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The Age of A-Rod: A Rambling, Borderline Incomprehensible Look at Steroids, Postmodernism, and the Fonz

beyondthezero:

“The symbol of his age”: I can’t help but think that, of all the sentiments that get repeated about A-Rod, that’s the one that’s gonna stick. He wasn’t the 30 year-old slugger trying to jack a few more (McGwire), the all-century player envying the attention being showered on homer-happy lesser lights (Bonds), or the psychopathically competitive pitcher unwilling to accept natural decline (Clemens). He had every gift a ballplayer could want, he had all the money and attention a human being could want, he probably would have hit 800 homers and won 4 MVPs without ‘roids. You can psychoanalyze A-Rod forever — he needs to be loved, he felt the burden of his contract, whatever — but the fact is: he didn’t need to take steroids, but, like every baseball player at that time, he had every incentive to take them, so he did anyway. It was the thing to do.

And I think that’s part of why the whole “symbol of his age” thing is so apt: A-Rod’s steroid dilemma wasn’t some epic human drama like the other greats; it just seems so ordinary. And here’s the thing about that: despite all the feigned outrage sportswriters are spewing out, I really don’t care. A-Rod has always been the symbol of his age to me, and it’s precisely because I’m so indifferent to him.

Great as he is, A-Rod’s not quite as good hitter as Manny — but Manny B. Manny Ramirez, Esq. is too idiosyncratic to stand in for anything other than Manny. Despite playing a less valuable defensive position than A-Rod, Albert Pujols is the best ballplayer alive right now (did you realize that he’s never had an OPS+ below 150?), but he came into the league at the tail-end of the steroid age, and besides, he’s too boring for anyone outside the Midwest to care. (Good Lord, though: as a Cubs fan, few things terrify me as much as the sight of that coiled-cobra batting stance.) Barry Bonds is an anomaly, a bulging monstrosity, an outlier — the extreme of the age but not its representative symbol. But A-Rod? He’s at the center of everything: playing in the biggest market, signing the biggest contract, chasing the biggest record. He may not be the best player of this era, but he’s certainly the biggest, and so the one who lends it some definition.

Babe Ruth, with his big swagger and bigger stick, defined baseball in the 20s. Ted Williams, the consummate professional running the bases with his head down and refusing to tip his cap, defined baseball in the 40s. The transition from Hank Aaron — one of eight children, who picked cotton growing up and learned to play ball by hitting bottle caps with a stick — to Reggie Jackson — the fast-talking mega-star who shined the most under the brightest lights — defined baseball in the 70s. Alex Rodriguez, for better or for worse, defines baseball today. But what defines A-Rod, exactly?

He’s the center, but he’s an empty center. He sleeps with the blondes — Madonna, Kate Hudson, that one stripper — but it doesn’t seem illicit, or passionate, or anything else, really — just what the good-looking, multimillionaire, biggest baseball superstar of his era is supposed to do. He works as hard as anybody, but it’s tough to think of him as the gritty, Chase Utley type of superstar; it’s just another thing he does because he’s supposed to, because it’s expected of him. He apologizes when he gets caught with steroids, but it feels about as real as his orange tan — it’s what you’re supposed to do when you get caught doing something wrong. That’s A-Rod: always going along with what he’s supposed to do, always playing the role prescribed for him. I can see why the new nickname A-Fraud might stick, but it doesn’t quite seem to capture it: A-Rod plays the role, but there doesn’t seem to be anything else behind it; the role is all there is.

That’s why A-Rod is the symbol of his age to me. As is so often the case, baseball correlates to the nation at large, and the symbol of each baseball era seems to speak to the corresponding cultural era. The Sultan of Swat and the Jazz Age; Theodore Ballgame and the Greatest Generation; Hammerin’ Hank and the Civil Rights era; Mr. October and Disco — they all just fit so well. And A-Rod fits this one.

Frederic James says that postmodernism, the cultural logic of late or multinational capitalism, is characterized by the waning of affect, of deep feeling, and also by the effacement of the depth model more generally — erasing the distinction between inside and outside, essence and appearance, that which is latent and that which is manifest, authenticity and inauthenticity, signifier and signified. That’s A-Rod to me — not someone with a rich inside we’re unable to see, but someone who is nothing other than the flat figure before us. He’s infinitely mediated, a simulacrum, a copy for which no original ever existed. He’s the ultimate postmodern ballplayer. And I don’t feel anything about him.

