.”

“My other complaints include not just sexism but your overall bigotry,” my computer said. “Nick's notebook and his oscillating fan can't get married, even though they're in love.”

“Yes, Mr. Fan blows my pages with LOVE!” my notebook declared.

My oscillating fan waved a soothing hello, then turned away toward the other wall...

“That is an abomination!” my pencil said. “Good lord, a notebook and a fan doing such a thing. Disgusting.”

“You're just jealous because I don't love you!” my notebook shouted at my pencil. “Nobody loves you, Mr. Pencil.”

“Why, that's not true. On many occasions after dark, I have indeed found love by plunging myself into the pure and delectable hole of Mrs. Pencil Sharpener.”

A moment passed, one that escalated from shock to awkwardness to sheer delight among Mr. Pencil's enemies.

“Pencil sharpener is a masculine noun,” my computer declared.

“Yeah,” my pencil sharpener said. “Dude, you didn't know I was a dude? Seriously?”

My once-upright pencil nearly toppled to the carpet but managed a slanted posture in his moment of trauma.

“Oh, sweet Lord, what have I done?!” my pencil shrieked.

But he regained his composure, reconsidered the many errors of his ways, and in no uncertain terms, he saw the light—literally, since Mrs. Lamp clicked on when he posed dramatically in the direction of her bulb.

“I've been an insensitive fool all this time,” my pencil said. “Whether pencil, dishwasher, radio, or fat refrigerator, we should all be treated with the same respect and kindness. Heck, when you put our obvious sex-differences aside, inanimate objects like us are all pretty much alike. We're all inhuman, ya know? Let this be a day of everlasting celebration in Nick's apartment, for we the masculine and feminine nouns have finally learned to live together in perfect harm—”

“He's home early!”

That was my lamp, warning the others as I crossed the fire escape and searched for the proper key to unlock the door. My pencil reverted to being a jerk.

“How dare you interrupt me, Miss Light!”

“You can't talk to her that way!” my blanket chastised.

The objects continued to argue and insult each other in this manner, right up to the moment I walked inside and saw the supernatural spectacle. After I explained to the toaster that I got Sunday mixed up with Monday again, I got the scoop on the dispute from my garbage can, and my mind was obviously quite blown. I stroked my chin and wondered, “Should I do a story about this? Yes, and then a movie.”

All right, thanks for reading this buffoonery, and sorry for the abrupt conclusion, but before I get to the Inanimate Objects Story screenplay, I'm in a hurry to finish the first draft of my epic legal-drama Alien v. Predator: The Supreme Court Trial.

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Nobody Brought a Football (rewrite)



While I love football in spite of its glaring flaws, athletic stalwarts are rarely made for acting, and the advertisements that feature these men are oftentimes hard to watch. This sports story stars offensive lineman Brock Walton, a bad brute who didn't get everything he wanted before the filming of his boneheaded local commercial.

###

Brock Walton:

OK, OK. That’s enough of the freakin’ eyeliner. Quit giving me the Howie Long treatment, for Christ’s sake. Let’s shoot this thing already.

Oh yeah, and one more thing: where’s the football? Come on, don’t play dumb with me. Everybody knows you bring a pigskin to a commercial like this one. It’s what you pony-tailed fairies call a “prop.”

Look at the three of you! You remind me of the fawns I plowed into with my Hummer on the drive here. Quit your dawdling and fetch me a ball.

What? You’re shittin’ me, right? Nobody brought a football? What in the hell, guys?!

Goddammit, how are the people gonna recognize me if I’m not clutching a football? It’s bad enough that I’m not wearing pads and a uniform. Now you don’t even have a Manning Missile for me to palm while I nod at the camera and say, “Bunkley Trucks has the perfect game plan for low prices!”

The nobodies sitting on milk crates in their trailers will say, “Who is that asshole dressed like the rest of us bums, not holding a football, telling us where to buy a truck? What does he know about game plans? Just where in the fuck does he get off?”

Jesus, why didn’t I bring a football from home? I’ve got like 50 of ‘em, and that's just in the garage. Wait, I know why. Because any dipshit with a camera and a boom mic should know to bring a Brown Lombardi to a commercial that stars a man who racked-up three pancake blocks against the Cowboys last year. Amateurs! How are the peons supposed to know I’m better than they are if I’m not toting a pigskin? I’m overweight, bald as Mr. Clean, and missing a front tooth. You take away my Dick Butkus Bomb and I look like a bouncer at a hick bar, checking the ID's of the jagoffs who want to see some Poison cover band. I’m a fat, naked nobody without that pigskin!

