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!

Love/Hate in an Elevator

At the office where I work, the powers that be have seen fit to break our group into two halves. All of us — when there were precious fewer of us, back in the day — once sat in the same area, on a renovated floor of a nice professional building. I’ll call this spot ‘the Tower’, just to give it a name.

But we were cramped for space, and growing over time, so something had to be done. We couldn’t get more space in the Tower; lord knows we’re not nearly that important. And space was at a premium on the other floors of that building, as well. So when we split, a few intrepid souls were sent to the older, less-than-renovated ‘functional’ building next door to stake a claim. I should give this spot a name, to distinguish it from the first. Let’s go with ‘the Outhouse’, just off the top of my head.

(If you prefer ‘Ghetto Shack’ or ‘Dung Hovel’, that’s fine, too. Or ‘Outhouse’ will do. I think we’re understanding each other here.)

So a few of us employees — banishees? shunees? — relocated to the Outhouse, and settled into our various niches. One guy had a wall erected, to make his ‘office’ seem less like an open space and more like… I don’t know. A phone booth? A toll island? Something.

A few of us huddle in a cave-like room, where the thermostat control on the wall is merely a ‘suggestion’ to the air conditioning system, which either ignores us for days on end or blasts waves of loud frigid air at us like we were walking, talking bags of frozen Birdseye peas. Or maybe pints of Cherry Garcia that it’s trying to keep stiff until the weekend.

None of this is especially germane to the current story — bitching is just oodles of fun, is all! — except to say this: every aspect of the two buildings plays a part in the glaring dichotomy between the Tower and the Outhouse. And that very much includes an aspect we deal with every day — the elevators.

Now, I’m not going to claim that one set of elevators — four in each building — is more efficient than the others. Both are a pain to ride during busy times, none are ever on the floor you want going the direction you want, and they’re all freight-friendly ‘vators, so oversized loads, odd smells and maintenance equipment are the order of the day, in both buildings.

That said, there are tremendous differences.

Take the Outhouse elevators, for instance. Given the setting, you might expect these people movers to be lacking in frills, cold utilitarian behemoths that work most of the time in most ways if you’re lucky, and point you toward the stairwell when you’re not. That’s what you might expect.

“They’re sparse on the inside, with the original keypad from 1938 or whenever the hell they were first installed — I’m pretty sure the ‘In Case of Fire’ message directs you to a telegraph operator who’ll know what to do with your Morse Code SOS signal.”

If you wanted to be spot-on dead right, that is. Because that’s exactly the deal with these elevators. The doors rattle home when one enters, never seeming quite to fit together, and then make a mildly alarming ‘opening a sardine can’ noise when the car arrives. They’re sparse on the inside, with the original keypad from 1938 or whenever the hell they were first installed — I’m pretty sure the ‘In Case of Fire’ message directs you to a telegraph operator who’ll know what to do with your Morse Code SOS signal.

And naturally, these elevators don’t work quite the way you’d really want them to. Sure, they go up and down, and mostly at the expected times and speeds, but there’s more to an elevator than that. Case in point — the indicator lights, telling would-be passengers which way the car is headed, and which car in the bank of four is coming. On the main floor, three of the four ‘up’ lights work, and on my floor, only three of the four ‘down’ lights are in operation. And its not the same light out on both floors. So every elevator trip is an adventure in positioning, deduction and memory retention, to infer which car is coming, going which way, depending on what you see, what you don’t see, and where you do or don’t see it.

Sometimes I just want to take a ride to the goddamned soda machine. I don’t need a frigging cognitive skills Mensa quiz every stupid time I run out of Pepsi.

Worse, remember that these are old elevators, built back when people were a lot quicker, apparently, because the reinforced blast doors on these things stay open for approximately nineteen milliseconds between trips. So if you’re still calculating the speed at which Car 4 will pass Car 2 if the red light didn’t come on and one left Omaha at nine o’clock going two-thirds the square root of the other’s rate of travel, then it’s time for you to PRESS THE EFFING CALL BUTTON AGAIN BECAUSE THE ELEVATOR LEFT WITHOUT YOU.

(Or crushed you in its steely maw, should you be (un)fortunate enough to get as far as the threshold. What, safety releases for the doors? How precious! No, we’d never build such a thing. Survival of the fittest. And best of luck to you, sparky.)