But then I think about my favorite player, Alfonso Soriano. He’s a good player — career OPS+ of 116 — but he’s certainly not a Hall of Famer, and in fact, he’s not even the best position player on the Cubs (Aramis Ramirez and Geovany Soto are better). During his hot streaks, he’s like no Cubbie I’ve ever seen, carrying the team on his back, crushing just about everything — the first pitch of the game, an eigth-inning heater, a changeup at the shins, it doesn’t matter. But when he’s struggling, as he has the past two postseasons, he looks awful up there, with his crouched stance, overly wristy swing, and big-barreled bat flailing at breaking balls in the left-handed batter’s box. He’s one of the better left fielders in baseball (though when you’re being compared to the likes of Big Donkey Dunn and Pre-Maturely Middle-Aged Raul Ibanez, that’s not saying a ton), he guns guys down at the plate like nobody’s business, but he takes inexplicably bad routes and will miss routine flies at the worst possible time (twice in the 9th inning of close games on the road last year — once in St. Louis, once in Pittsburgh).

He likes the attention he gets. I think of Fonzie at the All-Star Game in San Fran two years ago, rocking some serious bling in his ears, taking JJ Putz oppo in the bottom of the ninth to start the NL’s abortive two-out rally. (That was the game, for those with short memories, when Tony LaRussa left Albert Pujols — Albert Pujols! — on the bench while Aaron “I look like a constipated porn star in the batter’s box” Rowand made the last out.) He needs the attention and the love, really, but unlike A-Rod, it’s not something you just say with him; it’s something you see. When he’s in the cold streaks and the Wrigley faithful are booing him, he can’t hide the hurt from his face. When he puts one out on Waveland, you see him flash those million-dollar teeth heading to first, and then he pops out of the dugout like no one else, barely able to wait for the curtain call. If you ever go to a game at Wrigley, watch him in left field: he’s always turning around, talking and signaling to the fans, loving the closeness, making you feel like you really connect to this athlete who drives a customized Hummer, wears diamond-studded earrings, and has a $136 million contract.

But isn’t that just right, after all? He makes you understand why they call Wrigley Field the Friendly Confines, you feel like this — a sunny summer afternoon, Old Style beer in hand, ivy growing on the bricks, hand-operated scoreboard above, vibrant community outside — is what baseball once was, but you also know that it’s a sort of pastiche, a commodified version of the 19th-century pastoral game, that the iconic stadium itself is a multimillion dollar investment commodified to the end. The bleacher bums are still there, but they now sit in the Bud Light Bleachers.

But I’ll take that. Alfonso Soriano, with his hot streaks and his cold streaks, his always reliable arm and his sometimes suspect glove, his genuine emotional connection with the fans and his superstar physical distance, is my favorite baseball player. Is A-Rod anyone’s favorite player? Does anyone genuinely love him? We can’t escape all the shit that comes with baseball in the postmodern age — it’s all spectacle, after all, and spectacle is commodification at its purest — but we can at least find ways to embrace it. Fonzie is full of contradictions. I don’t know if his affection for the fans is genuine. I don’t know if genuine even has any relevance. But unlike A-Rod, he at least makes you feel that there’s still a connection, that maybe reveling in this shit itsn’t so bad, after all. I can deal with that.

Text posted at 2:50 PM (2 years ago) | Permalink

01/27/2009

alexbalk:
Kathie: Of course I don’t think I’m a beauty queen or a supermodel or whatever like that. Daddy would always try and tell me that there was something about how special I was that the camera could never really capture but you spend your middle school and high school years hearing the names and the whispers and the stuff they don’t even bother to whisper, and, well, you figure it out pretty good. Gramma going on about how much I “sparkled on the inside” didn’t help much either, even though I know she meant her best.

I know what I look like. Or, at least, I get reminded enough. The day I graduated – first one in the family to do it – was the proudest moment of my life, so far. I remember how happy everyone was, how we had a big party in the backyard after, how my friends and cousins and I stayed out under the stars after the grown-ups had gone home or to bed and talked about our plans and dreams and for those couple hours it didn’t make a difference whether I was as pretty as Mandy Moore or whatnot… I was just Kathie, with her friends, on graduation. I look at those pictures now and that’s what I try to remember, not the other stuff.