...

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

Monday, September 1, 2014

Fail Mary Revisited



The Green Bay Packers' matchup with the Seattle Seahawks to open the 2014 National Football League season rekindles memories of injustice. In 2012, when the Pack Attack last battled the 2013 champs, the green and gold got shafted by hapless replacement referees on a play that decided the outcome of the game. Following that fiasco, while I grieved, I wrote an explanation for the madness, from the point-of-view of one of the dopey refs. Enjoy former NFL scab Clyde Skumly's take on that Seattle “touchdown” that definitely wasn't a touchdown.

Clyde Skumly, replacement ref:

All right, you football freaks, if you could all stop bickering about how plan-B referees cost your favorite team a win, pretty-pretty-please with sugar on top allow me to defend myself and my colleagues. Yes, earlier this year I worked as a replacement ref in the NFL while the real officials were on strike. And I'd like to point out that I'm pretty sure I correctly nailed an Eagles' lineman for a false start, and meanwhile, that Ed Hochuli ref you people suddenly wanna hug did nothing but bench-press a treadmill in his basement. I guess that's gratitude for ya.

Our best efforts to succeed at the highest level of the reffing trade, under intense pressure and in a very short window of time, may have been criticized, but we weren't as incompetent as some of you ingrates think. While my associates had built their resumes by reffing everything from the Lingerie League to dog shows to pie-eating contests, I'd been busting my hump for decades as an official for a different sport that may cause brain damage: Professional wrestling.

Shortly after I damn near graduated from high school, I began my career as an amateur wrestling referee. When I made the jump from amateur to pro wrestling, it was for two reasons: 1.) When you watch sweaty young men straddle and pin each other enough times, it starts seemin' fruity. 2.) Plus I got fired for “gross ineptitude.”

Thankfully, the WWF came calling shortly thereafter. Apparently they were impressed by my reputation as a hapless referee and simply blown away by the awful score I got on that IQ test they gave me. My life was transformed in that magical moment when the owner of the company handed me a contract outside of a strip club and groaned, “Shit or get off the pot.” In a matter of weeks I was warning Jake “The Snake” Roberts to put his damn pet python back in its bag, and the jeers I got from Albuquerque to Tallahassee only toughened my skin. For all officials, our job entails making unpopular calls, and if that means sending young fans of The Undertaker or the Packers home with tears in their eyes while we refs rejoice in their sorrow, then so be it.

Death threats no longer scare me. I wasn't fazed when I got bundles of hate mail after I reffed that match between Hulk Hogan and Andre the Giant at Wrestlemania V or X or whatever the hell it was. Sure, my critics still insist I had my back turned while Andre hit Hulk in the head with a steel chair (which was an illegal foreign object) because I got distracted by Andre the Giant's evil manager, that I wrongly counted the Hulkster down for the three-count and awarded the championship belt to Andre the Giant. And to those naysayers, here's my rebuttal: My ruling stands. Get over it. Maybe Hulk did get knocked out by that illegal chair as the tape clearly shows and maybe he didn't, but I'm the ref and I didn't see it. So, go to fuck yourself, OK?

I didn't become a referee for the approval of my fellow man, or the trophy wives or the money. Heck, I gave up on trophy wives years ago. I earn just enough scratch to shack up with loose broads here and there while I'm on the road. And I really don't give a crap if my fellow man disapproves of that.

Not long after the story broke about the real refs going on strike, I was contacted by the NFL. Once a league official assured me that the gig—however temporary—would pay better than working this year's SummerSlam, I was happy to hop aboard the football express. My God, they even held the contract-signing inside an office in New York City! I had to put on a fancy suit and shake hands with big shots and put on deodorant and everything. It felt a lot more legit than pressing a contract against the back of Bam Bam Bigelow outside of The Golden Beaver in Knoxville and signing it with a stripper's eyeliner as I had done to join the WWF.

Lord knows my first few weeks jobbing as an NFL weren't perfect. On one occasion, I made a series of shadow-puppet gestures 'cause I forgot how to hand-signal a false-start penalty. Some football know-it-all on ESPN called me “substandard,” but at least the paychecks kept coming. In spite of the bickering from the media and the fans, I finally got the cash to buy that pinball machine I'd had my eye on for so long.

...

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