Charlie Hatton About This
About Me
Email Me

Bookmark
 FeedBurnerEmailTwitterFacebookAmazon
Charlie Hatton
Brookline, MA



All Quotes
HomeAboutArchiveBestShopEmail Howdy, friendly reading person!
I'm on a bit of a hiatus right now, but only to work on other projects -- one incredibly exciting example being the newly-released kids' science book series Things That Make You Go Yuck!
If you're a science and/or silliness fan, give it a gander! See you soon!

Radio Free Doofus

Today’s tale comes with a bit of context, by way of the following shameless self-plug:

This Wednesday, October 12th, I’ll be featured — or possibly feathered; the invitation wasn’t particularly clear — on Kris Earle’s TIME TRAVEL show, from 5-7pm, live on WMFO radio. Have a listen, if you’re in the Tufts University / Boston area — or if, say, someone were to provide a handy link for listening online. Just for instance.

This will be my first foray into a radio DJ booth in quite a while — but not my first spin ’round the old turntable, by any means.

(They don’t use actual turntables on the radio any more, do they? Like I said, it’s been a while. I’m not so up-to-date on the fancy new equipment that’s probably in use in a modern, state-of-the-art university broadcast center.

On the other hand, given the state of educational funding these days, maybe I am. I should probably dig up some old 8-track cassettes to take, just in case.)

As I mentioned a few years ago, I had a semi-regular gig DJing for my local college radio station back in the late ’80s. Though I didn’t actually attend said local college, which apparently was not a prerequisite for manning (or womanning) their airwaves for a couple of hours a week.

(And still isn’t, by the looks of things. So far as I know, Kris isn’t a Tufts student. Though he may once have been a Tufts student.

Of course, at this point, he and I could both have kids who could be Tufts students, which is a little depressing to think about. But not as depressing as actually having said kids. Their respective choice of college notwithstanding.

My parentheses aren’t usually this much of a downer. I’m going to scarf a tub of Cherry Garcia and move right along now. Peachy.)

In preparation for joining him in the booth on Wednesday, Kris asked if I could give him a list of “5-7 songs” to play between the banter and station breaks and wacky inappropriate sound effects.

(The latter of which I’m hoping will come from a machine or recording of some kind. But knowing Kris, I’m not holding my breath.)

So I did. I emailed him back, and listed a half-dozen or so of my favorite tunes from yesteryear — in keeping with the ‘TIME TRAVEL‘ theme, of course. And he promptly replied, saying simply:

Can you bring any of these on a CD or something?

Which I translated to mean, roughly:

What in the hell is this stuff?

Which is a fair point, even if I mistranslated. A lot of the music I listen to — and quite a lot of the older stuff, appropriate for the show — came from my own college DJing days. I worked a shift playing alternative music, which basically meant most people had never heard of it, didn’t want to hear it, didn’t want to hear about it, and wouldn’t miss it a week later when the band broke up and went back to bagging groceries at the local grocery and produce concern.

“Leaving almost an hour blank on a burnable CD flies in the face of everything I’ve decided to pretend to believe in for the purposes of this post.”

Now this music is twenty-plus years old. And obscure ‘alt rock’ tunes are not entities that — to the general public, anyway — ‘age like fine wine’. Rather, they ‘decompose like discarded corpses’, crumbling into forgotten dust with upturned collars and spiky hair.

Kris, being a ‘music guy’, probably knows the songs I sent him. But there’s no guarantee he could get his hands on them for the show. Not unless he takes a recorder down to the Stop & Shop and has the line of aging baggers belt a few numbers out, anyway. And that would just be sad. Especially if they all still have the same haircuts.

So I sat down today to burn this CD. I’ve got all the songs in my personal library, so I figured it would take no time at all. I popped the songs I mentioned to Kris in a list, queued up a CD to burn, and was about to hit ‘OK’ when I saw the info note at the bottom of the screen:

7 songs selected [28:15], 51:45 free on CD

Fifty-one minutes blank? Well, that seemed like a hell of a waste. I mean, I sort my plastic and glass into recycling bins and buy ‘green’ paper towels and hugged trees regularly, right up until the fire ant incident a few years ago. Leaving almost an hour blank on a burnable CD flies in the face of everything I’ve decided to pretend to believe in for the purposes of this post.