On the other hand, there are the Tower elevators — superior in nearly every regard. They’re bigger, they’re faster, more modern, better sensored, and with doors that cede the right of way before crushing fragile limbs or bones. But that’s not the best thing about these elevators. No, the best part is that these elevators are smart. Wicked smart — even smarter than the people who built the building. And I can prove it.

First, it’s important to know that these elevators can talk. Because why wouldn’t they, right? In the next upgrade, these fancy-building elevators will probably pour you coffee on the way up to the office, and give you a back massage on the way down. Vibrating walls for comfort. Happy endings after business hours. The whole ball of wax.

For the moment — talking. Specifically, the elevators will announce what floor is coming up at the next stop. Very handy, for the blind crowd, as well as easily-distracted riders or short folks in the back who can’t see the display panel. It’s a nice touch.

And the building they’re nestled into is fifteen floors tall. Our other half of the group actually works on the fourteenth floor of the Tower. Only it’s not called the fourteenth floor. Because whoever put the building together decided to ‘skip’ the unlucky thirteenth floor.

Mind you, this is a hospital building. The finest minds modern medicine can muster, and they’re eschewing the thirteenth floor because it’s ‘bad juju’. I always wondered — if you show up for a physical, do they throw salt over your shoulder and consult a Magic 8-Ball for a diagnosis? ‘Outlook Chlamydia-y‘? Sheesh.

I’ve always scoffed at this particular choice — but ever since they made these elevators talk a few years ago, it turns out they agree with me. The female voice they use is very confident and matter-of-fact in announcing the lower floors:

Floor Three.

Floor Six.

Floor Eight.

But when you get above twelve, that same voice turns questioning — almost incredulous:

Floor Four-teen?

Floor Fif-teen?

It’s as though it knows. Oh, it’ll go along with your little ‘naming scheme’ game, but don’t think you superstitious chumps have pulled one over on the almighty elevator. It’s got its eye on you, mister. Put down the 8-Ball and do some actual medicine, there, bub. That stethoscope ain’t gonna listen to itself.

So, that’s the story of the elevators. And of the Tower and the Outhouse, and just how different the two can be. I for one miss the Tower. Not for the working there, of course. Crying under one desk is the same as any other. But the ride getting up there was sweet, indeed. As elevators go, a guy could do a lot worse.

And does. Every. Fricking. Day. *sigh*

Permalink  |  No Comments



A Flash (Fiction) in the Pan

A few weeks ago, my friend Jenn pointed me to the Flash Fiction Challenge over at NYCMidnight.com. They run a whole series of annual writing contests, and Jenn thought the upcoming one would be right up my alley.

Because it has a one thousand word limit.

And everything I write is so short.

Right. It takes me three lines and half a pen’s ink just to endorse a check. My Post-It notes are the size of bedsheets. And I’ve just spent thirty words telling you I’m long-winded. I think you get the idea.

“A judging panel is the last bastion of hope for guys like me with less Twitter followers than your average fourteen-year-old Amish homeschoolee.”

Still, I’ve been told it’s important to step outside your ‘comfort zone’ once in a while. Mostly, I’m told this by someone trying to get me to put my pants back on, but the message is still valid. So I looked into this ‘Flash Fiction’ contest. Sadly, I wasn’t able to enter due to a prior commitment — namely, when the second part of the challenge is given out, I’ll be on a plane over the Atlantic, on my way to Oktoberfest. And priorities are priorities.

(I always knew drinking would have a negative impact on my life eventually. I just never figured it would be in the form of a scheduling conflict. Seems sort of ‘nailing Capone for tax evasion’, if you ask me.)

So that was out. But while on the site, I found an even less comfortable contest to enter — the Flash Fiction Micro Challenge. Screw a thousand words; this one comes with a one-hundred character limit.

Obviously, I signed up immediately. My entry form alone was three hundred characters. Not a good sign.

And yet! I entered, and last Thursday received the word to be included in each entry (up to three per competitor): cruel. And in the twelve hours alloted, I dutifully penned three teensy-tiny little storylets, each squeezing under the hundred-character limbo bar.

Today, the first cuts were announced, and I’m proud to report that two of my snippets made the grade. To go further, one of two things has to happen — and if you like, you can help. That would be awesome of you. Have I told you that I’ve always liked your hair? Because I do. Scout’s honor. Truly.

