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Charlie Hatton
Brookline, MA



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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!

The Zolton You Never Knew You Didn’t Know

This being Sunday — and my first Sunday back at the old blog in quite a while — I thought I’d do a bit of cleaning up.

(It’s either this, or fold laundry. And my wife has forty-seven pairs of socks that she insists differ in subtle gradations of shade, pattern, wear, length and form. While I, what with owning a penis and all, see ninety-four identical socks. Not ‘midnight blue’ versus ‘indigo sky’, or ‘fleur-de-lis’ versus ‘paisley dots’. Just socks. A huge honking pile of same-looking socks that would require a microscope, a fashion consultant and a forty-page instruction manual for me to fold ‘the right way’.

I choose this. Because, you know — duh.)

So far, so good. I’ve pruned a few sidebar links to sites that appear to have ridden off into the long interweb sunset. And I ditched the couple of GoogleAds that were hanging around, cluttering up the layout. I figure most people (like myself) browse with ad blockers turned on, anyway, so nobody’s really seeing the things. For people who were seeing them, I can’t imagine they were of interest. I mean, just look back at this week — how ‘topical’ can Google make ads to fit posts about dogs defiling condo floors or the physical charms of a commercial actress from an ad campaign that hasn’t aired during the current presidential administration? If Google’s got targeted ads for that, then by god, I don’t want to see them. Or wish them on anyone else.

“I figured if you’re reading this — and you’d be interested in more outlandish tales, dubious behavior and actual photographic evidence of my possible mental instability — then you might want to follow along.”

One more positive change I wanted to mention, though, is a couple of new links in the ‘Highlights’ section of the sidebar. I mentioned quite a while back that I write periodically on the baseball ‘n’ humor site Bugs & Cranks. That’s still true; they haven’t fired me yet and the link — should your peccadillos tend toward the tarred bat handles and the flashing leather, you filthy little minx, you — remains available on the sidebar.

It’s now joined by two others, related to legendary comedy site ZuG.com.

(They call me ‘Zolton’ over there; if you’re curious why, then this — or, if you’re truly brave, this — should make things clearer.

Frighteninger, perhaps. But clearer.)

I’ve rubbed elbows and various other pointy body parts with the members of the ZuG community for a few years now on the message board, and occasionally posted a few pieces from over here to over there. But it’s only relatively recently that I started writing original articles especially for the site. The first, back in summer of ’08, was entitled “Monster Love”.

(And if you thought ‘Zolton’ was scary, then maybe feel lucky that article is lost to the ages. Lucky if you enjoy sleeping at night or managing your dating site profile, anyway.)

Beginning last summer, though, I’ve contributed a regular biweekly series of pieces called ‘Zolton Does Amazon’, wherein Zolton buys and posts reviews of products on Amazon.com, then describes the ridiculous (and possibly felonious) experience in the ZuG article. I figured if you’re reading this — and you’d be interested in more outlandish tales, dubious behavior and actual photographic evidence of my possible mental instability — then you might want to follow along.

In the interest of catching any game readers up to speed, here’s a list of the Zolton Does Amazon adventures, so far:

Ed. Note: On April 1, 2013, ZuG shut its doors, after eighteen years of yuks. Over time, I’ll be migrating my Amazon/Facebook ‘prank’ posts over here and reproducing them, with permission, from ZuG’s parent company, MediaShower. For now, please excuse the mess and the lack of tasty linkage. Danka.

(Update: For the sake of having all these links in one place — and nowhere else to put them at the moment — I’ll update this post each time a new Zolton adventure goes live on ZuG. Just so’s you know.)

So, there’s that. Hence the ZuG and Amazon links over on the sidebar.

Meanwhile, I can’t even update my template without a 500-word dissertation. Man, it’s good to be back. Happy Sunday, kiddos.