So I didn’t burn it. Not right away. I went back to my library, and picked out a few more songs. More tunes from the old days, songs I used to hum, stuff from old LPs and cassettes I played back in the booth. I went A-to-Z, hand-selecting appropriately nostalgic material to fill out the disc. I went back to the ‘burn screen’, prepped the list and hit ‘OK’. This time, a friendly help window popped up to greet me:

49 songs selected [3:36:42] — remove 2:16:42, or burn onto 3 CDs?

It’s remotely possible that I went, as the kids say, ‘over the top’ with this little task. Burning those seven songs was going to take me maybe ten minutes, tops. Now here I was, half an hour later, with nothing burned and the prospect of a K-Telesque 3-CD set of all the greatest never-hits no one’s ever heard of. Clearly, this wasn’t going as planned.

On the other hand, this is the kind of thing that Monday holidays are made for. At least in my world. I don’t have a lawn to mow any more. And there’s nothing on TV. So I soldiered on.

Three hours later — no, you shut up — and I had my disc. A clean, tight, 24-song set that spans the full gamut from “obscure album track by popular band that hadn’t yet made it” to “minor success by one-hit wonder that six people within 100 miles might remember” to “no, seriously — what in the hell is this stuff?”. All of it from that magical halcyon period between, say, 1982 and 1988. Or pretty much when people were willing to listen to Tears for Fears.

(And no, there’s no Tears for Fears on this CD. Bite me, smartass.)

Also, maybe three of the original seven songs made it on the disc. Two of the bands fell off altogether. I don’t want to be accused of a ‘bait and switch’, but seriously. Creative editing to craft a set list — even one that’s 350% too long — is important. And it’ll be dinnertime soon, so I am not doing this stupid thing again. Monday holiday or not — I’m done here.

So, I’m ready for my radio closeup. Which will most likely involve Kris playing half a song off the disc, then breaking it over his forehead and playing Lynyrd Skynyrd for the last hour and fifty minutes. C’est la vie. At least I’ll have my lazy afternoon thumbing through the virtual archives. Good times, spiky-haired weren’t-yets and wannabes.

Good times.

Permalink  |  No Comments



A Scandal in Bathroomia

I can be bewildered by the simplest of everyday objects. Today, it’s a toilet.

Not all toilets, mind you. I’d like to make that perfectly clear. When it comes to your average bathroom facility, I know my way around the equipment. I didn’t just fall off the porcelain turnip truck yesterday, is all I’m saying.

But one toilet in particular, the one in the back stall in the office bathroom, I find especially vexing. Though technically, I suppose it’s not the toilet itself confounding me. Rather, it’s what’s inside.

First, a bit of background concerning this commode. It’s sensitive. Not in the sense that it starts crying or breaks out in hives when you use it — although really, could you blame it? Instead, it’s got an overly-sensitive sensor. It’s an autoflush model, with heavy emphasis on ‘AUTO’. Personally, I’ve never encountered a john with an itchier flusher finger. Step into the stall, and:

*FWOOOOOOOSH!!!*

Turn around to have a seat — or to set down your magazine, turkey hoagie or margarita blender:

*SHHHHWOOOOOM!!!*

Lean over to reach for toilet paper, to fish out your cell phone, or to read a new piece of graffiti telling you what sort of time you should call ‘Jenny’ for:

*WHOOOOF!!* *KERPHOOO!!* *BRUHOOOOOM!!!*

Sensitive, is what I’m saying. I’m a little afraid of the thing, frankly. I got over my childhood fear of being sucked ass-first backwards down the toilet a long time ago — but if I ever disappear, I want someone to examine the inside of this commode’s bowl for fingernail scratches. If I ever accidentally dropped my keys or cell phone into the beast’s maw, they’d be floating in the Charles River before I’d have time to blink.

This is, however, not the bewildering thing. I wish it was. But no. It gets worse.

Today, I sauntered into the stall for a hearty late-morning nap-‘n’-cry, looked into the bowl and saw… material. Solid material. The sort of solid material that you might expect to find in a toilet — and I’m trying to be discreet about this, I really am, so just meet me halfway and let’s say that we both know what people usually deposit into toilets, given our combined decades of experience on this planet with such things.

“If I find a stall that’s less horrifying than the elevator from the Untouchables, I consider it a ‘win’.”

(We good to move forward here? Because I’ll draw diagrams if I have to. Don’t make me draw diagrams. I’ll do it.

Good to go? Good.)