The first way into the next round — and where you can participate, and also check out a bunch of cool little bitty stories — is to be voted one of the top three stories in the group by the discerning public. I’m in Group 12, so if you’re so inclined, please consider popping over and having a vote. Could be for my stories. Doesn’t have to be. But that hair of yours is really stunning. Especially today. Just killer. Wow.

(Also, there are nineteen other groups to peruse. And some really cool stuff in each. Definitely worth checking out, even if you didn’t have that glorious mane. Which you do. I’m just saying.)

The other way to advance is to be selected as one of the top two in the group by a panel of site judges. Which is probably my only realistic shot. A judging panel is the last bastion of hope for guys like me with less Twitter followers than your average fourteen-year-old Amish homeschoolee. But I’m holding out hope. With two entries, my crossed fingers and your radiant locks of power, maybe there’s a shot at this thing.

And if not, I’ll enter the next contest where we write a novel using only ampersands. Because ‘writing short’ is totally my thing. Obviously.

Sheesh.

Permalink  |  2 Comments



Good Help Is So Easy to Lose

Day three. My wife’s been gone since Thursday, visiting her family. I’ve been on my own for three full days, and things are looking grim. Mighty grim, indeed.

“On the bright side, I haven’t eaten the dog. Yet.”

On the bright side, I haven’t eaten the dog. Yet. Although there’s a good chance she would eat me back if I tried, so I’ll probably avoid that mess altogether. But I chowed through all the usable food in the house long ago — there’s nothing but fancy mustard and some sort of frozen tofu something-or-other left. And I’m not that desperate. Maybe I’ll try some of the dog’s kibble. The mutt seems to live okay off of the stuff. And I’m pretty certain it’s tofu-free.

Meanwhile, I’ve got to think about putting the house back together again. It’s amazing how quickly a place can go to hell without adult supervision — and even more, how many other people apparently took the weekend off when my wife left.

Like the Mail Fairy, for instance. I never check the mailbox. There’s nothing but pain and bills in there for me, anyway. But the Mail Fairy, like clockwork, empties the box every day and puts the day’s mail on the dining room table. So the pain and bills can be shared among all the family in an otherwise cheerful happy room, presumably.

But when my wife left, the Mail Fairy went on vacation, too. So like a schlub, I’ve been schlepping the mail from the box to the table. Or near the table, anyway. A lot of it ended up on the floor, but most of that was inside the front door, so it counts. I’m still getting the hang of this new job.

And all the other ones. Because a whole troupe of other workers also decided to slack off while my wife is gone. The Towel-Folding Dwarfs that live behind the clothes dryer? Gone. The mysterious gypsy dog walker who takes the mutt out at the crack of dawn so she won’t piddle on the floors? Out to lunch. As is the Floor Piddle Cleaning Fairy, which simply could not be worse timing. What are the chances?

Also, the mermaid who cleans hair out of the shower drain. She’s gone, too — and I really need her to come back, soon. This morning, I pulled enough fuzz out of there to make a posable Chewbacca figurine. If I can find a little shiny bandolier, I could totally sell it on Etsy. It already makes the noise. Which is… disturbing.

Meanwhile, I can’t get any new help around the place. I called the Underpants Gnomes to come by, but the negotiations fell through. They wanted to steal my underwear (for ‘profit!‘), and I wanted them to put them in the dirty clothes hamper. Finally, I said I didn’t care what they did with them; I just needed them out of the potted plants and the microwave by Monday. They hung up on me. Stupid unions.

So I guess I’m on my own on this one. The dog’s no help — and she’s not sharing her kibble, either. I suppose I’ll go finish off the mustard for dinner, and try making the place seem like an actual human has been living here this weekend. It’s going to be tough, but I’ll give it a shot. With no thanks to the staff. Chewie and I are going to give them a good talking to when they get back. *hhhnnnnggggglllllhhhh!!*

Permalink  |  No Comments



Hopeless Solo

This post is a miracle.

The very fact that I’m sitting in this chair and typing on a keyboard right now is itself an astonishing feat. Never mind that the words are (so far) stringing themselves together more or less coherently, and that they’re headed for my website as planned, rather than some online petition to Save Transgendered Chinchillas or a Wilford Brimley moustache appreciation page. That’s just angel-food icing on the miracle cake.

So why is this post so unlikely?

My wife is out of town for the weekend. Off to the middle of the country — the kidneys of the nation, or perhaps the gallbladder — to visit her family. But not me. Just her. Solo.

