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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!

Into the Flix Mix

My wife decided we should join Netflix. Right now, in 2007. That’s just how hip and bleeding-edge we are. Next thing you know, we’ll be buying ourselves cell phones and motorized vehicles and trying out that ‘indoor plumbing’ thing all the kids are raving about these days.

Still, it’s better to have joined the party late — very late in this case, like when the host is flicking the lights on and off and cleaning up the empties — than to have never joined at all. My wife says she’s tired of people asking her, ‘Ooh, did you see that movie?,’ and always having to answer:

Nope. Never did.

“That’s just how hip and bleeding-edge we are. Next thing you know, we’ll be buying ourselves cell phones and motorized vehicles and trying out that ‘indoor plumbing’ thing all the kids are raving about these days.”

I told her she should just do what I do — lie. It’s not a pop quiz, after all. If you say you’ve seen a movie, your friend isn’t going to ask you which character jumps off a bridge in the scene after the car chase involving the circus clown in the hearse.

(“It was a trick question! The car chase had an ice cream truck; you never saw the movie at all, you big fat liar. Liar!”)

But the missus doesn’t approve of my methods. She wants to actually be able to discuss the movie with other people. In her mind, that means engaging in critical discourse about plot progression, dissecting the motivations of each character, and waxing poetic about comparative cinematography. For this, apparently, you need to actually see the film first.

(For the record, I like to discuss movies, too. The way guys discuss movies, like this:

Some Guy: Hey, you see that movie?

Me: Yeah.

Some Guy: What’d you think?

Me: It was okay. But dude — that chick.

Some Guy: The one with the boobs?

Me: Yeah. She was hot!

Some Guy: Yeah. Kick ass.

My way doesn’t actually require either of us to have seen the movie, or even heard of it before. Frankly, the movie doesn’t even have to exist.

Because hot chicks with boobs kick ass. Some truths are universal.)

Personally, I’m okay with joining the Netflix horde. I’m a little concerned that the mailman will have another reason to sneer over his glasses at me when my choices arrive, but with any luck they won’t plaster the names of the movies all over the packaging.

(“‘Teenage Mutant Nympho Turtles’, eh? Go figure. Freak.”)

But I think my wife’s overlooking one teensy but rather important point. The reason we don’t watch many movies, as a rule, is that we generally don’t have time to watch movies. And not just the ‘spend an extra hour driving to the theater and barfing up popcorn’ kind of movies, either. We usually can’t cobble together an hour and a half of spare time to watch movies in the comfort of our own house. I’ve got six movies, right now, TiVoed from HBO that everyone on the planet has seen. Except us. And they’ve been there for weeks.

(“You haven’t seen ‘Pirates of the Caribbean‘? Or ‘Lord of the Rings‘? You poor, backwards little man. Doesn’t your cave get pay per view?”)

So now we’ll have an entirely new way to not watch movies that we wish we’d seen. First, we’ll miss them in the theater, then we’ll ignore them on HBO, and finally we’ll leave them on our coffee table until we accidentally mistake them for coasters, break them, and pay thirty bucks for each DVD broken. And we still won’t know who jumps off the bridge, what sort of vehicles are in the big car chase, or whether the clown ever makes it back to Vegas for the big show.

All we’ll know is that the hot chick with the boobs kicks ass. I guess it’ll just have to do.

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The Looming of the Lambs?

It’s amazing how a little disruption can alter your everyday perceptions.

We’re doing a bit of painting around Chez Charlie this week. Three rooms are going under the brush and roller, so three rooms of domesticated clutter have been moved into three other rooms, which were already full of domesticated clutter. So now they’re packed to the wainscoting with domesticated clutter, and three rooms stand empty save for trampled tarps and painting paraphernalia. It’s unsettling.

Also, I lied a little white lie. We’re actually having the painting done, by a pro. In our defense, we’d normally tackle a job like this ourselves, but it’s just not feasible right now. My wife is wicked busy with school and work and the burdens of a neurotic scatterbrained husband. And I… well, I just don’t want to paint the stupid rooms. I’ve got other things to do, like writing and complaining and being unsettled by newly-cluttered rooms. Clearly, my dance card is full here.

“Up is down, right is left, your dishes are in the living room, your desk is in the kitchen, and your favorite bookcase is stuffed into the guest bathroom toilet. Utter chaos.”