Do I get sad sometimes? Sure. Who doesn’t? I’m lonely, just like I guess most of us are, even someone like my cousin Carly who’s pretty as all get out and always has a different guy wanting to take her somewhere.  Carly sometimes comes over crying in the middle of the night about why can’t she find someone special who she can share the special moments with, and even though I’m crying about the same thing inside, I keep it all in, because that’s what you do for someone you love, you listen. But I tell myself what I tell her, which is “Chin up, you’re so special, there’s someone out there bound to recognize it, and when that happens you’re going to be so happy it’s gonna be like all of this was the time you put it just so it’d be that much extra special for you for real.”

And you know what? When I tell it to Carly, it’s true, and when I tell it to myself, it’s true. Sure, maybe I don’t have the prettiest face the world has ever seen. Maybe my smile isn’t the brightest one going. You know what? I’m special. I can love someone like they’ve never been loved before, and if there’s someone out there who’s as lonely as me, who just wants those empty quiet moments when they feel like they’re the only person in the universe to be a thing of the past, and knows what love is, how it’s not always about perfect or pretty but it’s just about being good, or funny, or having a good heart, or being someone who will quietly hold hands and not say anything while the movie’s going on but grab real tight when the scary part happens, well, I know they’re going to find me and I’m going to find them. And if they see my pictures and they laugh, well, fine, it’s happened before. But hopefully somebody sees the me that’s in there. Because I have so much love to give. I hope that comes through.

alexbalk:

Kathie: Of course I don’t think I’m a beauty queen or a supermodel or whatever like that. Daddy would always try and tell me that there was something about how special I was that the camera could never really capture but you spend your middle school and high school years hearing the names and the whispers and the stuff they don’t even bother to whisper, and, well, you figure it out pretty good. Gramma going on about how much I “sparkled on the inside” didn’t help much either, even though I know she meant her best.

I know what I look like. Or, at least, I get reminded enough. The day I graduated – first one in the family to do it – was the proudest moment of my life, so far. I remember how happy everyone was, how we had a big party in the backyard after, how my friends and cousins and I stayed out under the stars after the grown-ups had gone home or to bed and talked about our plans and dreams and for those couple hours it didn’t make a difference whether I was as pretty as Mandy Moore or whatnot… I was just Kathie, with her friends, on graduation. I look at those pictures now and that’s what I try to remember, not the other stuff.

Do I get sad sometimes? Sure. Who doesn’t? I’m lonely, just like I guess most of us are, even someone like my cousin Carly who’s pretty as all get out and always has a different guy wanting to take her somewhere. Carly sometimes comes over crying in the middle of the night about why can’t she find someone special who she can share the special moments with, and even though I’m crying about the same thing inside, I keep it all in, because that’s what you do for someone you love, you listen. But I tell myself what I tell her, which is “Chin up, you’re so special, there’s someone out there bound to recognize it, and when that happens you’re going to be so happy it’s gonna be like all of this was the time you put it just so it’d be that much extra special for you for real.”

And you know what? When I tell it to Carly, it’s true, and when I tell it to myself, it’s true. Sure, maybe I don’t have the prettiest face the world has ever seen. Maybe my smile isn’t the brightest one going. You know what? I’m special. I can love someone like they’ve never been loved before, and if there’s someone out there who’s as lonely as me, who just wants those empty quiet moments when they feel like they’re the only person in the universe to be a thing of the past, and knows what love is, how it’s not always about perfect or pretty but it’s just about being good, or funny, or having a good heart, or being someone who will quietly hold hands and not say anything while the movie’s going on but grab real tight when the scary part happens, well, I know they’re going to find me and I’m going to find them. And if they see my pictures and they laugh, well, fine, it’s happened before. But hopefully somebody sees the me that’s in there. Because I have so much love to give. I hope that comes through.

Text posted at 6:11 PM (3 years ago) | Permalink

Five Alternate “Gran Torino” Lines Briefly Considered Before Clint Eastwood Went With “Get Off My Lawn”

marklisanti:

“The lawn. Off.”

“You’re standing on my lawn. See this rifle I’m pointing at you? I think you know what to do, punk.”

“Still on my lawn? Are we not getting the message here? You needed to be off the lawn three seconds ago. Now git.”

“OK, OK. Stand on the fucking lawn. See what I care.”

“I know this whole lawn standoff deal is going to seem really silly once we’re unlikely best friends and I’m teaching you about life. But for now, come on, get off it. Give me a moment of dignity, for Christ’s sake. I don’t ask for much.”