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You Can’t Teach an Old Dog New Turds

All things considered, the transition from house to condo that my wife and I made a while back went rather swimmingly. Some might say we ‘downsized’. I prefer to say that we ‘simplicized’.

(As one might do by making up a new word when the dictionary doesn’t provide the one you’re looking for. As in, say, ‘simplicized’.

Circles within circles, my friends. Circles within circles.)

To be sure, there was a bit of creative decorating involved in cramming six rooms of house furniture into four condo rooms. I ‘creatively decorated’ the inside of a dumpster with junk several times, and still we overflowed to fill our new basement storage space to the bursting point.

(With what? I still don’t have a clue — I’ve never even seen half that crap down there before. And I can’t figure out why we’d want any of it badly enough to keep it around. I’m pretty sure if we ever really need a leaky cooler or a patio chair missing a leg, I’ll be able to buy a fresh one.

I’m convinced that either my wife is secretly sneaking off to Goodwill for hoarding material, or the junk down there is somehow getting together and reproducing. I’m fully expecting to walk down there one day and find the extra curtain rods bumping uglies with our old broken toaster.

How, you ask? Awkwardly, I guess. Just like the rest of us.)

Anyway, once we took half of our worldly possessions and sold, chucked or traded them for booze, the missus and I settled into our new place like it was a soaking tub full of warm soapy water.

(Also? The new place doesn’t have a soaking tub. But I’ve heard of such things. We’ve got Kennedys hanging around the city, remember. Word gets around.)

And of course we assimilated nicely — what’s there to fight, really? We traded step shoveling, grass mowing, leaf raking, bush whacking and gutter de-glomming for… well. For less hassle, certainly. I pulled a kid’s frisbee out of the hedge beside the condo front door this summer. That’s about the closest I’ve been to ‘yard work’ in over a year.

Truth be told, the only wrinkle in our transition has to do with the mutt. It’s not as though she’s struggled with it, exactly — I frankly don’t think she’s bright enough for that — but her little furry brain and years of positive reinforcement have come back to bite my wife and I in the ass.

The problem boils down to this: In our old house, the living room led to the kitchen, the kitchen to a tiny mud room, and that room — via a doggie door — to an enclosed chain-link kennel where the dog could do her business if no walker was available. Or if, say, a walker was available, but really wanted to finish dinner first. Or was in the middle of his favorite Seinfeld rerun. Or it was cold outside, or the clouds looked ominous, or it was Saturday and I wish I could help, but the floor is lava on Sundays and the only way to save myself is to stay on the couch so I don’t spontaneously combust already.

You may get the impression that the dog spent regular ‘quality time’ visiting the kennel latrine. Very astute of you.

Now here’s the layout in our new place: the living room again leads to the kitchen, which leads to a hallway, which leads to a small room in the back of unit. Tiny little thing; you could maybe squeeze a mattress in and call it a guest bedroom — assuming you weren’t particularly fond of your guests But it’s not really made for that. As a bedroom, it’s lacking the width for a big bed, a connected closet, or room for nightstands or dressers.

But as a kennel, it’s downright luxurious. Except for that whole ‘being fully enclosed inside’ deal, which might deter one from dropping deuce in it every fricking time one felt the urge to offload a few Snausages.

The dog, I’m sorry to say, is not so deterred.

“There’s no body wash on the planet that can compete with the funk of horsemeat and rawhide that’s spent the last week up a dog intestine.”

Somehow in her kibble-stained brain, the spatial position just seems to make sense. When the Fairy Turdmother calls, she can either find one of us to take her out — or she can mosey back to that spot behind the kitchen where we always encouraged her to go, and squeeze it out there. The two choices are completely equivalent to her. And no amount of retraining, screaming or wrinkling up our noses and gagging at the rush of fresh scatwash emanating from the room has yet convinced her otherwise.

Instead, we find the doofus pooch trotting out of the back room, head bobbing and tail awag, as if to say:

Whoa, look at what I just did! Sure am glad this condo came with a poop room, too! Hey, what’s for dinner?