Now, in my younger days, I might have questioned the why of such a thing. I’ve used bathrooms where other people left… ‘materials’ inappropriately behind, and I used to wonder why. It’s so easy to flush. Half a second, and two fingers or a foot or some sort of flushing stick, if your paranoid germophobia runs that deep. But still — almost zero effort. And it’s common courtesy.

That was a long time ago. In the intervening years, I’ve been in a lot of disgusting bathrooms. A lot. That should probably tell me something about my life and the highly questionable choices I’ve probably made to get here, but for the moment it tells me only this: people are generally unreliable. Whether they’re simply not putting out the near-zero effort or getting distracted too easily or being overly drunk or being born with poor aim or idly wondering whether they can hit the ceiling, door, sink or towel dispenser with various bodily excretions, the upshot is that the state of any public bathroom is highly unpredictable. I’ve given up asking ‘why’; it just is. If I find a stall that’s less horrifying than the elevator from the Untouchables, I consider it a ‘win’.

That does not, however, settle my mind about the situation today. The ‘why’ does not concern me. But given the toilet, and its super-sucking propensity, I’m left to puzzle:how?

The… uh, ‘material’ wasn’t so large, at first glance, as to not fit down the drain. I’m no fluidics engineer — or whatever sort of ‘-ics engineer’ would be appropriate here — so I can’t say for certain. And as I approached the bowl, the beast flushed itself, sending said material to the depths of Davy Jones’…er, ‘material locker’. So it was definitely ‘flushable’.

But the toilet drops water at the drop of a hat. Or the wave of a hat, or probably when hats wander by outside the door. So how in the world did this ‘material’ get left in the bowl without being whisked away immediately post-deposit? The possible answers are disturbing; I could think of three:

1. Someone threw the offending material into the bowl from a distance, somewhere outside the auto-flushing radius. Say over the closed stall door, or from over by the sinks. If this is the case, it simply raises more questions.

Like, what did they launch it with? Are there slingshots or trebuchets out there for this sort of thing? Or did they just wear a rubber glove — or not — and pitch it over and in? Also, how did they hit the bowl on the first shot? Did they set up a practice area at home, some sort of unsavory target range I don’t want to think too hard about? This answer, I don’t like at all.

2. The material spontaneously appeared in the bowl, as a random event. At first blush, I’m more in favor of this one. It removes any sort of premeditation or human intervention, which is reassuring. No diabolical conspiracy to commit ‘material’ happened; it just materialized as-is from thin air. Or toilet water, whichever you prefer.

It’s improbable, certainly. But I like to believe that anything is technically possible, so I leaned toward this explanation. Until, that is, I realized that if this is true, then it could conceivably happen again. Anywhere. My toilet. Your toilet. The local swimming pool. In that plate of spaghetti you just ordered at the fancy Italian restaurant.

So, no. Spontaneous generation is out. Which leaves only the third, and only satisfying, explanation:

3. One word:

Spiderman.

So there you go. Obviously, one of the people on our office floor has been bitten by a radioactive spider, can now climb walls and tall buildings, and — for reasons unknown to we who’ve never felt the bittersweet sting of a green-glowing arachnid — has now chosen to poop from a spot on the ceiling overlooking the toilet. Simple, really, when you think about it.

So that’s that. And from now on, when I feel Nature’s call, I’m getting in the car and driving home to answer it. The last thing I want is share a crapper with a web-slinging superhero. I’ll take my Sports Illustrated and a roll of Charmin and flush my own material, thank you very much.

Permalink  |  No Comments



Alarmed, I’m Sure

When one has just returned home from a vacation — as, it so happens, one just has — one faces many challenges in assimilating back into a routine. Fighting jetlag, for instance. Unpacking. Washing filthy unpacked clothes. Heaving empty suitcases into the back of the closet. Scarfing down souvenir candies intended for the office. That sort of thing.

But the single most difficult task in wrapping up a vacation is getting back to the routine of the workaday office grind. Particularly the schlepping out of bed at ungodly single-digit A.M. hours to clean up and shuffle toward work. And without the benefit of room service breakfasts in bed, or fresh bloody Marys served from a swim-up bar. It’s inhumane, to say the least.

Of course, when I’m confronted with a conundrum like how to manage rising early for the first time in a week, I do what I always do in complicated situations. I make things more complicated.

“Easy things get hard, hard things turn damned near impossible, and the already-unpossible becomes totally inconceivable, with a likelihood of grievous bodily harm.”