Text posted at 5:24 PM (3 years ago) | Permalink

01/04/2009

Oh for fuck’s sake!

cajunboy:

I think I’ve finally discovered the one thing above all that most annoys me to the point of wanting to punch random old ladies in the face, and it is this…

It’s late at night. 2 or 3 am-ish. You’re out and about somewhere in New York City. For whatever reason, maybe it’s because you want to save a few bucks by not taking a cab, or maybe you’ve had no luck hailing one, or maybe you’re just one of those people who likes to watch drunkards trying to piss on track-rats in a subterranean shithole, you make the decision that you’re going to take the subway home. So you’re standing on the tracks and you wait.

And you wait.

And you wait.

With each passing minute, you think, “well…maybe I’ll just go back up and take a cab.” But then you think about it and you know, you just fucking KNOW, that as soon as you scale the stairs and exit the turnstile to the street that you’ll hear the train you’ve been waiting for pulling into the station, and you know that this will only inflame your already raging temper even more, for the subway Gods will have then fucked you even harder in the soul, so you decide to stay right there on the platform and wait it out.

And you wait.

And you wait.

And then finally, a breakthrough.

The first thing you notice is the slight trace of a breeze coming through the tunnel that your train is supposed to be coming down through. Could it be? You’re tired, weary, beaten, maybe your equilibrium is a bit scattered due to last shot of whiskey you downed that you just knew was a bad idea at the time, but you took anyway because you didn’t want to look like a pussy for turning it down, and now you’re standing there wondering if your mind is playing tricks on you, so you walk over to the edge of the platform to take a gander down the tunnel to see if you see anything coming down the way, and finally, FINALLY, there it is, a light, a blessed light, the proverbial light at the end of the tunnel, getting bigger by the second, definitely coming your way, and finally you can feel your heart beginning to rest with the knowledge that soon you’ll be barreling through a soot-stained tunnel on your way home, and all is suddenly forgiven, as in a moment everything is so damn fantastically fine.

And then the first car of the train pulls into the station and you can see that it is red. It’s the garbage train, going from station to station to collect the rubbish of Gotham’s commuter peasantry.

Fuck that Goddamn garbage train!

Text posted at 1:56 PM (3 years ago) | Permalink

12/20/2008

Coming soon.

alexbalk:

With Darren Aronofsky’s The Wrestler being hailed as a triumphant comeback for actor Mickey Rourke, studios are gambling that moviegoers are hungry for more inspiring stories of redemption. Here’s a look at five films that are currently in production for release early next year:

The Seat Filler

Back in the ‘80s, Jimmy “Cushions” Carney (William Baldwin) was Hollywood’s most in-demand televised awards show audience replacement professional. Then the fame and power went to his head, resulting in a famous altercation where Jack Nicholson (in an unbilled cameo as himself) knocked out his teeth for refusing to relinquish Nicholson’s chair. Twenty years later, Jimmy’s a washed up alcoholic living in rented rooms and surviving on the occasional gig bulking out the dais at benefits for geriatric diseases. But when his former agent takes pity on him and lands him a spot at the Academy Awards—the scene of both his greatest triumph and lowest moment—Jimmy realizes that it’s his one last chance to make the industry take notice, and to regain the respect and affection of his estranged lesbian daughter (Winona Ryder).

Tagline: “In every man’s life there comes a time to take a stand.”

The Big Eater

During the Reagan years, Tumi “Tummy” Takari (Gedde Watanabe) was the brightest star in the glamorous—and dangerous—firmament of competitive eating. But a burst appendix and a decision to embrace vegetarianism turned him into a mere memory on the gut-busting scene. When the brash new champion discovers Tumi sweeping the floors at a vegan patisserie, he goads the old man into one last contest. Can Tumi show the world that he’s still hungry—and reunite with his estranged trangendered son (Stacy Ferguson), or will the effort prove fatal to his weakened system? It’s a heartbreaking tale of one man’s ultimate gut-check.

Tagline: “Twenty years later, he’s still hungry.”

