Monday, September 19, 2011

A Eulogy for Borders

You don’t usually think of a eulogy being spoken for a bookstore. Let alone a massive retailing enterprise. The purpose of a eulogy is to say a few words about someone before they die. To honor their memory. To celebrate the prominent moments of their life, so their memory is immortal.


Today I would like to say a few words about my good friend borders, not to commemorate death – but to commemorate life. Borders wasn’t just a friend, but it was a family for me. Amazon may offer cheaper merchandise, but they don’t have restrooms you can use if you’re having an emergency.


When I was a child, Borders represented my indoctrination into the world of books. It offered a brightly colored, tactile, and tangible jungle for me to explore. I remember roaming around the towering shelves with a sense of wonder – hoping nothing would fall on me. The newest in 90’s hits played over the speakers: the Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Alanis Morisette, the Smashing Pumpkins. The smell of coffee and chocolate banana muffins wafted into my nostrils. As I leafed through the pages of each book, a hundred different fantasies entered me through the touch of my fingers tips.


As a young adult I began my employment at Borders. Like any good book, Borders had its share of characters, and I have to wonder to myself – where will these characters make their home now?


When I signed up for the job, I was required to take an online personality test – which I failed twice – you can only imagine the effect on my self-esteem. Luckily, my friend M worked in the café, and as the old cliché goes, it’s not what you know, but who you know that counts.


M is my magical Gaysian friend who towers above me at a height of almost 6’3. I, on the other hand, am a vertically challenged leprechaun barely tall enough to ride the tea cups at Disney world.


Every day M drank an iced 6 shot latte with a double pump of caramel. After which he concocted drinks that were both strange and surprisingly delicious. He gave me a flow chart of how to keep the café clean that read something like: Does it sparkle? If not, make it sparkle.


Borders was a haven for groups of people who weren’t into things like bars, clubs, or friends. In the back right corner we had our Manga section and the fox eared kids who lived there. One of the gentlemen who resided in the manga section was an aspiring priest in his late twenties. Every day he wore goggles, sweatpants, and drank an indulgence of soda water, almond, hazelnut, and coconut syrup. He described it as a carbonated Almond Joy.


Yet even more eccentric was the Professor. His formula for a tasty snack was a chocolate chip brownie microwaved at exactly 49 seconds. It didn’t matter what I was doing, even if I was cleaning the juice out of the garbage cans he would talk to me about his computer program that could predict the patterns of the housing market.


In addition to these lovable eccentrics, there were other story book characters who must’ve escaped from the pages of the books themselves: Probably to use the restroom, or catch a nap on the sofa.


A gnome slept in the gardening section, although some co-workers argued that he was “Father Time”. More practical was the theory that he was a hobo.
However, in this story I am going to insist that he was a gnome. But anyhow, everyday without fail, the gnome would come to the café to check the time and then ask for “a bloody cup of hot water.” What he used the hot cup of water for; I’m not sure, since he didn’t appear to have any tea on him.


One day, he gave me something he called his Business Card. It was the name of a Vision Improvement Center with directions to a pawn shop scribbled on top. He said if I wanted to make money, I should meet him on Sundays, when he’s there. Perhaps he was going to show me his Gardening tools.


Santa Claus, a heavy but jolly man with white stubble, came almost nightly and always left a generous tip of 5 dollars. Then he would complain about Obama, and the failure of the Borders Business model – which he ended up being right about. Perhaps this financial wisdom is what has been keeping Santa in business all these centuries.


The people who weren’t regulars of Borders have consoled grieving customers by saying, “at least you can go to Barnes and Nobles.”- Barnes and Nobles, a store with such a sterile atmosphere that you could safely get heart surgery on a shelf.


Borders was a store so friendly that we would let people sit in our cafe all day, use the internet, and read books – all without buying a single thing. It was our ludicrously generous policies that ultimately put us out of business: 40% off coupons on everything and a free coffee for every five purchased.


If anyone let Borders fail, it was not the hardworking employees at the stores – it was the employees at a corporate level. They had us try to sell “glitter balls” with each purchase, for five bucks a pop. Is it so hard to imagine why Borders failed when our best plan was “glitter balls?”