“‘Bankrupt’ is among the least of your worries, when ‘Grease Fire’, ‘Explosive Canine Heimlich’ and ‘Naked Drunk Rooftop Karaoke’ are still on the board.”

That means I’m alone here in the condo, without adult supervision, until Monday night. Already I’ve endured a night on my own — just me and the mutt, fending for ourselves. In the past, that’s been like bending over and giving the Wheel of Bad Fortune a good spin. You don’t know exactly where it’s going to land, but you know it’s bad news. ‘Bankrupt’ is among the least of your worries, when ‘Grease Fire’, ‘Explosive Canine Heimlich’ and ‘Naked Drunk Rooftop Karaoke’ are still on the board.

(I never seem to hit “Lose A Turn”. That would solve all my problems. But do I hit it? No. I never do.)

So far, the pooch and I have survived intact. Which, at the risk of repeating myself — mir-a-cle! But the path ahead is fraught with peril. We’ve barely scratched the surface of the weekend, and already things are turning for the worse. I’m working on maybe four hours of sleep here, for starters.

(I tell people that I don’t sleep well when my wife is out of town, and they say, ‘Awww. That’s so sweet!

Right. Why don’t you pop by for a visit at four-thirty in the morning, when I’m lying in bed yelling ‘Baa Baa Black Sheep‘ at the top of my lungs, running my forehead along the slats in the headboard like some suicidal xylophonist, trying to drive myself into a nice exhausted concussed coma?

Still think that’s ‘sweet’, PopTart? Then maybe you could’ve taken the 9am meeting bullet that I got popped in the forehead with this morning, and I would’ve slept till noon, instead of drooling all over myself and half the conference room during whatever the hell presentation I was mostly sleeping through.

I started awake once and made such a loud noise that everyone looked at me like I was going to ask a question. So I played it off and said, “I was just thinking that last slide was a little confusing. You could really organize that data better.

So he went back a slide. It was the acknowledgments. I wasn’t on it. Nobody saw that as ‘confusing’, particularly.)

Second, I’m already getting just a little too ‘free’ with the freedom of having the place to myself. I had leftover pizza for dinner — and I didn’t reheat it. Also, I didn’t use a plate. I just ate it right out of the foil it was wrapped in in the fridge. No napkin, either — I scarfed it down, licked my fingers and I’m good to go.

Are you getting this, people? I’m talking serious Lord of the Flies shit going on up in here. I’m seriously considering taking my beer off the coaster on my desk. Because who’s gonna tell me not to? Nobody, that’s who. I gave the dog a big fat hunk of pepperoni, so she’s on my side. That’s right.

(In the interest of full disclosure, I actually dropped the pepperoni. Because it fell off the pizza, since I didn’t warm it up. And I didn’t have a plate, or a napkin, to catch it with.

But the mutt doesn’t know that. I totally have her eating out of my hand now.)

(Which, uh… happened after I licked my fingers clean. Not before. Because that’s gross. Ew.)

The real danger, of course, is that I’m here all alone, and it’s the weekend, and I know where the beer lives. In the fridge, next to where the pizza was, and close to the six jars of mayonnaise and olives that will likely have to sustain me until Monday, now that I’ve scarfed down the leftovers.

(That was probably a bad move, in hindsight. It was most of a pizza, too. That’s probably not going to end well.

I’ve never been good at the rationing. That’s my wife’s thing. The dog and me, we’re scarfers. She rations; we scarf. Without that check in place, there’s nothing stopping us. It’s going to be empty mayo jars and olive pit shrapnel all weekend. Not pretty. Nutritionally subpar. Probably a little slippery, by the end of things.)

So just be happy — if this post makes you so — that you’ve heard anything at all from me this weekend. The next three days will likely be a blur of empty bottles, smeared condiments and a doofus dog slowly turning feral. When my wife gets back, I’ll probably be wearing the tatters of whatever I find in the linen closet, with a Castaway beard, bloodshot eyes and a face drawn on the dog’s butt to talk to. Because I’ll get tired of dealing with the other end pretty soon. It’s slobbery and hot and smells like horse meal.

And it’s eating all my goddamned pepperoni. I’ve got to go fight for what little solid food is left in the house. If I’m not back by Monday, send in a rescue team. Or a Domino’s guy. Readers’ choice.

Permalink  |  1 Comment



The Reviewer’s Choice Awards

(Program Note: I’d like to thank the good folks — Jenn and Kyle, that is — over at the Mug of Woe collection, who’ve seen fit today to cast me in their ‘Woeful Spotlight’, a weekly series featuring contributors to the MuggaWoe effort.