(That’s just how I roll, apparently. Easy things get hard, hard things turn damned near impossible, and the already-unpossible becomes totally inconceivable, with a likelihood of grievous bodily harm. Because where’s the fun in ‘simple’?)

So naturally, I chose the first full night back — and the eve of an important early-morning meeting — to swap out the alarm clock on my nightstand for a new model. A different model. And not one that I’d ever used before.

I made the change in the evening, and then set about doing all the washing and heaving and scarfing usually associated with the end of vacation. Several hours later — in the wee hours of the morning, and well past my intended bedtime — I finally hit the sack, and reached over to set the alarm clock ticking to wake me up.

Only I didn’t know how. Who reads the instruction manuals for these things? Seriously, please. I figured it had to be self-explanatory, once i could see all the buttons and poke around a little bit. So I turned on my bedside light for a looksee.

(That woke up my wife, of course. She’d been asleep for hours, and woke up in a panicked daze. I assured her that the house wasn’t on fire, the aliens weren’t invading and the Redcoats weren’t coming to get us — just to cover all the bases — and tucked her back in. Then I had a go at setting my new alarm.

It took a few minutes, but I eventually fiddled and futzed with the device until I was reasonably sure I had an alarm set for the time I wanted. And I nestled down into the bed for a too-short nighttime snooze.

But I didn’t snooze. I lay awake anxious, worried that maybe I’d cocked up in setting the alarm. What if it didn’t wake me up? What if the volume was accidentally turned down? Had I set P.M. instead of A.M.? Would the buzzer only sound in the Greenwich Meridian Time Zone? I was haunted by these questions, and this new, non-battle-tested possibly-defective gizmo. But short of a dry run — which my snoozing wife would NOT appreciate — I had no way to have confidence in my up-gettingness.

So I lay awake, staring mortified at the ceiling when I should have been sleeping, worrying over how and whether — and to a large degree, why — I was going to crawl out of that comfy bed with the chickens in the morning. Eventually, exhaustion got the better of me and I drifted off to sleep, to await the fate of the alarm’s near-dawn chirping.

My brain, however, wouldn’t let it go so easily. Full of punctual and vinegar, apparently, it shook me awake into a frothy panic an hour later, wondering if I’d missed the alarm altogether. I checked the time. Nope, all clear. So I drifted back to sleep.

And woke up again, just as anxious. I found I’d slept for just twenty minutes, and still had a couple of hours to go. So I rolled over for another nap.

This one lasted five minutes, and again I was awake. I cursed my misplaced vigilance, shut my eyes tight and willed myself to fall asleep in the scant precious time I had left.

I didn’t fall asleep, of course. I may have pulled an eyelid muscle or two, but no more sleep was forthcoming. There was no way that new alarm and my funky untrusting brain were going to result in any more shuteye that night. Some worrisome, neuron-wringing part of me was just too vigilantly smart for its own stupid good. I briefly considered a targeted self-lobotomy. But my wife told me never to stick a wire hanger up my nose unless I know exactly what I’m doing, so I abandoned that notion.

Beaten and bleary-eyed, I stumbled out of bed — mostly because there seemed to be no other way around it. It wasn’t until I’d showered, dressed, primped, preened, brushed, combed, rinsed and spat that my original target ‘uppy time’ finally rolled around.

And with it, like the clockwork it literally was, the alarm that I’d set the night before, blaring dutifully in the general direction of anyone with ears to listen. Nothing to worry about, it turned out — this alarm is a-ok, after all.

Of course, it was also a pain in the ass to turn off. So I spent ten minutes enduring the insistent *beep*-ing while I tried to shut it up. Eventually, I unplugged the damned thing — the better to save my delicate eardrums from harm, it turns out. Tonight, when I got home from work, I plugged the alarm clock back in, reset the time, adjusted the alarm, and have everything back to just-how-I-want-it. It’s all perfect; nothing more could possibly be required.

Except.

When it was time for bed again, I couldn’t help wondering about that alarm. Did I reset it just the same way this time? Maybe I mixed up the radio and CD settings? If my alarm rang in a forest, would I ever hear it? Sickening possibilities skittered through my head, unbidden and unstoppable. This new clock, meant to replace my crappy old one, was becoming the death of me.