Yes, with death there is creation. We are entering an era reminiscent of the Printing Press boom of the 17th century. Scribes who embellished royal scrolls with gold leaf were replaced by legions of ink blocks. Ultimately the Printing Press was a good thing, it unlocked a world of literature for a class of people who never even held a book.


Today, e-readers are enabling more authors than ever before to publish their work. Stories are cheaper and thus more people around the world are reading.


Yet with the death of Borders, comes the death of living breathing characters who exited the two dimensional pages of a book to come to life. Gone is the tactile interaction with lore. And even more dead is the social meeting ground for screaming twilight fans, dressed up wizards standing in line for hours in anticipation for the midnight release of the next Harry Potter Book, book clubs, and intellectuals discussing the world’s ills over a slice of lemon bread and a cup of coffee.


As I give this eulogy I struggle to imagine where the Professor, the Garden gnome, the Manga Priest, Republican Santa Claus, Anime Geeks, Vampires, and Wizards will all live.


On the day that Borders died, the world became that much more two dimensional.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

I swear to god, these are the lyrics I hear when I listen to Manfred Mann's "Blinded By the Light"

Blinded by the light

Wrapped up like a douche

And then roll her in the night (X4)



Nothing drools

Like a piggy in the summer

With a teenage stripper man

And the dogs screw the mulch

And at the end of this waltz

There's whale doo on your hand



With a boner on your shoulder

Feeling like a pwner

Trippen on a marry go round



While its very pleasin

To be Sneasing and Weasing

Goliath ...be crushed to the ground



*Guitar Solo*



Goliath got strapped to the ground!

She was blinded by the light

Wrapped up like a douche and then roll her in the night



Some silicon sister

With a managable blister

Told me I got what it takes

She said I'll turn you on sunny

To something strong

And a song

With a frogger break



And go-cart Mozart

Was checkin the weather chart

Seeing if it was safe outside



And Ernie and Bert

Came in his curly whirly

To see if I needed a ride



She was blinded by the light

Wrapped up like a douche

And then roll her in the night



Blinded by the light

She got down But she never got stiches

She's gonna make it through the night

She's gonna make it.....Through the night



*Dissonant trippy instrumental that takes forever, during this time feel free to make a sandwich*



Mama's Doberman

told me

Not to look into the eyes

Of the son



But Mama!

That's where the fun is!



*The keyboardest did not know what a solo was, so he played the song 'chopsticks' instead...you know, that song that everyone learns the first week of playing piano.*



Some gemstone baritone

Randy Blythe from Rolling Stone

Preacher from the East

Said Steve from the Technodrome

Hit it in its funny bone

And that's what they expected least



And some new old chaperone

Standing in the corner

Watching the young girls dance

Learned French on Rosetta Stone

Messin with his birth stone

And Miley needed more yogurtttt!!!



*Bridge*



And they'll all live to regret it!

She was blinded by the light

Wrapped up like a douche

And then roll her in the night

Blinded by the light

Wrapped up like a douche

And then roll her in the night



My mom's trucks run over Indie kids in the summer

With a teenage stripper man

And then with the ducks with the Marxists

Split the atom with Pharisees

Praying to his hand



With a bird on his soldier

Feeling kinda older

Tripped over a mary go round

With his veneral diseases

With coughing and wheezing

They all crashed to the ground



A scott with a sling shot

Blinded with a temper-pedic shock

Threw his lover in the sand

The sling shot forgot me not

The panties were in his hand

And the duck hunt began



Some silicone sister

With the Manager from twisted sister

Told me I needed to sun bathe



She said I'm turnin 21

So I need to see what's wrong



She got down

But she never got stitches



She's gonna make it

Through the night

Monday, July 18, 2011

Rewrite of AC/DC's TNT as D&D

oi oi oi oi oi oi oi oi oi oi oi oi oi oi oi

See me ride out on my dragon
On your crystal ball screen
Out for all GP I can get
If you know what I mean
Women run from the left of me
And they run from the right
Ain't got no girl friend
got no life
But I'll roll that die