“And I got to mention Stairmasters, Zeus, Wal-Mart, Neiztsche and gerunds all in the same piece, which is nice.”

The spotlight is evidently black-and-white. Which is not the worst look for me, as dual colors go. And I got to mention Stairmasters, Zeus, Wal-Mart, Neiztsche and gerunds all in the same piece, which is nice. Go read. I’ll wait.

And for that matter, pick up a copy on Amazon, if you like. It’s 28% off right now, for some odd reason. You can’t afford not to buy this thing, probably. Chop chop.)

Since we’re half-spent already at this point, I’ll just share a mild but uncomfortable dilemma I’ve managed to weasel myself into tonight. That should be a hoot.

You may be aware of the Zolton Does Amazon series I’ve been writing over at ZuG.com. It’s a biweekly romp of farcical product reviews, with ridiculous scenarios played out in the virtual pages of the Amazon catalog.

(I’ve been doing it for over a year now. Approximately three people have heard about it. You? No? Outstanding.)

My favorite part about the series is that the Amazon reviews included in the pieces are real. They sit, live on Amazon, without the benefit of the ridiculous story or wildly embarrassing photos to provide context. They’re just reviews, like any other.

Mostly, that leads to some nice perks. Most people get the joke — or at least, find a joke in the reviews — and occasionally leave comments to say that they got a good laugh out of it. Those are my favorites.

Naturally, there are a few WHOOSH-tastic souls who don’t know what to make of the things. They’ve contributed conversational gems such as — and I quote:

  • This review seems very fake. Post analytical reviews.‘ (On a dozen roses. Roses.)
  • what…‘ and ‘ARE U HIGH?‘ (On itching powder. I’m guessing they were snorting the stuff.)
  • Is this a joke…?‘ (On Peppermint Patties. Hint: Yes. Yes, it is.)

And the gem of the non-plussed crowd, the comment left on a ‘review’ of Krispy Kreme doughnuts, which begins:

That is the most ridiculous and lame product rating I’ve EVER read in my 15 years of amazon shopping.

I don’t know what sort of hard-hitting, in-depth journalistic insight this person was hoping for, WHILE SHOPPING FOR MAIL-ORDER PASTRIES ONLINE, but I evidently didn’t reach the bar. Pity. Those sugar-glazed Pulitzers are the best kind of all.

Even these comments are usually good for a giggle. But then there are the outliers. There aren’t many of these — that’s why we call them outliers; try to keep up with the fancy terminology. But there are a few. Meaning people who don’t see the reviews as parody, and also don’t think to simply question the sanity of the author and treat them as fiction. Every once in a great while, someone will get into their head that the review happened exactly. As. Described.

Like this plucky fellow, who recently commented on a vuvuzela gag and ended with the flourish:

GROW UP YOU STUPID IMMATURE EXCUSE FOR A HUMAN BEING, A HEARTLESS RASCAL! ABSOLUTE CRUEL SCUMBAG!!!

Implied animal cruelty with a musical instrument apparently gets some shoppers’ bloomers in a twist. Remind me never to shove a kazoo up this guy’s hamster’s butt.

His, maybe. But the hamster — off limits.

Odd as that comment was, the topper has to be an email — not an onsite Amazon comment, but an email, to me directly — that I received this evening. It was regarding my review of a small surveillance camera, and the guy asked, in part:

How did you record the video to watch it later?

He’s got a thief he wants to catch in the act, just like in my review.

Only, my scenario didn’t really happen. And I never bought the camera. And if I had, I’d have probably dropped it or broken it or swallowed it before getting to test it out, so I have zero clue how the thing works, or whether it records video in the first place, much less saves it for future viewing enjoyment.

But the guy seems really sincere. I’m honestly not sure how to break it to him that my situation, which he says sounds a lot like his, was completely fabricated from scratch for the sake of entertainment. Plus, he clearly has interest in and access to surveillance equipment of some kind, so if I don’t break it gently, he could end up stalking me. And I don’t want that. Even tiny little cameras add twenty pounds. That’s no good.

Little help here? Anybody have some advice on how — or whether — I should respond with my ‘expertise’ on this camera thing? Because I’ve looked all over Amazon for something to get me out of this, and I’ve come up empty. After all I’ve done for that site, too. Harrumph.

Permalink  |  3 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