And we peek inside to find the latest pungent half-digested nightmare, and we grab the hazmat tongs and Lysol-brand Holy God, Let’s Mask That Stench With Lemon!™ and go to work.

I suppose it could be worse. We just have a couple of filing cabinets in that room right now. That could just as well have been the master bedroom, if the layout were a little different. Or a closet, or a pantry, or the place where the soaking tub is installed. And nobody wants that bobbing around their bathwater. There’s no body wash on the planet that can compete with the funk of horsemeat and rawhide that’s spent the last week up a dog intestine.

(Although that would make an awfully interesting Axe commercial. Someone alert the marketing weenies.)

So here we are, a year-plus into our condo tenure, and everything’s just grand. Except that we obsessively follow the dog around like she’s about to shit the second coming of Ashton Kutcher, so we can head her off at the hallway and hustle her looming turds out of the damned house. It’s a fairly constant pain in the ass, and the price of failure is twenty minutes of scrubbing, disinfecting and choking on recycled Purina-brand ass candy fumes.

And you know what? Still, it beats the hell out of shoveling snow. Doggie door or not, man I love this condo.

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The More Things Stay the Same, the More Things… Stay the Same

I’m amazed, when I look over the last few pre-hiatus posts around here, at how little has changed.

I mean, we’re told all the time that “change is inevitable”. “You can’t fight progress,” they say, usually as they’re canceling our favorite sitcom or introducing a disgusting new flavor of chewing gum.

(“Try new and improved DoubleMint Wint-O-Spleen! Your favorite chewing pastime, now with the fresh minty flavor of bile! That’s new DoubleMint Wint-O-Spleen — it’s the retchmaker!)

That’s how change works. You don’t try to stand up to it; resistance is futile. You simply brace yourself and let it crash over top of you, and pray you can get the sand out of your underpants before the next tsunami lands.

“You’d think I’d have used that time away to adopt a baby seal or join a Mexican street gang or donate a vital organ. Or something.”

But look at me. I disappear for a good year and a half, just fall right off the edge of the blog, and when I resurface… what’s changed? Nothing much. My boss hasn’t fired me, my wife hasn’t left me, my car hasn’t fallen apart or burst into flames or crawled out of its parking spot to go fight Decepticons. Even my slobbering idiot mutt is still around, barking and pooping and eating and ralphing in the worst possible places. If mid-2009 counts as ‘usual’, then I’m steadfastly rocking ‘business as’, so far as I can tell. Same as it ever was.

Truth be told, it’s a little disconcerting. I mean, I’ve had more ‘life-altering’ experiences during a weekend Winnebago trip than I can remember in the past couple of years. You’d think I’d have used that time away to adopt a baby seal or join a Mexican street gang or donate a vital organ. Or something. But no. I’m just incrementally slower, fatter and older than before. So apparently, I can fight progress — even when I’m not especially trying to.

Mind you, that’s not to say that nothing has happened since last we tangoed. The missus and I finally moved and ever-so-slowly settled into this condo. At one point, she quit — and rather impressively un-quit — her job. My penchant for ‘fat old man sports’ has led me into new, uncharted, and possibly badly sprained territories. The dog remains one fresh kitchen-floor turd away from getting the boot out into the street. And I’ve said and done some outrageously stupid things, most usually in front of the people who employ me, put up with me, or gave birth to my wife. We can talk about all of those things, any many others, in good time.

(The ones I haven’t already desperately repressed into my subconscious, that is. Or the ones covered by the various gag orders. My hands are tied there.)

But in the grand scheme of things, ‘now-Charlie’ feels remarkably like ‘then-Charlie’. We think about the same things, our cheeks rest in the same couch divot — we even use the same ridiculous made-up words and hope no porksmitten cluebags decide to chime in to call us on it. It’s kind of homey, actually.