At any rate, the painters went to work today. We cleared one room of furniture, thinking they’d start there and work their linear little selves through the house systematically. But no. Painters are, at heart, artistes, and these particular artistes deemed it necessary to pile all of our belongings in the remaining paint-thirsty rooms into our office and bedroom, respectively. And that’s not just unsettling. It’s downright freaky.

Just for instance, imagine this scenario. Let’s say you spend three years or so walking into your bedroom, with no large shadowy figures looming over you. This is a bedroom without overhead lights, mind you. You can walk all the way around the bed to get at the nightstand lamp — and you often do, when there are no large shadowy figures looming over you. Which there never have been. For three years. Not even once.

You with me on this one? No looming. Zippo.

Now let’s say an unruly pack of creative artistes whirls through your house, mingling the various contents of your rooms all higgledy-piggledy into different places. Up is down, right is left, your dishes are in the living room, your desk is in the kitchen, and your favorite bookcase is stuffed into the guest bathroom toilet. Utter chaos.

But let’s also say that you know these artistes, these Dutch Boy desperados, aren’t painting your bedroom. Whatever shock and dismay you feel at seeing the rest of your home twistered up like a toppled-over Tennessee trailer, you know your bedroom is safe. It is your sanctuary, your haven. An orderly Eden in a sea of disarray.

Those were my thoughts as I made my way, dizzy and bewildered, up the stairs. Maybe it was the unfamiliar clutter and odd juxtapositions that got to me. Wine glasses next to shoeboxes? Bed pillows sitting on dining room chairs? Dogs and cats living in harmony? Peace in the Middle East? Donald Trump and Rosie O’Donnell bumping uglies?

(See? You’d be dizzy too. I told you.)

Maybe it was the barren and empty rooms, instead. Or just the paint fumes charging through the house. At any rate, I stumbled upstairs for a nice quiet lie down in my safe cozy bed. I stepped into the bedroom, took one step, and there it was — the looming.

I wigged out mid-step, like Cosmo Kramer play-testing a defibrillator. I did my best to stifle a girly shriek, and slid back out of the room, away from the looming, to catch my breath.

The bastards had rolled up a rug and deposited it three feet inside my bedroom doorway. If the thing had fallen on me by chance, I’d still be lying there right now, with an exploded heart and bravely soiled underpants. Instead I gathered myself, ignoring the dog’s snickering, and strolled confidently into my bedroom.

And immediately banged my shin on an end table. Which they’d moved, so they could fit the futon on the other side. Que desperados!

I spent the next hour clearing a path through a jumble of my own stuff, and finally had my lie down. It was just what I needed, very relaxing — until I opened my eyes to two peepers full of looming.

Goddamn rug. Was there nowhere else they could put that?

The missus and I spent the rest of the evening tidying up as best we could. We’ll have another few days of living with the mess, and then we can put it back for good. Assuming we don’t get sick of looking at it and chuck it in the trash, that is. I don’t care how nice your

‘stuff’ is; when you pile it all together in one corner of a room, it becomes ‘junk’. Half our house looks like Buffalo Bill’s basement from the Silence of the Lambs. I’m afraid to venture into our cellar for fear there’s someone there to rub the lotion on my skin or give me the hose.

At least then I’d know where to find the lotion and the hose. Lord knows I can’t find anything else in this heap of jumbled-up jetsam.

Meanwhile, I never did move that stupid rug out of our bedroom. And it’s bedtime. Sure, I know the thing is there now. But it’s going to be a hell of a rude awakening in the morning, with that carpet doing its looming thing again. If we start trashing our stuff, that rug is the first thing on the curb.

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R-O-C-K-B-O-T-T-O-M on a Triple Word Score

I’ve reached a new low.

You can’t imagine how difficult that is for me. At this point in life, my lowest lows have been pretty darned low. I’ve got earthworms looking at my lows and saying, ‘What is that, way down there?‘ I thought reaching a new low at this stage would require three donkeys, a tub of Crisco, and at least a class ‘C’ felony.

I was wrong.

All it took was a few silicon chips, a comfortable couch, and a few moments of boredom. And a Scrabble CD-ROM.

That’s right. I’m playing Scrabble now. On my laptop. All by myself. On several recent nights, I’ve found myself sitting on the couch, with the entire world available to me. I could watch TV. I could write. I could venture forth among the masses and make my fortune. Or I could pour a stiff margarita and drink myself stupid. All of these avenues and more are open to me, but what do I think to myself instead?