(Chorus)
Cos I'm
D&D
I'm a mage of mite
D&D
Aligned with the night
D&D
My staff's a power load
D&D
Watch it explode

I'm nerdy, dirty and mighty unclean
An unshaven man
HP of 110
Understand
So lock up the cheetos
And lock up the Dew
Lock up your dungeon
And roll for your life
The mage is back in town
So don't you mess around

(Chorus)

(Guitar Solo)

D&D. oi oi oi
D&D. oi oi oi
D&D. oi oi oi
D&D. oi oi oi

D&D.
I'm a mage of might (oi oi oi)
D&D
And I'll win the fight (oi oi oi)
D&D
My staff's a power-load (oi oi oi)
D&D
Watch it explode

Monday, June 28, 2010

Explosions, Seductresses, Epic Battles, Pimps, and Miracles brought to you by the Best Selling book of all time – the Bible


File from http://icanhascheezburger.files.wordpress.com/2008/02/funny-pictures-ceiling-cat-creates-man.jpg

Our best-selling author, God, blows his competition out of the water (literally) with plot twist after plot twist – making M Night Shyamalan look like an amateur. Read in at least 33% of the humanized world, and on the best seller list for a thousand years, the bible is without a doubt, the best book ever (James Patterson eat your heart out).

Like any great tale God begins with a “bang!” Bam! The Earth is made, and God makes it awesome. Here, a bit of pretentious flair seeps through his writing, God references himself in the third person a lot, (but when you’re book is on the best sellers’ list for a thousand years, you are allowed to do that.)

When the Earth is made, all seems well at first, but this is only the calm before the storm. God sets the scene in paradise, where our protagonists, Adam and Eve, live eternally young. But of course the complacent bliss of Eden only serves as a contrast to man’s tragic fall. Through a sequence of snake filled seduction, man goes from romping naked through flower fields to toiling amongst thistles and thorns (Genesis 3:18).

After Adam and Eve fall lower in self respect than tabloid rejects, God introduces more characters into the plot than a Tolstoy novel. In Genesis, he literally lists the descendents of every man who ever walked the Earth. At times this constant character introduction can become tedious, but that’s okay, because most readers will suffer through these parts until they get to the bits about Solomon’s 300 concubines (Kings 11:1).

Among some of the more interesting characters we have the seductress Esther, who uses her sex appeal to prevent a Babylonian king from committing a genocide against the Jews. Our Babylonian King is none other than the infamous Xerses - you may know him from the cameo in Frank Miller’s 300. It is a classic tale of drama, intrigue, romance, and murder. Not only does Xerses not kill the Jews at the end of this tale, but he has the man who suggested the idea of genocide impaled on a seven foot spike in the palace garden (Esther 7:1).

The most intriguing element of God’s writing style though, is his sense of humor. A prime example is found in 2 Kings 2: 23. In this text God introduces the miracle maker Elijah (not to be confused with everyone’s favorite Hobbit Hottie Elijah Wood). When a mob of forty-two young boys gather around Elijah and start chanting “go away baldy,” Elijah summons two bears from the woods to maul this motley crew of twerps. The vengeance of our bestselling author is as swift as it is sweet, and as humorous as it is creative. I know that I was one of the adoring fans cheering Elijah and his furry friends on as they kicked copious amounts of pre-pubescent ass.

An Ode to Robert Pattinson

Photobucket

I hate your face Robert Pattinson

Paler than the ashes of nuclear winter
Covering the bodies of fallen children in the snow

More ghastly than a graveyard specter
Collecting the hearts of tormented tweens

Glowing incessant like a radioactive frog
bloated and croaking stalker poetry

Your eyes are red and dead
Like a dimming bulb in a Methlab

With your drunken glance
You drink my innocence
With your eyes
and with every gulp
I die a little
Inside

Customer Service



Cafe Barista: Hi, welcome to Seattle's Best, how may I help you.

Customer: *grunts in response*

Cafe Barista: I'm sorry, sir, what did you say?

Customer: Doubletalllatenonfatexrahotnofoam-howmuchisit?

Cafe Barista: I'm sorry, can you please say that one more time.