Maybe there’s some sort of ‘personal growth’ or life change or epiphany planned for the next year and a half. Can’t say for sure. In the meantime, the status quo seems to be working out okay. I suppose I’ll just roll with it, and see whether it leads somewhere else eventually.

Unless somebody out there has a baby seal that’s up for adoption. ‘Cause if so, I am all over that bad boy. Hook me up.

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Why Call It ‘Apartment’, When We’re So Close Together?

In the spirit of picking up where I left off — that impending move I mentioned a couple of posts / years ago worked out okay in the end. I’m sure I’ll get to the particulars of our present pad in due time, but in that post, I mentioned that the missus and I were looking for a month’s worth of temporary housing. We’d somehow managed to set a sell date and a buy date, and ne’er the twain did meet.

So we went apartment hunting, for the first time in a decade. And — after a few false starts — we eventually went apartment finding. You’d think we’d have started with that step, and cut out all of the drama. But no. We’re gluttons like that.

The place we settled into — way back in August of ’09, for those of you who were, you know, born yet — was cozy enough. Where ‘cozy’ means ‘cramped like Kevin Smith stuffed into a Southwest Air overhead bin’.

(Yes, I know that happened over a year ago. I’ve had nowhere handy to offload these jokes since then. Deal with it.)

“We reached an accord. I peed a little blood. We moved on.”

As ‘efficiency’ apartments go, it was certainly true to its name. The front door of our second-floor unit opened directly into the combination bedroom/storage area/TV parlor, which led to the hallway/kitchen, which flowed through to the living/dining/ironing/computering/laundry folding nook. Not to mention the bathroom/pantry/sauna/gymnasium, or the little space at the top of the stairs they tried to sell as a ‘basketball arena’. Fifteen rooms, all in the space of one lean-in closet!

(Right. And my welcome mat is the Rose Bowl. Remind me never to look for real estate in the hippie granola area near Harvard Square again. All that free-spirit ‘imaginizing’ tends to creep into the listing sheets.)

Still, the missus and I weren’t averse to a bit of spartan living. All our stuff was in storage, anyway, so it’s not like we needed space for anything. The fridge held two six-packs, we had laps for our laptops, and the pantry showers were generally warm. As little space as there was, we really didn’t feel squished at all.

Well… except.

See, we rented the place furnished, so we were at the mercy of whatever stuff had been pre-crammed into the scant space available. That included the bed, which was beautiful with an ornately crafted real wooden headboard and footboard, each at least two feet tall. I thought they were wonderful; I had no beef with the bed boards. My problem was all about the space between them. Or lack thereof.

I’m not sure what sort of mattress size comes five-and-a-half feet long — I’m guessing it’s ‘Petite’, or ‘Smurfy’, or maybe ‘DeVito’ — but that’s the kind of mattress they managed to fit on the bed. Sadly, I came in queen or king size — six feet and a couple of inches — so there was no possible way I was going to fit, non-fetally, on top of that mattress. And because of the looming solid wooden barriers guarding either end, I wasn’t hanging off the thing, either.

My first solution was to sleep diagonally. My wife countered my move by punching me repeatedly in the kidneys after I repeatedly violated ‘The Neutral Zone’ with my legs. We reached an accord. I peed a little blood. We moved on.

The next night, I tried wrapping up in a tight little ball. And slept about as well as you might expect a fat gangly giraffe with bruised organs trying to impersonate an armadillo to sleep. Also, I kept forgetting that I was sleeping in a goddamned wooden shoebox, and banged my feet and ankles against the bottom every time I moved. Which was about as often as you might expect an ostrich trying to sleep inside a cherry-wood briefcase to toss and turn. Approximately.

(That’s an awful lot of animal metaphors right in a row. Sorry. I’ll try to keep the ‘Wild Kingdom’ in my pants — at least until this post is done.