So I did the only sane and rational thing I could. I cancelled all my morning meetings for the rest of the week, unplugged the clock again, and got some damned sleep. With the pressure thus off, I might sleep til noon, but hey — I might also sleep til noon. If I can just keep the klaxons in my head from sounding every ten jittery minutes, that is. If I ever find my internal ‘Snooze’ button, I’m Super-Gluing that thing down.

And if that doesn’t work, I’ll take another week’s vacation, if only for the rest. Sometimes the best way to get back into ‘the grind’ is to run the hell away again. Or to buy an alarm clock that you can actually believe in.

All in all, that wire hanger idea is looking pretty good about now. Nighty-night.

Permalink  |  No Comments



Rule, Germania

So. My ten days of vacation are over, and I’ve successfully navigated my way from the beer and bratwurst halls of old Deutschland back to home sweet home.

(Missed the note about that trip? Well, then catch up, Sparky. I’m only singing this song once. Probably.)

In lieu of a long and overwrought blow-by-blow of where I went, what I did, who I saw, how I ate and why-oh-why I drank that one thing — all of which may or may not see the light of day in future — I figured I’d sum up the trip with the most indelible impression made upon me each day since my last post. Ten points for ten days. As the fourteen-century ruling Prussian aristocracy used to say: “I love it when a plan comes together.

(Maybe i learned that on the trip. Or maybe I made it up. And maybe I hallucinated it lying in a beer tent after one too many steins of festbier and salty pretzels. Let’s just do this thing, all right?)

Anyway, here’s the list of ‘What I Did on My German Vacation’. Gesundheit.

#1. Saturday – Boston / Munich: I’ve flown to Europe a couple of times, but never on Lufthansa. Even after accidentally asking the ticket agent how she liked “serving with the Luftwaffe” — which I would NOT suggest — I figured they were pretty much like any other airline. Until we boarded, and one of the very first in-flight announcements began:

Gutentag! Welcome to Lufthansa flight 424 to Munich. I’m Helga Humpf, one of your pursers…

I’m not even remotely making this up. I thought Helga Humpfs only happened in dirty limericks and Benny Hill reruns. But we had one right on our flight, presumably stirring our drinks and fluffing our head pillows.

That got the trip off on the right note. Fly the friendly skies, indeed.

#2. Sunday – Munich: I always had the idea that Oktoberfest was like a carnival for beer drinkers, that the brau tents and oompah bands and delicious animal parts stuffed into sausage sleeves were the main and sole attractions for ‘Festgoers.

Not so, it turns out.

Actually, I discovered, Oktoberfest is more like a carnival with beer drinkers. All that stuff I just said is there in spades, sure — but there’s also an honest-to-Wilhelm amusement park, too. A dozen rides or more, with bumper cars and fun houses and a a hundred-foot mega-drop. Also, an enormous ferris wheel and a ginormous three-loop roller coaster. My notion of the place as solely a haven for swillhounds and beer jockeys was disabused when I saw the rides from three blocks away, before I’d even stepped foot on the grounds.

So now I know: Oktoberfest isn’t “like Six Flags for beer”. Instead, it’s “Six Flags with beer, and pretzels, and traditional Bavarian-dress cleavage as far as the eye can see”.

Which kind of makes you wonder why they bothered with the ‘Six Flags’ part. But hey — I’m not complaining.

#3. Monday – Munich: The (in)famous beer tents of Oktoberfest open at 10am. At the height of the festival, I hear you have to wait in line starting around six in the morning, just to score a seat at one of the tables. They say once you get a spot, you do. Not. Leave. For anything. Guard that spot with your ever-drinking life.

By contrast, on a sleepy Monday after the first week of the ‘Fest, you can get a tent seat by strolling in at, oh, say, five minutes after ten. I know, because that’s what we did. And the first tent we entered, run by Paulaner, wasn’t even ready yet. They were still setting up tables and scrubbing down steins from the night before. No one had yet sat down, and nobody was being served.

So the first thing we did upon entering our very first Oktoberfest tent was to leave an Oktoberfest tent. So much for traditional wisdom.

Luckily, the Augstiner tent nearby was somewhat more ‘hopping’ — but not yet full — so we spent a highly profitable (if you’re a liver, anyway) four hours or so sampling their brews, scarfing their food and rubbing glasses with our new German friends at the table every time the oompah band played the ‘Prost!‘ song. Which was every twelve seconds or so. So there was that.

“So basically, the U.S. airlines can kiss my fat chocolate-snarfing ass.”