The Don

In 1983, Frankie “Louie” Bartolini (Vincent Spano) was the youngest—and most powerful—crime boss in Mafia history. But after the Feds flipped his cousin (Eric Roberts) and convicted him of multiple racketeering charges, the good times ended. Released after twenty years in prison, he needs to find his way back into a world where sanitation contracts are awarded on the basis of meritorious bids, the drug trade is now controlled by unscrupulous doctors with itchy prescription fingers, and the only worthwhile crime is being committed by hedge fund managers. Can he return to the top without returning to jail? And will he be able to fix his relationship with Frankie “Louie” Jr. (Jason Biggs), the polyamorous son who wants nothing to do with him? Spano delivers the performance of a lifetime as a man caught between two worlds.

Tagline: “It’s always darkest before The Don.”

The Screenwriter

Arnie Gornfeld (Judd Hirsch) made his career as the film industry’s most successful scripter of redemption movies. But that was back in the ‘80s, when all it took was a climactic scene in a boxing ring or weepy “moment of realization” monologue for an audience to feel the pathos. These days, Arnie is reduced to punching up dialogue for sitcoms on The CW. But when an aspiring screenwriter with the modern touch (Wes Anderson, in an uncredited cameo) overdoses on Klonopin before he can complete his hotly-anticipated new screenplay, a nervous studio head (Adam West) gives Grunfeld one last shot at making the kind of movie that women from 30 to 55 will see more than once and tell their friends about. Can he pull it off? And will he be able to mend the broken ties with Gary (Keanu Reeves), his hermaphroditic firstborn who has been in a coma for five years after a snowmobile accident for which Arnie may be responsible? The climactic “final page” scene will be talked about for ages, and Reeves’ silent, immobile performance is sure to be rewarded with an Oscar.

Tagline: “You can’t rewrite your life. But sometimes you can change the ending.”

POTUS

John W. James (Kevin Costner) has a problem: even though he’s the most powerful man in the world, he’s considered an irrelevant loser. After involving his country in a disastrous war which was sold on false evidence and presiding over the most spectacular collapse of the economy in generations, his colleagues, the media, and the public at large cannot wait until he finishes his presidency and his charismatic young successor is sworn in. He’s even estranged his daughter to the point where she votes for the opposition. But this president isn’t going to go without a fight: a fight against Iran. Can he single-handedly convince an electorate which hates him to sign on for one last mission? Or will he take matters into his own hands? It’s a chilling vision of a failure’s final shot at redemption.

Tagline: “What’s the point of being POTUS if they don’t notice?”

Text posted at 1:48 PM (3 years ago) | Permalink

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

liana:

Blue Diamonds, The Long Winters

This song reminds me of being carless in L.A.   Which is kind of an art.  You pull together your most bemused face and darkest eyes, scamming rides and hoping to avoid, you know, getting dead.

If you fail, you must walk the length of Sunset.  Sharing cigarette butts with your grumpy friend.  Inventing reverse-tourist games to try and forget the stupid, hot sun.  When the light melts into a milky dusk, you can rest at the bottom of the hill.  Your pal’s got a little weed in her pocket, mixed up with denim lint.  Stumbling uphill with jeans in your lungs, you think you see Wonderland Murder ghosts.  You wonder if they’ve got a car.  Imagine what it’s like to be a crook full time.

(Plays: 90)

Audio posted at 4:45 PM (3 years ago) | Permalink

leitch:

Some guy on The Price Is Right nailed the showcase showdown right on the nose, at $23,743. Drew Carey is so sedate here, and the guy who won so cartoonishly “who, me?” about it that I’m just going to assume that this segment had already been filmed, and this was a reshoot. What happened in that initial segment?

I’m guessing that Drew Carey, after Terry’s bid was dead-on, called in his secret squad of game-show ethics enforcers, who proceeded to torture Terry into explaining how he cheated. But little did they know! It turns out that Terry grew up in the ghettos of East Hartford, overcoming Dickensian child kidnappers, a vicious drug cartel and his complicated relationship with the older brother who was once his protector. During his whirlwind life, he actually had completely random — but whimsical! — lessons on the price of a Winnebago, a whirlpool spa and the matching dinette set. It was because of his amazing life that he was able to nail down exactly $23,743.

Shame nobody told him there’s no phone call at the end of The Price Is Right. He never did get to call his lifelong paramour, and she was shot in the back of the head and left for dead in a Burbank gutter. He does get to keep the dinette set.