Speaking of which…)

The third night, I went with stretching my legs out up on top of the footboard. That wasn’t especially comfortable, and had the unfortunate effect of pooling most of my blood somewhere in the groin area. That tends to make a guy a mite… ‘frisky‘.

You might think that’s not such an ‘unfortunate’ thing, what with the missus close by and my internal organs mostly healed. You’d be forgetting that by that point, both my legs were solidly asleep and completely useless for any sort of maneuvering, frisky or otherwise. I’ll let you do the math.

(And just be glad I swore off the animal metaphors already. Because the image of a paraplegic horny walrus comes vividly to mind, and I’m certain you do not want to think about that.

Oh. Sorry.)

Anyway, long story short, I spent the rest of the month sleeping on the couch in the living/dining/ironing/dreamcatcher/moonbeam closet. It wasn’t any longer than the bed, but at least it was made of lumpy cushions and naugahyde, instead of blocks of wood.

And probably hemp. It’s always the hemp with these people.

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Episode IV: A New Dope

So. It’s been a little while.

There was a time when I was writing every day here — come rain, shine or plagues of locusts.

(To be fair, the plagues of locusts never actually happened. Though I do remember walking home one day and having a ladybug fly down the back of my shirt.

And I wrote an entry that day, dammit. Granted, I ran around my yard for twenty minutes first, screaming ‘Get it out, get it out, GET IT OOOOOOUT!!

But I wrote. That’s what you call “commitment”.)

Then I moved to an ‘every weekday’ model, and then ‘two or three times a week’. And now, finally, I appear to be on a schedule that has me writing once every… well. Once every twenty months, apparently.

At that rate, let’s hope there are no ‘two-parters’, eh?

“Finally, I had an epiphany. Or a seizure brought on by watching a tight loop of ‘milky minutes’ in slow-motion one too many times.”

Actually, I can explain my prolonged absence. You see, there are times in a person’s life when a question of Great Importance presents itself, and commands full and undivided attention until it can be fully resolved. All other endeavors — sleep, food, work, sex, hobbies — take a back seat to the unwavering desire to answer one of life’s great mysteries, to unravel a riddle that could offer a glimpse into the very nature of being, of existence, and of our place in the universe.

That’s what happened to me. One warm summer night in mid-June ’09, as I sat innocently drinking with a couple of friends in a local bar, one of them posed a query that simply couldn’t be ignored:

“Hey, that mom character in those rollover minute commercials — you think she’s hot? Or not?”

So began a nearly two-year odyssey of relentless research, aesthetic evaluation and self-discovery. Is ‘hotness’ defined by objective criteria? Can we comprehend the true nature of beauty? If the commercial isn’t in HD, does it still count? And how many rollover minutes are we talking here, anyway?

Finally, I had an epiphany. Or a seizure brought on by watching a tight loop of ‘milky minutes’ in slow-motion one too many times. Whichever. The important thing is, I answered the question. Rollover minute mom is, indeed, ‘hot’.

As opposed to ‘not’. With a 92% confidence interval and a p-value within the bounds of sampling error.

So, there you go. Statistics don’t lie. They just take a couple of years for a doofus like me to sort out on a calculator. So nobody fricking ask me about the Orbit gum lady, or that goosebumpy chick who seems to enjoy Peppermint Patties so much, and maybe we’ll get some updates around here for a change.

In the meantime — what did I miss?

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HomeAboutArchiveBestShopEmail © 2003-15 Charlie Hatton All Rights Reserved
Highlights
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Me on Science (silly):
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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
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Wheel of Misfortune
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Selected Clips:
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  04/30/05: Goodfellaz
  04/09/05: Com. Studio
  01/28/05: Com. Studio
  12/11/04: Emerald Isle
  09/06/04: Connection

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Selected Things:
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  #7: My Name
  #11: My Spelling Bee
  #35: My Spring Break
  #36: My Skydives
  #53: My Memory
  #55: My Quote
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  #91: My Family
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