#4. Tuesday – Munich / Berlin: When a U.S. airline has a flight too short to serve a meal, you’re lucky if you get a pack of stale off-brand Chex Mix to tide you over.

The flight from Munchen to Tegel airport in Berlin is roughly fifty minutes long. They handed out Toblerones as we boarded.

So basically, the U.S. airlines can kiss my fat chocolate-snarfing ass.

#5. Wednesday – Berlin: Our hotel in the capital city was centrally located, near many sights we wanted to see, and just a couple of blocks from the famous Checkpoint Charlie gate on the old Berlin Wall. Also, it catered nearly exclusively, it seemed, to Australians.

Why? I haven’t the foggiest, Bruce, but from the other guests to the desk clerks’ accented English to the wine list at the in-house restaurant, it was clear that this was a place working to make the Aussie crowd feel right at home.

The most telling nod to the Down Under clientele? The restaurant menu, which featured, among other things, steaks made from kangaroos.

Naturally, I ate the g’day out of one of those. That’s another animal — and a delectable animal, I might add — off the list of “Beasts I’d Like to Eat Someday”.

(You can make a Scarlett Johansson joke here, if you like. I won’t stop you. But I’m moving ahead. Suit yourself.)

#6. Thursday – Berlin: We had another nice — though decidedly less exotic dinner in town on Thursday, and discovered/remembered as we were walking back to our hotel late at night that we were staying in the former East Berlin, not West Berlin.

In the daytime, there’s not so much difference. The Wall’s been down for a generation or so, and the architecture, atmosphere and ambiance of most areas we went to — former-East or former-West — were fairly indistinguishable. In the daylight.

At night, we quickly noticed the sparse streetlights and dark and ominous overgrown lots flanking the street we walked along. And then walked faster along — first on one side, then the other, and finally, like speed-walkers with bathroom emergencies, right down the middle of the street. Because it was the only area that was lit, and there was nobody else around.

I know Hostel didn’t take place in Berlin. But we took a different route back to the hotel after that. You never know when they’re going to be making another sequel.

#7. Friday – Berlin: We did a lot of sightseeing in Berlin — museums, monuments, walking tours, currywurst stands, you name it. But the oddest, in many ways, was the trip to the Reichstag we took on Friday afternoon. Or rather, the pre-trip preparation.

The Reichstag is where the re-unified German parliament sits, and also an interesting historic site in its own right. To complete the triple-whammy of touristy goodness, they’ve also seen fit to top it with a big glass dome with a wide spiral walkway, from which you can see (and hear about, on a location-aware audio tour) many of the local sights. So far, so good.

Because of the government affiliation, security is much higher at the Reichstag than most sites. They check your passport on the way in, and send you through a metal detector, which seem like reasonable enough precautions. But you also can’t just waltz (or polka) up to the guard post and get in. Nope. You have to reserve a spot in advance. By email.

We did just that, on the advice of a friend, on Wednesday evening, and come Friday morning received a lovely — and somewhat personalized, even — email invitation to tour the Reichstag dome. Signed by a government official, too. We had to print out the message and take it with us, or we’d have been turned away at the door. As were most people in line in front of us when we arrived.

Silly tourists. One does not simply walk into the Reichstag. Jeez.

#8. Saturday – Berlin / Boston: By this point, we’d taken the Berlin subway system a few times. We knew the lines, and our relevant stops, so it was natural to think of hopping the Metro to get back to the airport. We’d pretty much mastered it by then. And we’d been told how much easier and cheaper the subway was than Berlin cabbies. So armed with our vast three days of experience, we took the Metro. It was the smart thing to do.

Or so we thought. And yet? Nein.

The problem was, we needed to change lines a couple of times. And one subway line — the one in the middle of our trek — was littered with cars that weren’t going the whole way, but rather getting only to a particular stop and turning around. Repeatedly. We made our first switch, lugged our suitcases onto the next train, and settled in for a ten-stop wait.

Two stops later, it was ‘everybody off — this train’s kaput!‘. We waited for the next — and that got us two more stops, then kicked out to the station again. We let the next one go — it was only going one stop, by the name on the front — and waited ten minutes for another, which was labeled the same as the last. But how many trains only go one station? We figured it was just a common stop, plastered up to give an idea of the direction, and climbed aboard. And reached the next stop, and waited, and… felt the train accelerate back in the other direction, where it dropped us unceremoniously back where we’d picked it up. With another train just like it due next.

