Oh, wait, wait….

Suddenly I understand the unreasoning hatred toward Texas I alluded to earlier in the week.

It seems that Warren Chisum, the chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, weighs in on the side of those who feel that the Earth revolving around the Sun is a crackpot idea forwarded by a bunch of Jewish conspirators. The memo Chisum forwarded to legislators originates from a Georgia rep, but Good God!

Next we’ll be outlawing penicillin, because infections are obviously due to an imbalance of bodily humors. That whole medicine thing was started by a buncha Jews in medieval times, tryin’ ta invent socialized medicine!

I’m back to hating people again. My life is such a rollercoaster.

That which does not kill me

Two murderous days at the Hated Job. Each night, I came home, ate dinner and went immediately to bed. Well, okay, Wednesday night I got up long enough to watch Lost. Today was the day off, so my body finally decided, cool, a chance to finally collapse, so here it is, late afternoon, and I am only just now setting foot outside my bed and/or bathroom.

Bleh.

I have absolutely no desire to find out what is going on in the outside world, so I am just going to sit quietly in my office for a while and hope my headache goes away. In the meantime, I’m sure anyone who wants to has already seen this, but if you haven’t… well, welcome to a fair approximation of my high school days:

The only thing better than this trailer is the ongoing discussion at YouTube about it. Good Lord, you’d think the topic was actually important.

The Curmudgeon Returns.

So via Boing Boing, I come across a story obviously dredged up by the recent Boston Mooninite scare; Last year,Paramount apparently attached devices to newspaper racks that played the Mission Impossible theme when the machine was opened, all to hype Mission Impossible III. If you’ve paid attention at all to the news the past month, you’ll see the similarities to the panic caused by a bunch of Lite-Brites advertising an upcoming (I think) Aqua Teen Hunger Force movie.

It’s time we fessed up. The terrorists won. And they did it with the complicit aid of our politicians and our media, neither able to comprehend the difference between a state of “alert readiness” and one of “abject fear”. Abject fear reaps more profit, in terms of money and other capital, I fear, and that is the road that has been travelled, and this is the result. Don’t know why I’m surprised or dismayed; Common Sense took a round in the head quite time ago, and got buried in someone’s back yard.

Time to drag out that on-again, off-again book I’ve been working on for ages. The new working title is A Nation of Fuckheads.

Panic (or something) Attack

AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH! Make them stop MAKE THEM STOP!!!

I actually said to a caller today, “It doesn’t matter how many syllables you break the word ‘please’ into, there are still no appointments available.”

I didn’t add “unless you’re in pain” because I feel giving ammo to the enemy is bad… and I really didn’t need to hear a poorly-enacted groan at that point.

Not back two weeks and already I need another vacation.

New Day Dawning #5,908,623

Nah, I got nothing pithy to say. Except I’ve always preferred it when the legislative and the executive branch were not owned by the same company.

I actually kind of missed voting against Tom DeLay. Wistuflly, I wish I’d had the chance to do it one last time.

Still don’t totally trust electronic voting. It wasn’t as bad as last election, though, when I was only voting on a few propositions, and still felt like I was somehow voting for George W. Bush for President.

Color me cynical. Cuz I am. Therefore, I’m a little surprised that a couple of guys I voted for actually won. I was just about ready to dip my toe into the lucrative waters of extortion, since my vote over the last seven years has been a speeding bullet into the heart of any political hopeful.

I don’t watch much TV, therefore I missed most of the negative campaigning, although I did come home daily to find several instances of the Two-Minute Hate downloaded to my answering machine. Did you know that Liberal Democrats are out to destroy the world? I had no idea, so I guess I’m not as cynical as I thought.

Also, I derive no special joy from pressing “Delete” whenever a message began “This is President George W. Bush…”. Which totally surprised me.

Whine Moan Bitch Complain

Whole lot of water under the bridge, amigos.

