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Friday, March 04, 2005

A Life on the Road (pt. 1)

So, for whatever reason (shame), I haven't really come out and said (admitted) what it is I do for a living. I am, for lack of a better job, a courier. Yes, tragic, I know. Perhaps a step above Pizza Hut delivery boy, but mostly it is a lateral move. So be it. I am as God made me. Anyway, I figured that I'd illustrate just what it is I do by taking you on a step-by-step account of what I did today, which was, by and large, a typical day (unlike yesterday, which found me running back and forth inside and outside Santa Anita race track, trying to figure out where the fuck I left my car, followed immediately by a quick jaunt over to the Jet Propulsion Lab). Okay, here goes:

7:00 AM - Wake up, shave, shower, try to force myself to shit.

8:00 - Via walky-talky (or two-way telepager, or whatever it is the kids call them), I contact the office (or, as we call it, "base") and tell the dispatcher I'm ready to go. He tells me to contact him when I've reached Beverly Hills.

8:20 - I park on a residential block of El Camino, press the button on the side of the walky-talky, wait for the specific beep that let's me know I'm getting through, announce myself with a quick, "747 to base" (I am driver 747). "Go ahead, 747," replies Mike, the head dispatcher. "Just checking in from Beverly Hills," I tell him. "Oh," I add, "is it too late to give you cash and have you tear up that check I gave you the other day?" (I'd borrowed $30 on Monday so I could fill my tank, and in exchange had given them a post-dated check, which would have bounced had they tried to depositi it). He tells me he'll see if the check is still around, and to stand by, which means sit there for 10-15 minutes, then call again to remind him I exist. I say, "10-4," turn off the engine, and sit back and listen to Howard Stern try to get some British chick to show him her tits.

8:35 - Just as I'm about to call base, the walky-talky beeps and a message appears telling me that I have a message (besides the one telling me I have a message). The message instructs me to go to a law firm that serendipitously happens to be just two blocks from where I'm parked. I start the car and go half a block before the walkty-talky beeps and a voice says, "747." I pull over again. "Yeah, 747 here," I say into the thing. "Hey, cancel that order and head up to the office and I'll give you that check back." "10-4," I say, then pull back out into the street and continue driving north up El Camino. Another half black, and a thought crosses my mind. I try to page the office, but Dispatcher 1 is not available. I drive the next block and a half and park next to the building where I was originally supposed to make the pick-up. I try the office again, and this time get through. I tell the dispatcher I'm right at 120 S. El Camino if he still wants me to make the pick-up. He tells me to go ahead, so I do. It is a small, fairly old, fairly typical Beverly Hills office building (there are two kinds of office buildings in Beverly Hills--the high-profile type, and the type that looks like something from a '40s detective movie. This one is the latter). I find my quarry in the form of a manilla envelope taped to an office door, grab it, go back down to my car, and drive out to the office, on a shabby stretch of Santa Monica Boulevard in Westwood.

9:00 - I park in front of the broken meter in front of the base and go up to the office. Mike does not have change, so I run back down to the liquor store on the corner and break a twenty, run back up and exchange a ten and a twenty for my check, which I tear up and throw in the trash can. I also pick up the paycheck that had, I learned the day before, been sitting around for the better part of two weeks--my first day on the job was the last day of the pay period, so it was only for one day of work, and I was under the impression it would just be included in my next check. The way the system works is that drivers get two checks each payday, as 59% of our income is paid as a reimbursement, and is thus tax-free. This has something to do with our being independent contractors, but it's prety much Greek to me. Whatever the case, I was pleasantly surprised to see that I made about $75 for my first day, which is better than I thought, considering I only made six deliveries and spent much of the day confused. Anway, with that shit taken care of, the dispatcher tells me to drop off the package I'd picked up, so I do.

9:15 - A friendly parking attendent lets me park for free in the underground lot at the Beverly Hills Superior Courthouse "this one time," because I did what I always do and looked bewildered and just about ready to cry when he told me that there was no free parking for deliveries. I go upstairs and go through the typical courthouse rigamarole of emptying my pockets and taking off my belt for the x-ray machine, go through the metal detector, put my belt back on, and head upstairs to one of the courtrooms, which is locked. Folowing the instructions the were paged to me, I go up to the clerk area. There is a long wait while the woman in front of me fills out approximately five hundred million pages worth of documents. At onwe of the other counters, a young black man is literaly pleading his case to one of the clerks, talking about how some traffic ticket he got was an injustice. From what I could tell, he wasted a lot of time and energy in the process. While this is happening, a crazy old white woman comes in and stands behind me and says something indecipherable in a chatty, conversational way to someone who, as far as I could tell, was not there. Meanwhile, another young black man goes up to the counter next to the one where the guy is arguing his traffic ticket. The two apparently know each other, as the newcomer shouts over to him, "Hey, good to see you, Baby Face." At which the old woman says in a loud, sincere voice (and I should add that this is a small room), "Did you say that to me?" The guy who said it stares at her with the must baffled look I've ever seen, then breaks out laughing. I continue to stand and wait. Eventually, it's my turn. I hand over the envelope, the clerk stamps my sheet, and I leave.