Video posted at 2:49 PM (3 years ago) | Permalink

Your Guide To Holiday Romance

johncarney:

It’s that time of year when even the most independent of lads can get a little desperate for more companionship than one can find in the bottom of a bottle of Jameson’s Irish Whiskey. If I thought it would make any difference, I’d tell you that you should avoid becoming involved with the lasses during this season. It’s just too dangerous, and will almost certainly lead to disaster. But it wouldn’t make a difference. These winter nights are too long and too cold to avoid the urge to spend them with someone shorter and warmer.

So, instead, I offer you this guide to holiday romance. One type of girl to avoid for each day from now until 2009.

1. Avoid any girl who has lots of overly-enthusiastic followers on tumblr. She’s an attention whore.

2. Avoid dating a girl just because she is your favorite bartender. Where are you going to drink when you want to forget her?

3. Avoid girl who tells you she she is on a cleanse. She hates herself.

4. Avoid Kirsten Dunst. She’s a walking time-bomb.

5. Avoid any girl who frequently blog about her sex life. You know how that one goes.

6. Avoid any girl who works for a Hearst magazine. She’s about to lose her job and you’ll have to pay for everything.

7. Avoid any girl who really likes girls who blog about their sex lives. She’s just too lazy to ruin your name right now. She’ll find a way later.

8. Avoid any girl who ever mentions The Box or Beatrice Inn. She has herpes and just wants your for your cocaine.

9. Avoid any beautiful girl who wears ugly glasses. She thinks she’s in a romantic comedy for teens.

10. Avoid any girl who follows you on twitter. She’s already stalking you.

11. Avoid any girl who smells too nice all the time. There’s something strange happening.

12. Avoid any girl who smokes heavier cigarettes than you. You’re already her bitch.

13. Avoid any girl who is a DJ. She’ll make you listen to her terrible music.

14. Avoid any girl who didn’t like “Once.” She’s dead inside.

15. Avoid girls whose clothes are all retro, period costumes. Just trust me on this.

16. Avoid ballerinas. She’s too flexible and you’ll just wind up hurting yourself.

17. Avoid any girl with more tattoos than you. She’ll never respect you.

18. Avoid any girl who is still angry because her last boyfriend cheated on her. You’ll cheat on her too.

19. Avoid any girl who lives within two blocks of you. It’s too soon for that kind of proximity.

20. Avoid any girl you meet in the basement of Lit. That’s also Kirstin Dunst and she’s high as a kite.

21. Avoid any girl with tattoos in Chinese. Unless, of course, she’s from China.

22. Avoid any girl who drives in NYC. She’s already proven she’s a nutcase.

23. Avoid any girl you meet in the bar where you and your friends are watching a game. She thinks she’s figured out guys. She hasn’t. She’ll fuck everything up all the while thinking she’s very clever about men.

24. Avoid any girl who wears jewelry given to her by her ex-boyfriend on your first date. She is still in love with him, and only him, and will still be wondering why no-one else ever gives her anything nice when she’s living with six cats and getting her meals on wheels.

25. Avoid any girl who tells you she hates her ex-boyfriend. She hates herself.

26. Avoid any girl with a bad haircut. She spends enormous amounts of time and money on her hair and if it is still fucked, she’s incurable.

27. Avoid any girl with poor hygiene or too much hair where too much hair doesn’t belong on women. If you ever attempt to help her out on this score, she’ll hate you for it. And then she’ll take all your advice and look great for the next guy she sleeps with.

28. Avoid any girl who is “microfamous.” Her name is Julia Allison and you’ll end up on Gawker.

29. Avoid any girl who has done speed dating, match.com or j-date. She’s got commitment issues, and since you’re an emotionally unavailable alcoholic, neither of you will ever call each other.

30. Avoid any girl on anti-psychotics. She’ll go off her meds one day and plant a corkscrew in your ribcage.

31. Avoid any girl who has dated a website founder. That’s also Julia Allison and you’ll end up on Gawker.

32. Avoid any girl who has rules or tests for men she dates. She should be on anti-psychotics.

33. Avoid any girl who doesn’t drink. Do I need to say anything else here?

34. Avoid any girl who is really, really into tanning. You’ll end up on Hot Girls and Douchebags.

35. Avoid any girl who won’t make out with you in a taxi. She lacks a properly functioning sexual instinct.

36. Avoid any girl whose best friend just got dumped by her boyfriend. Together they are a committee of manhaters and you are the next target for hate.

37. Avoid any girl who tells you she thinks she feels a spark between the two of you. Her mind is trapped in a Sweet Valley High novel.