Customer: Maybe you should take that walkie talkie out of your ear so that you could hear me better. God. What do you need it for anyways?

Cafe Barista: To communicate with the rest of the people in the store. Can you please repeat your order.

Customer: God! Can't you see I'm in a hurry!

Cafe Barista: I'm sorry, it's ten in the morning on a Saturday, where do you have to be? Are you the fucking president? CEO of Fortunte 500? Why don't you take a deep breath, calm down, and take the extra 5 seconds to explain your order so that you end up getting what you paid for.

Customer: (Indignant) Excuse me?!

Cafe Barista: What? Do you have hearing problems now?

Customer: I can't believe this! I've never had such bad customer service in my life! How dare you! I'm the customer! I demand to talk to the manager!

Cafe Barista: (Turns around. Turns back around.) Hi

Customer: Is this some kind of joke?

Cafe Barista: Would you like to file a customer complaint?

Customer: Umm...yes...I would like to report that I'm unhappy with my customer service experience today and that I will never shop here again.

Cafe Barista: Alright. I'll file that complaint on this form right now and file it away in file 13.

Customer: What's file 13?

Cafe Barista: The trash.

Customer: (starts shouting) You mother fucker! You're fucked now! My brother in-law is a lawyer and I'm going to sue you, and your boss's boss, and their boss's boss, and all your employees until you're all unemployed, homeless, and bleeding money out of your ear drums. You'll regret this!

Cafe Barista: Sir, if you don't calm down I'm going to call security.

Customer: And then I'll sue you to kingdom come! You'll see. You'll be on the streets, livin' in a bus with a crack addict and begging for my reconciliation money you piece of shit!

Cafe Barista: Alright, I warned you. SECURITY!

(Security comes out and starts beating "customer" with billy clubs and cafe stools. We hear "customer" screaming in agony and begging for mercy)

Cafe Barista: I think you may need to bring out the tasers. This one's a doozy.

Head Security Officer: Good call, bring out the tasers boys.

(Security stats to taze "Customer" and we hear more agonized screaming)

Cafe Barista: Would you boys like something to drink?

Head Security Officer: Oh, I don't know, my doctor said I should try to lay low on the caffeine. It brings up my blood pressure.

("Customer" is still screaming in the background as the rest of the security continues with the beatings)

Cafe Barista: Ah. I understand. How about some tea?

Head Security Officer: Hmm...that sounds good. Got any green tea?

Customer: FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, SOMEONE HELP ME!

Cafe Barista: Sure do. And how about a bagel? Cream cheese?

Head Security Officer: Sure. Sounds good. I could use some carbs. Customer "service" sure is draining.

Cafe Barista: You can say that again.

Interview With a Vampire



Stephanie Myer’s release of the popular series “Twilight” has spawned an invasion of vampires of all sizes and shapes. I was working as a barista at a bookstore café when I encountered my first vampire. My back was turned to the counter and I was grinding coffee beans. Since there were no customers in the café lobby, I heard only the high pitched whir of the industrial grinder.

Suddenly, from behind me there was a hissing noise. I abruptly turned around, but saw nothing. Was one of our machines malfunctioning? A gas leak perhaps? The hissing happens again. I lower my gaze by about two feet to behold a cute, but fearsome creature. He’s three feet tall, around 7-8 years of age, and cloaked in a cape.

“Boo! I’m a vampire! I want to get some blood!”

I politely inform him that the café does not supply blood, but that we do make hot chocolate. I feared that my unsatisfied customer might suck my blood, but fortunately, this vertically challenged beast had a parental unit that provide for his beverage needs.

While the mom-unit was purchasing his drink, the vampire reassures me, “Don’t worry, I drink cows blood, not human blood. I’m a vegetarian vampire.”

His mom mutters “Shut up, Jay Jay.”

The vampire continues, "I do like to bite though.”

"HUSH!" his mom commands.

I begin to fear that there is there a head-vampire out there biting the youth in order to build up massive blood-sucking army.

Jay Jay’s mom – or I should say the vampire's mom - rolls her eyes and tells me that they just watched "Twilight" together.

Ah hah, so Stephanie Myer’s is the head vampire.