Gee. Might be fun to play Scrabble. With no one in particular.

Dorkalicious, thy name is Charlie. Somebody choke me with a letter ‘Z’ tile, please.

“Sadly, I only know twelve words — and six of those are euphemisms for breasts. If I don’t have two ‘O’s on my rack, I’m pretty much out of luck.”

The thing is, all nerdiness aside, it’s not even fun to play Scrabble against a computer. It’s challenging, sure, and it makes you think, but it’s hardly fair. It’s like playing basketball against the tall mean kid who used to hold the ball over your head and make you jump for it on the playground. Even if you win, you know it’s not for real. It’s just the bully throwing you the occasional bone to keep you coming back for more abuse. That’s not ‘fun’. That’s evil.

The software is really devious in that department, too. It’s not at all like playing a human. With a person, you can be fairly sure that if the first five words your opponent plays are ‘CAT’, ‘TREE’, ‘LID’, ‘FOOT’, and ‘UP’, the sixth is not likely to be something like ‘QINDARKA’ or ‘URAEMIA’. Oh, I’m a emia, am I? Well screw you, Mr. Smartypants word expert. Screw you and the qindarka you rode in on. Ass.

Of course, the other problem is that against a computer, there’s no way to cheat. Not that I want to cheat, mind you. If I could compete without cheating at a level above your average crack-addled tree squirrel, then that’s just what I’d do. Sadly, I only know twelve words — and six of those are euphemisms for breasts. If I don’t have two ‘O’s on my rack, I’m pretty much out of luck.

(Heh. I said ‘rack‘. That makes seven.)

If you’re playing a flesh and blood opponent, a shameful and crippling lack of vocabulamary can be overcome. You can plop down a bunch of gibberish tiles, lean in to calculate your score, and simply play it cool when your bluff is called. That’s what I do.

Opponent: Um… what’s a ‘FLYXMUK’, exactly?

Me: Flyxmuk? Oh, you’ve never heard of flyxmuk. Well, that’s the noise that’s made when a wildebeest sneezes.

Opponent: A wildebeest. Really.

Me: That’s right. It’s from Swahili, originally. Flyxmuk.

Opponent: I see. Swahili.

Me: It’s a technical term. Medical, really. I hear these sorts of things. You know, in my line of work.

Opponent: You see a lot of wildebeest sneezes around the office, do you?

Me: Well, you know… tangentially. One of our interns is part Swahili, I think.

Opponent: An intern.

Me: Well, her grandmother’s from Morocco, anyway. Or Moldavia. Memphis? One of those places.

Opponent: Right. I’m looking it up. There’s no way in hell that’s a word.

Me: Sorry, you can’t.

Opponent: I can’t?

Me: No. I… um, lost your dictionary. In the garbage disposal, earlier. Tragic accident, really. You’ll just have to trust me. Come on — would I lie about Scrabble?

Opponent: Harrumph..

Me: Ooh, and on a triple word score, too. God bless those hayfevered overgrown goats!

That’s how you win at Scrabble. Shred the dictionary and lie through your ignorant teeth. That’s how I win, anyway. Your mad lexicographical skillz may vary.

But it all goes out the window when you’re up against a computer. You can’t talk your way out of a ‘Does Not Compute!‘ error. A lump of cold, heartless steel and circuitry can’t be convinced or cajoled or fooled by hastily concocted ‘definitions’ scribbled in crayon on the back cover of Webster’s.

(“It’s an addendum! That’s how they addend it!

Yeah. That one doesn’t even work on people.

I may need to find dumber friends.)

Anyway, the point is that I’m officially a geek, and now I’ve truly hit rock solid bottom in my geekiness. Not only am I playing Scrabble — in my free time, mind you, not as some ‘community service’ mandated by the state — but I’m playing alone. And not cheating, which means I’m also losing. Alone.

For the love of a respectable social life, what shame could possibly be next? Dance Dance Revolution by myself in the basement? Jenga for one? Solitaire Clue?

Well, that last one I could win. The dork did it. On the computer. With the FLYXMUK. Gesundheit.

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Straighten Up and Fly Right

I was talking to some friends earlier who are flying to the West Coast for a few days. As the conversation wrapped up, I wished them a good time and caught myself almost repeating the words my mother always tells me before I fly:

Have a safe flight.