Yep, I’ve been gone for a while. In the physical world, at least. Two weeks ago, the antique air conditioning unit – which I believe was original equipment when this house was built in the late 70s – finally gave up the ghost. No problem, I thought – this is why I pay lots of money to a home warranty company.

Those of you familiar with my writing style will know that those last thirteen words are a prelude to disaster.

It took two days for First American Home Protection – no names will be changed, screw them – to send our information to a contractor. It was then two more days before the contractor could come. (That, at least, was understandable. This is a very busy time of year for the industry)

It then took the technician less than five minutes to reveal the unit had a hole in it, it had lost all coolant, would have to be replaced, and the claim would be denied because the unit was dirty. We had obviously been abusing the poor thing.

So I do the usual thing you hear about in these stories: do research, far too late. You see, I had been told I had to have a program like this in place in order to obtain a mortgage. Thereafter, it was somewhat comforting to keep it in place. I called on them perhaps once a year, a clogged drainage pipe here, a busted thermocouple there. Now, on my first major claim, my eyes got opened to the truth of the organization.

Doing a Google search on First American, the first hit I got was, of course, their website; practically every hit thereafter was page upon page of people complaining about them. Well, except for the second from the bottom, which was their financial statement for last year. They made a $64 million dollar profit.

It took me two weeks to find the money for a new unit – which was, incidentally, a THIRD of the price the First American contractor quoted – and we are finally back in our home. Now I just have to find the money for the cosmetic repairs the Home Owner’s Association is demanding before they put a lien on said house, closely followed by those damned property taxes which will not go away.

One of these days I am going to figure out WHY it was a good thing to buy a house. Until then, I will be contemplating a return to heavy drinking.

One of the things that the consequent divorceage from the Internet enforced was a return to some, you know, actual reading. I had downloaded some PDFs of Doc Savage novels from Black Mask Online (which has since gone missing – turns out those pulps were not in the public domain after all….). I devoured these things in the Bantam Paperback reprints of the 60s, and returning to this trough, discovered that they are merely entertaining and diverting garbage. In other words, pulp. Formulaic and highly addictive. The demise of Black Mask Online would not be near so irksome if these were available though some legitimate source.

On the other hand, a visit to a local used book store I had meant to visit forever (it’s literally right across the parking lot from the office I manage) netted the first volume of Brian Daley’s GammaLaw series. I’ve always enjoyed Daley, from his first Coramonde books: Doomfarers and Starfollowers. Excellent fantasy/science fiction war books with large casts of engaging characters. But just to add to the sorrows of this period, I was reacquainted with a fact I had managed to forget: Daley died ten years ago, and we won’t be getting anymore books from him.

So, to recap: First American Home Protection = Satan, Brian Daley dead, Doc Savage and The Shadow unavailable.

I freakin’ hate the 21st Century.

Splenetic 101

I wrote this last week – then, having gotten that load off my chest, I decided to let it just sit on my hard drive, where it would not crank up ennui a notch or two. Then I was awakened at 4:00 am this morning with the sure knowledge that what had been bugging me a bit lately was the onset of a combination of a sinus infection and an infected tooth. SO screw you all, you’re getting the whole spiteful thing:

Everybody knows that Mondays suck. They suck out loud. They suck more than the Queen of Suckland during the High Feast of Saint Suck, to put it in Harry Knowles terms. Yet I suppose it took working full-time in an office once more to really prove to me how much that is true – to give a quantitative overview, to put it in academic terms.

But what I had somehow managed to forget – since, let’s face it, the basic Mondays Suck paradigm is now written into our genetic code, like don’t pick up snakes or jumping off cliffs is not a good idea– what I had managed to forget was that each and every one has its own character – each one manages to suck in a fiercely individual way, and like the wily opponent it is, each Monday seeks to outflank me and take me by surprise.