10:00 - I've parked on the street a couple blocks from the courthouse. I recieved a page telling me to make a pick-up over at the Lifetime Network (I've been there many times these past couple weeks, and I stopped making jokes after the first time, when I asked the young, male receptionist if Meredith Baxter-Birney comes in a lot, to which he answered with a sincere but puzzled, "No, not that I know of." Also, in the little candy bowl at the reception desk there, they keep individually wrapped Velamints, which somehow seems perfect). Just as soon as I've written the details of the picl-u and delivery into my manifest sheet, a voice comes over the walky-talky telling me the order's been cacnelled, and to head on down to Culver City. As I make my way there, a page comes through telling me the specifics of the job. I use my time at red lights to check my map, and soon enough I am at Mobius Productions. A moderately atractive receptionist buzzes me in, and I tell her what I'm there for. She calls my contact person, who tells her to have me wait. While I wait, I try to chat with her. She is vaguely amenable to talikng with me. There is a poster for a recent Pierce Brosnan - Julianne Moore movie on the wall, which this company produced. She tells me she did not see it, but her mother liked it. Looking at the poster, I say that it looks awfully cute, in maybe not the nicest tone. She tells me it's about two rival lawyers who fall in love. "That sounds horrible," I say, unable to control myself. "Well, my mother liked it, and she doesn't like many movies," the girl counters weakly before picking up the phone and asking my contact if he thinks I just just leave. Feelng unwelcome, I sit down and flip through a copy of Variety. Soon, the receptionist tells me that my contact knows nothing about this package I'm there to pick up, so 'bye. I go outside, contact base, and am given a different name to mention. I wait to get buzzed back in, the receptionist talks to the contact again, and again, nothing. I call base back, the dispatcher utters a dirty word, then tells me he'll page me whht something else for Culver City.

10:35 - I pick up a package at Sony Studios. Nothing interesting happens. I am instructed to head to El Segundo, so I do, accidentally missing the ramp for the 405, but nonetheless able to reach my destination quickly and pleasantly, thanks to a fast-moving Culver Blvd. and a scenically delightful Vista del Mar, finally getting to see the ocean for the first time in the nearly three weeks I've had this job. I make my pick-up in this small, depressing talent management office I've been to several times already, and then immediately recieve two more pages for El Segundo. En route to the next pick-up, I witness the aftermath of a devestating collision between an 18-wheeler and a cargo van. I cannot say for sure what the details were, but I can say with some certainty that the van lost. I arrive at my next point, wrangle my way into the loading zone, and get a call telling me the delivery's been cancelled. So I go to the next place, Mattel, make my way through their Barbie-lined lobby, and go back to my car and get a tan through the sunroof while I await further orders. It is now noon, and I have had nothing to eat or drink all day except cigarettes.
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Okay, we're at the halfway point (time-wise, anyway), and I really ought to be trying to wind down so's I can get a good night's rest for tomorry. Join me next time, won't you? Please?

Thursday, March 03, 2005

Fun with Pointless Babbling

Shit. It's nearing my bedtime and I have no idea what I should write. The first thing that springs to mind is the Michael Jackson case, but what's really left to say? Well, I guess I do have a few thoughts on Corey Feldman's recent admission that Michael used to look at pornography with him (but--and about this Feldman was adamant--there was never any physical expression of sexuality toward the young actor). My questions are a) How does someone grow up to be as disturbing as Corey Feldman without having been molested as a child, and b) Is there any way a judge could toughen Michael Jackson's eventual sentence for the crime of omission that was NOT molesting Corey Feldman? I know it sounds strange, but I really think young Corey Feldman deserved to be molested by Michael Jackson as punishment for being Corey Feldman. I suppose we should all be thankful that I'm not in charge of the courts (yet).

Ah, and here's something to think about: what would I do if handed the reins of our nation's judicial system? Well, first of all, no more Gypsies. That may sound politically incorrect, but I've simply had it up to here with the Gypsies. And I would legalize all aspects of black-on-black crime, not because I'm some racist who wants to see "them" wipe "themselves" out, but because I am a true liberal who feels that denying blacks the right to criminal self-expression is like denying squirrels the right to scurry up trees and occasionally stop halfway up and stare at you in that vague, nonjudgmental way they have; I've said it before and I'll say it at least one more time: you can fight City Hall, but you can't fight Mother Nature (though City Hall can fight Mother Nature). I would also make it illegal for men over the age of, say, twenty-two to wear button-down dress shirts without a tie. It looks creepy, I think. And only fat old men can wear a sweater with a sport coat. And no one should be allowed to wear more than one piece of jewelry at a time (I will count a pair of earrings as one item). And anyone owning a car worth more than the median household income of said owner's home county shall be put in the stockades for an entire week, to be beaten and humiliated by the townspeople, at their discretion. And whosoever shall exact an unlawful tariff (as determined by regional tax boards, pursuant to Federal Regulation 7-4439-JS-06, and in compliance with all attendant federal and local statutes), shall be fined to an extent commensurate with tax board findings. Also, it will be illegal for all women to walk backwards down the street in the company of a man other than her husband or legally recognized beau..