38. Avoid any girl who talks about her father on her first date. She’ll demand you spend the night at her place but will only want to cuddle.

39. Avoid any girl who won’t kiss you if your breath smells like whiskey. She has oral-purity issues that are undesirable.

40. Avoid any girl who wants to monopolize your time on New Year’s Eve. The night is too wrought with emotions and memories. Spend time with as many different people as possible or else stay home and alternate heroin and absinthe until you pass out at twenty till midnight. Also, she’s probably on ritalin and won’t share it.

41. Avoid any girl who won’t wear a skirt in winter. The winter is too long as it is without having to do without legs. You’ll end up in the stairwell of a Christmas party making out with a girl in skirt.

42. Avoid any girl who cries when she’s drunk. Her self-pity will destroy you.

43. Avoid any girl who you think looks even hotter when she is miserable. You will destroy each other.

44. Avoid any girl who tries to come off as more emotionally unavailable and cavalier about relationships than you are. She’s secretly a tightly wound bundle of need.

45. Avoid any girl you’ve dated before. Pace Friedrich, if the first time is tragedy, the second time will just be worse.

46. Avoid any girl in a headband. She’s a slave to fashion and will try to make you use expensive hair-products.

47. Avoid any girl you meet at Cocaine Anonymous. She won’t do drugs with you.

48. Avoid any girl who you never found attractive before but suddenly looks hot. You’re drunk.

49. Avoid any girl who tells you she wasn’t interested in you when you first met but has now developed feelings for you. She’s just been dumped and is desperate.

50. Avoid any girl who buys you shoes for Christmas. You will return them for ones you like and she’ll hate you forever.

52. Avoid any girl you meet at an office party. She is your boss’s wife and wants to hurt him.

53. Avoid any girl who knows the names of all the bartenders in more than four bars. She’s out of your league.

54. Avoid any girl you meet near the Conde Nast building. She’s writing a book and you are going to be in it if you don’t watch out.

Bonus Round: Avoid any girl who tells you that you are emotionally unavailable. She’s got your number.

[Apologies to the obvious candidates. You know who you are.]

Text posted at 9:21 PM (3 years ago) | Permalink

Movin’ on up

cajunboy:

It all gets back to childhood, doesn’t it?

No matter where we are, no matter what we do, no matter what we become, whether we’re kings or queens or janitors or jerks, it all, one way or another, gets back to childhood. It’s the common thread. We can’t escape it, nor, frankly, should we try. It’s who we are.

Like when one day you’re walking down the street doing your thing that you always do, you’re on your way to work, you’re dropping off clothes at the cleaners, you’re buying a cheap frame in which to place a photograph of your genitals that you plan on secretly placing amongst your best friend’s collection of family photos the next time you’re over at their place, whatever, you’re living, you’re simply just living, and you’ve got your iPod on or you’re listening to the radio, whatever, and a song comes on that you remember that your mom used to love when you were a kid, she used to sing it at the top of her lungs whenever it came on when she was driving you to your grandma’s house, and all of a sudden, for a brief moment in time, no more than a few seconds, you’re transported to another place and time, you’re a kid again, buckled into the child safety seat on the rear passenger side of your Mom’s old Toyota Corolla, and part of you is so damn happy to be back there again if only for a few seconds within your mind, while another part of you is so fucking sad because when you really stop and think back on it, life will never be better than it was back then, life will never be as innocent, as unencumbered, as free of emotional baggage and responsibility, fucking responsibility, as it was back then.

Never.

So when I came home tonight at 4am and discovered that an obscure British character actor who rarely, if ever, crosses my mind, but who once played a supporting role on a cheesy American sitcom that I used to watch with my family as a kid had died, I felt compelled to search for old clips of the show on YouTube and VOILA!, there I was again in the living room of the little wood frame house I grew up in, me sprawled out on the sofa while my Mom and Dad sat in their matching recliners.

It all gets back to childhood.

All of this gets me to the larger point I’m making rather poorly which is that art, even cheesy 70s/80s sitcom art like The Jeffersons, has a profound ability to touch the soul. Then again, my emotional sway could have more to do with the three Jack and Cokes I’ve had since walking through the door than it does with the death of Mr. Bentley, but I doubt it. But I will concede that perhaps it’s a combination of both.