Working in an office with an off-kilter schedule has not helped, either. We are generally closed on Wednesdays, with the intriguing effect that Tuesday becomes an odd mixture of Monday, Part Two and False Friday. And Thursday becomes Second Monday. One day a month we work a half-Wednesday and a half-Saturday, creating strange, hellish vistas in which Monday has somehow become extended, because these truncated weeklets themselves have become longer. Case in point: next week, when I will be sitting in that office for five days in a row. Anywhere, this is the norm; here, it is horrible, seemingly unending drudgery.

You might think I hate this job. I suppose you are right, though on balance, there are certainly jobs I have hated more. It has enabled me to hone my skills as a clockwatcher. And as far as increasing my endurance for misery goes, well, no one has yet offered me an hourly wage for holding my hand over an open flame, but this comes close. At best, it forces me to be open and social; I had a nasty little flirtation with agoraphobia last year, because my last gig allowed me to become so insular.

As I sit here – deliberately ignoring some tedium disguised as paperwork – well, okay, a stack of bills to be triaged and sent out, so that I may become the most Beloved Man in America. Give it two days for delivery, then let the angry phone calls begin. I feel fine letting two-thirds of that stack fester over the weekend, since already, at 4:15 on a Friday afternoon, it has been a week to inspire shooting rampages. And keep in mind, I got my Wednesday off.

Not helping things – feel free to click away if this is becoming tedious – I have once more received a phone call from the dinner theater I quit last summer – almost a year ago – omigawd, we need an actor tomorrow night, omigawd you’re the only one who can save us aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

I hate these shows, I hate that particular medium (“interactive murder mystery” – pfagh!), I hate this. Three good reasons why I quit. Yet somehow these crises continue to develop, and I continue to get the Help Me Obi Wan entreaties, calling me away when I have company from out of town, or on my wife’s birthday, for God’s sake (four good reasons). The only reason I continue to come to these people’s rescue – besides being cursed with conscience – is they’ve started throwing a ridiculous amount of money at me for pulling their fat out of the fire.
But this has not raised my spirits one bit. In fact, it dropped my spirits in the dirt and proceeded to grind them underfoot. Oh, good. Two jobs I hate.

My son’s eighth birthday is this weekend (so of course I got the call. I should schedule open-heart surgery, just to see if I get the call). I was supposed to go straight from the office to his birthday party – well, his party with his schoolmates – so naturally the emergency calls have come hard and fast. There wouldn’t have been any cake or pizza left by the time I got there, anyway.

Oooh, I’m a bitter little pill. Time to go over to Cute Overload and zen out.

Back to the present. If there is one thing the throbbing swollen mass of my face has allowed me to do, it is to bypass my usual censors and actually glare at people who have insisted on parading their idiocy before my little window today.

One gleam of positiveness, before I take more antibiotics and painkillers: I have already told you of the wonder that is Achewood and The Great Outdoor Fight, whose motto is “Three Days, Three Acres, Three Thousand Men”. Now, I have often said that one of the few things that makes life worth living is Synchronicity, so how cool is it that my friend Chris Holland is pimping a movie called The Outdoorsmen, whose slogan is “10 Men, 15 Events, 32 Cases of Beer”. Coincidence… or hellish design? You can find out easily, since the first six minutes of the movie are available online. I also insist you watch “Big Fat Corporate Hollywood” because it made me laugh.

Tales from the Front Office

I have had worse jobs. The food industry, for example, can bite me. But managing a dentist’s office, I find, reminds me of the time during my spangled career when I managed the box office at a small regional theater. There is no ticket more attractive than the ticket you cannot buy, and people get very demanding when they cannot buy it. Much the same in the receptionist trade: as the year’s end approaches, and people must spend their cafeteria dollars, everybody’s got to see the dentist. I try to arrange them as best I can, with what small knowledge of procedures and the time they take I have gleaned. Mistakes are made. I’m still making them. Probably always will, as the laws of the universe dictate that everything shall happen as once, and the floor of my work area is pockmarked with the signs of the balls I have dropped.