So we hiked up to street level and hailed a cab. I’m not sure the cabbie always went in the right direction to get us to the airport, but he never went backwards with us in the car, either. Money well spent, if you ask me.

#9. Sunday – Boston: I worried about jetlag after finally arriving home Saturday night. I had — is there no mercy in this world? — a softball game scheduled for 9:30 Sunday morning, and fretted that I’d miss my alarm, or sleep late, or sack out for fourteen oblivious hours or something. I hit the sack around 10pm Saturday — or four in the morning, according to the clocks back in Germany — and hoped I’d scrape myself together in time.

I woke up at six. Wide awake. I’m by no definition a morning person, and this trip had me screwy enough to rise with the chickens, roughly three hours before necessary. I don’t know if that’s ‘jetlag’ or something else — ‘jetperk’, maybe? — but I don’t like it one bit. If that’s the kind of thing travel does to you, I may not bother to leave the house again — never mind the continent.

#10. Monday – Boston: Happily, I’d taken the day off work, in case of flight delays or issues. And now, clearly, most of my Monday was spent sussing out all the nonsense above. What do you want, a report on what I had for breakfast?

That’s enough, already. I’ve got an office and a desk to go back to and cry under in the morning. I’m calling this thing, right now. Nothing more to see here — this vacation is OVER. Auf wiedersehen.

Permalink  |  No Comments



One Fest for the Beery

I’ve got good news and bad news for you today, site fans. And then some more good news, hopefully, but that will have to wait a bit.

First, the good news. Fresh off the presses and days ahead of schedule, the latest installment in the Zolton Does Amazon series over at ZuG.com is now live and ready for perusal. It’s dubbed (Food) Safety First!, and it’s laden with enough innuendo and multiple entendre to last you for a week.

The bad news is: ration that entendre. Because that’s all you’ll get (from me, anyway) for said week. For this afternoon, I’m off to merry old Deutschland, and my very first trip to the fabled Oktoberfest. The missus will be joining — to share in the festivities and smooth out any legal wrinkles I might find myself in — and in addition to the brew bashing in Munich, we’ll be jaunting over to Berlin for a few days to see what’s what over in that part of lederhosenland. Because we never know when we’ll get back that way. Or when we’ll be banned from returning that way. So we’re packing in the fun like pig parts in a bratwurst. Just the way Frau Nature intended.

“If we somehow get lost and wind up in an area where English isn’t spoken — and history, karma, Murphy’s Law and the second law of thermodynamics all conspire to dictate that THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT WILL HAPPEN — then we’re screwed.”

I should point out — if it’s not already patently obvious — that this trip has a very high probability of going south at some point. My wife and I are flying across the Atlantic to two cities that we’ve never visited, in a country where we don’t speak the language, for the express purpose of drinking copious amounts of alcohol, and relying on forms of transportation over which we have no iota of control. We’re approximately as likely to make it back home safe and on time as we are to wind up being fatted on gingerbread shingles and baked by some warty old emo hag who’s into black gowns and broomsticks.

(Or in my case, ‘further fatted’. Or possibly ‘trimmed’. Maybe witches have gotten health conscious about nutrition, too, for all I know.)

Anyway, it’s a bit of a crapshoot. I’m jetting to Germany armed only with “gutentag!“, “bier, bitte!” and “hasenpfeffer fahrvergnugen!” in my repertoire for communicating with the natives. If we somehow get lost and wind up in an area where English isn’t spoken — and history, karma, Murphy’s Law and the second law of thermodynamics all conspire to dictate that THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT WILL HAPPEN — then we’re screwed. Or arrested. Or fattened and baked. Whichever takes the longest and hurts the most, probably.

And that’s the other good news — for you, at least. When — *ahem*; IF — I return, I’m sure to have lots of tales of misadventure, miscalculation and mispronunciation. And I’ll gladly share anything of note that I can manage to remember.

(And which doesn’t weaken any legal defense I might have to mount. Those Germans are real sticklers about their laws and such over there. I hear they can be a real bunch of Na- …nah. I’m not gonna go there. Not until after a few biers, anyway.)

So have a great week here stateside, or wherever you happen to be. Chances are it’ll be October-with-a-‘c’ before I’m able to update again, though if I can slip onto a network near the Fest-with-a-‘k’, I might surprise us both with a look-in. Or a lederhosen-in. Though I’m pretty certain nobody wants that.