I hope you enjoyed reading that as much as I didn't enjoy writing it. Here is where the fun ends.

Tuesday, March 01, 2005

It Took Me Nearly Twenty Hours to Write This

Yes, that's right, it's time for Little-Known Collective Nouns, in which we look at little-known collective nouns. What fun!
  • A diaspora of spaniels
  • A rhinoceros of hippopotami
  • A Shriner's convention of rhododendra
  • A vaudeville of old Jews
  • An embolism of swans
  • A Comstock Lode of gibbons
  • A Reggie Jackson of field mice
  • A jamboree of bootblacks
  • A malingering of otters
  • A foiled assassination plot of cougars
  • A waxy build-up of magpies
  • An excrement of sales reps
Well, that was funny. The end.

Monday, February 28, 2005

I Continue to Miss Billy Crystal

Well, freedom lovers, the worst case scenario is playing out before our eyes (well, not really before our eyes, but, you know, before our eyes if we're watching TV or reading a newspaper or something); Democracy is beginning to spread across the Middle East. Long before we illegally invaded Iraq, I opined that all of the Bush administration's tough talk was a ruse designed to spur the Iraqi people into overthrowing their government. And I was optimistic that if Iraq fell, it would invigorate the internal push for Iranian democracy. And if Iran and Iraq were democratic nations, how could a relatively forward-thinking country like Lebanon resist the charms of a good, old-fashioned, US-style cashocracy?

Well, obviously, I was wrong about Iraq. I, for one, will likely never know if we'd really just hoped to invade Iraq all along. And, of course, our actions only deepened the distrust of the hardliners who still have the final vote in Iran, and by doing so dramatically quieted the pro-democracy movement that had given hope to so many exiled former cronies of the Shah (all of whom, when asked, will say that they are Persian).

But look! The proud people of Lebanon have, in essence, overthrown their government! Sure, it has a lot more to do with the recent assassination of a beloved former leader than it does the recent and rather unimpressive Iraqi elections, but still. And, just a couple days before that, Egypt introduced some sort of vague measure that purports to move that once noteworthy culture a few steps closer to the Iron Age. All this, joined by Israel's tentative withdrawal from lands held sacred by the Palestinians for nearly half a century, as well as Syria's willingness to help out by turning over Saddam Hussein's half-brother to coalition whatevers, may just signal that the hell on earth that is today's Middle East is starting to evolve into a region that will play ball with America--and play by America's rules, no less!

Which, of course, is a very bad thing. Not that the world wouldn't be better off with a stable (well, relatively stable) Middle East, but it does send a very bad message, the message that George W. Bush knew what he was doing all along. The way I see it, this thing could have gone one of two ways: what appears to be happening now, or Armageddon. Part of me is very happy to see things working out for the best, but there is another part of me (the part that sprang into existence when, as a seven-year-old, I was "accidentally" hit in the head with an aluminum softball bat) that can see into the future, and what I see is an entire hemisphere shrouded by mushroom clouds, and a big campaign poster that reads, "Wolfowitz/Perle '08." Fasten your radiation shields, kiddies. Something tells me the War on Terror has only just begun.

And now, because you were good and sat through that without fidgeting, here are the racier pictures stolen from Paris Hilton's T-Mobile Sidekick:


Never, ever masturbate while viewing this site. Please. (Unless you are a girl.)

I Miss Billy Crystal

Academy Awards? More like, Academy A-boreds! Am I right? Huh? What's that? Oh.

A few brief observations:

1. Drew Barrymore. More disturbing than how she looked is that she was introduced as, "the multitalented Drew Barrymore." I'm sure there are no hard and fast rules on this, but can someone really skip past "talented" and go straight to "multitalented"?

2. Sidney Lumet. Finally, some recognition for the man who brought us such classics as Fail-Safe, Bye Bye Braverman, The Deadly Affair, The Group, Last of the Mobile Hot Shots, The Anderson Tapes, Lovin' Molly, Equus, Just Tell me What You Want, Prince of the City, Daniel, Garbo Talks, Power, The Morning After, Q & A, A Stranger Among Us, Guilty as Sin, Night Falls On Manhattan, Gloria, The Beautiful Mrs. Seidenmann, and Critical Care.

3. Cate Blanchett. Look up the word "actor" in the dictionary, and you'll find a picture of Cate Blanchett. And I don't mean that in a good way.

4. Sean Penn. And the award for sour, humorless prick goes to...

5. Hillary Swank. Million Dollar Baby? More like, Million Dollar Boobies!

There you have it. Eat your heart out, Billy Bush. (Seriously, I'd like to watch you eat your own heart.)

And now, to pad this out a bit, here are some fake gay porn movie titles based on tonight's nominees:
  • "The Gayviator"
  • "Gay"
  • "The Incrediballs"
  • "The Sea Inside My Ass"
  • "Felching Neverland"
  • "Eternal Bunshine of the Spotless Behind"
  • "A Very Long Engorgement"
  • M. Night Shyamalan's "The West Village"
  • "Hotel Rwanda (Men Only)"
  • "Phantom of the Opera"
Thank you. Good night, Brooklyn!!!!