Weighing heavily on my mind are the people in pain I cannot accomodate quickly; the best I can do is take their number and call them if a cancellation occurs before the time I was able to give them. I think I manage to get in about 75% of those people. The time spent playing Tetris in my youth has come in handy.

Hardly any wonder that after dragging home after nine hours in the trench I eat, wash dishes and go online to kill things. The catharsis is more than just nice, it has become necessary.

In the spirit of the holidays… and the office radio station has started playing Christmas music, three freakin’ days before Thanksgiving… let me give you some helpful hints for dealing with receptionists, and making the day far more pleasant for both of you.

It is considered bad form to look into the office and exclaim, “A man???!!! How the hell did you get stuck with this???!!!”

Similarly, it is likely not a good idea to tell the new guy what big shoes he has to fill, especially if the old receptionist told him that every five minutes during the day and a half of training he got.

The proper response to “The earliest we can get you in is Tuesday the second at 10AM” is not, “What do you have that’s earlier.”

If you ask, “What have you got this afternoon?” expect the answer to be “A lot of people who made their appointments long ago” or maniacal laughter.

If you call and launch into a long spiel about how much pain your child is in, and no other dentist will see him, and the receptionist moves the afternoon’s appointments and convinces the dentist and the assistant to stay late so they can attend to the wee tot after hours, “That’s no good, what have you got tomorrow” is not a good answer.

No, your insurance does not pay 100%. Either you are one of the lucky few who actually does have uber-insurance, or the dentist has been eating the difference between what he got paid and what was actually owed.

Or, as in my case, the current receptionist’s predecessor just threw away certain peoples’ bills. For years.

Similarly, when you are disagreeing about your bill, it is not a good idea to shout at the current receptionist that his predecessor always took care of it. Doing so will result in your opinion of the predecessor being severely challenged.

Rest assured that all remarks about how you’re glad the old receptionist is gone provide golden shafts of sunlight on a storm-wracked day.

Do not abuse the answering machine that provides you with the dentist’s home phone and cell phone number, particularly not to bully your way into a 7:30AM appointment when you feel the receptionist hasn’t given you a timely enough appointment, possibly by jettisoning some children or a needy senior citizen. Especially do not do this for a strictly cosmetic procedure. Or if you do, don’t be smug about it. The receptionist has a remarkably long memory. There are still people in third grade who are going to pay.

I’m just sayin’.

Yet Another Open Letter to the Coca-Cola Company

Dear Sirs,

Regarding your announcement that you will remove Vanilla Diet Coke from the market at the end of this year:

You bastards.

Sincerely,

Freeman Williams, Esq.

The Media Blender

I’ve not had much time to watch TV the last few weeks, and I’ll wager you can tell how much that saddens me. Especially when I was walking through a living room last weekend and saw the previews for two of the last gasps of the reality TV craze, which were so completely odious my mind wiped them clean from memory, leaving only a mental Post-It Note: not watching TV is a good thing, it seems.

This means that, by and large, I missed the Michael Jackson trial, or, more appropriately, the media coverage of the Michael Jackson trial, except for those pithy, essential parts published in the inverted pyramid of the newspaper stories. That, in and of itself, is a good thing for my quality of life issues. But the aftermath has caused two things to flicker across my screen, seemingly unconnected, yet not:

First, there is this editorial from the Houston Chronicle, about supposed news anchors injecting their personal opinions about the then-impending verdict into the media. To be sure, Court TV’s Nancy Grace is a commentator, not an anchor, but the other perp, Fox News’ (oh what a surprise) Shepard Smith, has no such distinction on his side. The not-so-obvious flip side of this coin is an Associated Press story detailing a poll which shows the sampled Americans consider Bill O’Reilly and Rush Limbaugh to be journalists, but not Bob Woodward.

Good God, people get the popular media they deserve, don’t they?