For now, I’ll simply say ‘auf wiedersehen‘, ‘gesundheit‘ and ‘ich bin ein Oktoberfester!

At some point, I’m hoping some friendly drunk German person will tell me what all of that means. Or at least hand over some of that gingerbread. I’m not so picky at this point.

Permalink  |  No Comments



HomeAboutArchiveBestShopEmail © 2003-15 Charlie Hatton All Rights Reserved
Highlights
Me on Film 'n' Stage:
  Drinkstorm Studios


Me on Science (silly):
  Secondhand SCIENCE


Me on Science (real):
  Meta Science News


Me on ZuG (RIP):
  Zolton's FB Pranks
  Zolton Does Amazon


Favorite Posts:
30 Facts: Alton Brown
A Commute Dreary
A Hallmark Moment
Blue's Clues Explained
Eight Your 5-Hole?
El Classo de Espanol
Good News for Goofballs
Grammar, Charlie-Style
Grammar, Revisitated
How I Feel About Hippos
How I Feel About Pinatas
How I Feel About Pirates
Life Is Like...
Life Is Also Like...
Smartass 101
Twelve Simple Rules
Unreal Reality Shows
V-Day for Dummies
Wheel of Misfortune
Zolton, Interview Demon

Me, Elsewhere

Features
Standup Comedy Clips

Selected Clips:
  09/10/05: Com. Studio
  04/30/05: Goodfellaz
  04/09/05: Com. Studio
  01/28/05: Com. Studio
  12/11/04: Emerald Isle
  09/06/04: Connection

Boston Comedy Clubs

 My 100 Things Posts

Selected Things:
  #6: My Stitches
  #7: My Name
  #11: My Spelling Bee
  #35: My Spring Break
  #36: My Skydives
  #53: My Memory
  #55: My Quote
  #78: My Pencil
  #91: My Family
  #100: My Poor Knee

More Features:

List of Lists
33 Faces of Me
Cliche-O-Matic
Punchline Fever
Simpsons Quotes
Quantum Terminology

Favorites
Banterist
...Bleeding Obvious
By Ken Levine
Defective Yeti
DeJENNerate
Divorced Dad of Two
Gallivanting Monkey
Junk Drawer
Life... Weirder
Little. Red. Boat.
Mighty Geek
Mitchieville
PCPPP
Scaryduck
Scott's Tip of the Day
Something Authorly
TGNP
Unlikely Explanations

Archives
Full Archive

Category Archives:

(Stupid) Computers
100Things
A Doofus Is Me
Articles 'n' Zines
Audience Participation
Awkward Conversations
Bits About Blogging
Bitter Old Man Rants
Blasts from My Past
Cars 'n' Drivers
Dog Drivel
Eek!Cards
Foodstuff Fluff
Fun with Words!
Googlicious!
Grooming Gaffes
Just Life
Loopy Lists
Making Fun of Jerks
Marketing Weenies
Married and a Moron
Miscellaneous Nonsense
Potty Talk / Yes, I'm a Pig
Sleep, and Lack Thereof
Standup
Tales from the Stage
Tasty Beverages
The Happy Homeowner
TV & Movies & Games, O My!
Uncategorized
Vacations 'n' Holidays
Weird for the Sake of Weird
Whither the Weather
Wicked Pissah Bahstan
Wide World o' Sports
Work, Work, Work
Zug

Heroes
Alas Smith and Jones
Berkeley Breathed
Bill Hicks
Dave Barry
Dexter's Laboratory
Douglas Adams
Evening at the Improv
Fawlty Towers
George Alec Effinger
Grover
Jake Johannsen
Married... With Children
Monty Python
Nick Bakay
Peter King
Ren and Stimpy
Rob Neyer
Sluggy Freelance
The Simpsons
The State

Plugs, Shameless
100 Best Humor Blogs | Healthy Moms Magazine

HumorSource

 

Feeds and More
Subscribe via FeedBurner

[Subscribe]

RDF
RSS 2.0
Atom
Credits
Site Hosting:
Solid Solutions

Powered by:
MovableType

Title Banner Photo:
Shirley Harshenin

Creative Commons License
  This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons License

Performancing Metrics

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Valid XHTML 1.0

Valid CSS!

© 2003-15 Charlie Hatton
All Rights Reserved