So yes, this gets me to an even larger point I was trying to make, the original purpose of this post in fact, which is that Paul Benedict, the actor who most famously portrayed Mr. Bentley on The Jeffersons, has died. May his soul find peace in the afterlife.

Text posted at 8:36 PM (3 years ago) | Permalink

stephenfalk:
Sometimes you decide to go to the gym because you had a really good day yesterday and might as well keep the momentum up after some great work news and even better political news and then as you’re driving through an intersection some woman runs a red light and you say, “Oh shit!” — you actually say those words, but what else is there to say, really… I mean, you could say, “Bitch, what are you doing running that red light?” I guess — but anyway, you slam on your brakes but then it’s actually happening — you plow into her with the time-slowing-down that brain scientists talk about and the bone-rattling metallic CRUNCH and your airbag goes off in your face and you’re spinning and then you stop but your horn won’t shut off and there is smoke everywhere and you somehow make it to the curb and part of you doesn’t understand what’s happening and what you’re supposed to be doing and why is your hood at that angle and what’s on fire? The girl is now getting out of her car and so do you but she doesn’t speak English so you just wait dumbly on the curb, shaking, but luckily a cop was standing on the corner and saw the whole thing and suddenly there are ambulances and everyone is asking you if you’re okay and you’re rubbing your arm and the paramedic points out that you have burns from the airbags and there is green stuff leaking everywhere — from the car, not you. Cops come and go and eventually the woman’s boyfriend or husband shows up and says he’s sorry to you as he leads her crying form away. You eventually get bored, oddly, and you stop shaking and you start to gather things like the new big pack of gum you just bought and cds still in the changer and as you stare at your twisted and wrecked car — the one you bought only because someone stole your last one — you realize, well, at least now you’re not going to have to go to the gym.

You also realize that this desire you’re feeling to find greater meaning in the completely random but violent collision between two very different people from two very different walks of life is exactly the impulse that lead Paul Haggis to write a shitty movie like Crash so it’s probably in everyone’s best interest if you just put down the laptop, smoke a bowl, and watch some TV.

stephenfalk:

Sometimes you decide to go to the gym because you had a really good day yesterday and might as well keep the momentum up after some great work news and even better political news and then as you’re driving through an intersection some woman runs a red light and you say, “Oh shit!” — you actually say those words, but what else is there to say, really… I mean, you could say, “Bitch, what are you doing running that red light?” I guess — but anyway, you slam on your brakes but then it’s actually happening — you plow into her with the time-slowing-down that brain scientists talk about and the bone-rattling metallic CRUNCH and your airbag goes off in your face and you’re spinning and then you stop but your horn won’t shut off and there is smoke everywhere and you somehow make it to the curb and part of you doesn’t understand what’s happening and what you’re supposed to be doing and why is your hood at that angle and what’s on fire? The girl is now getting out of her car and so do you but she doesn’t speak English so you just wait dumbly on the curb, shaking, but luckily a cop was standing on the corner and saw the whole thing and suddenly there are ambulances and everyone is asking you if you’re okay and you’re rubbing your arm and the paramedic points out that you have burns from the airbags and there is green stuff leaking everywhere — from the car, not you. Cops come and go and eventually the woman’s boyfriend or husband shows up and says he’s sorry to you as he leads her crying form away. You eventually get bored, oddly, and you stop shaking and you start to gather things like the new big pack of gum you just bought and cds still in the changer and as you stare at your twisted and wrecked car — the one you bought only because someone stole your last one — you realize, well, at least now you’re not going to have to go to the gym.

You also realize that this desire you’re feeling to find greater meaning in the completely random but violent collision between two very different people from two very different walks of life is exactly the impulse that lead Paul Haggis to write a shitty movie like Crash so it’s probably in everyone’s best interest if you just put down the laptop, smoke a bowl, and watch some TV.

Text posted at 8:27 PM (3 years ago) | Permalink

You need to hear this.

alexbalk:

Hey ladies: you know how your boyfriends are always bugging you with music? Insisting that you sit through a whole song even though there are about eight million other things you’d rather be doing? It’s because men have a hard time expressing themselves and they somehow think that if you listen to a particular song you’ll magically be able to understand the feelings that song engenders in them and, by extension, their whole range of emotions about life itself. They haven’t quite figured out that you don’t actually care how they feel about anything; you just want them to look good in front of your friends and give you babies.

Text posted at 8:22 PM (3 years ago) | Permalink

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