I’m glad I caught myself, because my mother always says it, it’s never made any sense to me, and I don’t know what the hell it means. And I don’t want to burden my friends with this sort of cryptic mumbo-jumbo before their vacation. If I do, they won’t bring me back a souvenir T-shirt, or little airplane bottles of booze. That would be tragic.

So I’m left on my own to ponder the meaning of this riddle, this koan for the friendly skies. At first, I thought she meant to say:

Here’s hoping you have a safe flight.

“If I make it to the destination gate with a heartbeat, a hangover, and half my luggage, I’ll call it a win.”

Which is nice. Because what could be better, just before you board an airplane, than for a friendly soul to mention that they hope your plane isn’t torn to flaming shreds on takeoff, or has an engine plotz at thirty thousand feet, or gets hijacked by an angry pack of Bolivian banditos brandishing ceramic machetes and unfiltered cigarillos? I’m trying not to think about those things while I’m crammed into my sardine seat and munching my three salted peanuts. For heaven’s sake, don’t hand me a kernel of doubt that the airlock door didn’t close all the way, or the landing gear wasn’t screwed on tight, or that the vacuum-seal toilet might suck me into space.

I’ve got plenty enough to worry about with cramming an overnight bag into a space under my seat the size of a fetal chinchilla, and making sure never to touch elbows with the jackasses next to me trying to bogart my arm rests. Screw ‘safe’; I plan on drinking enough of those little bitty booze bottles to forget all about ‘safe’. If I make it to the destination gate with a heartbeat, a hangover, and half my luggage, I’ll call it a win.

Surely, no one would intentionally cause that kind of anxiety. She is my mother, but there are limits. Lines of social decorum and such.

So eventually, I decided what she meant was:

You have a safe flight, and do anything you can to make it safe.

Again, the logic seem questionable. Should I really do anything it takes to have a safe flight?

I could walk down the aisles pointing out the emergency exits and demonstrating the oxygen masks — but I don’t really want to. And no one else wants me to, either. People have a fairly instinctive notion at this point that the ‘exits’ are located more or less in the vicinity of the doors. And if there’s an emergency and someone’s wearing their mask backwards, or upside down, or around their waist like a fanny pack, screw ’em. Frankly, they deserve to die. Darwinism, now boarding at gate C12. All rows, all passengers.

Besides, we have stewardesses and male sky waitresses to sort those details out for us. If I really wanted insurance for a safe flight, I’d contribute something they’re not likely to have on hand. Like, say, bringing along spare airplane parts, in case of equipment failure.

But I don’t see that working out very well. I can just imagine the conversation at the security gate:

Security Guard: Sir, there seems to be a large metal object in your carry-on bag. Can you identify that, please?

Me: Oh, that’s just an altimeter.

Security Guard: An altimeter, sir?

Me: Yeah. A Boeing 767 altimeter.

Security Guard: Sir, why are you carrying a Boeing 767 altimeter in your carry-on bag?

Me: You know, in case something goes wrong up there. In the cockpit. Some sort of fire or malfunction or explosion or something.

Security Guard: Sir?

Me: Yes?

Security Guard: Please step into this room. And prepare to be ‘boarded’.

That would go against my primary goal when visiting an airport, which is to not endure a body cavity search. I don’t care if the planes are late, the food is bad, and the beers are watered down — just keep those little gloved piggies out of my orifices, please. The only cavity I ever want searched is my mouth. And then only with a tongue, and only by my wife.

(It’s like a little game. Sometimes I hide things in there for her to find. Like a mint, or a little note, or tied-off balloons filled with heroin. Good times.)

Luckily for all involved, I stopped short of telling my friends to ‘have a safe flight’. But I had to say something. So I gave them the best flying advice possible:

“Get drunk. Sleep on the plane. If you can’t sleep, have sex in the bathroom. Bon voyage.”

Now that’s the kind of advice they should work into the posted placards and crew member instructions. Leave ‘safe’ to the pilot and crew. They don’t come to your office and do your work; why meddle about in their business? I can almost hear the call from the flight deck now:

Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We’ve reached our cruising altitude of thirty thousand feet. We’ll be back on the ground in about two hours and fifteen minutes, and we’ll be dimming the cabin lights for you.

You are now free to get hammered and boink it in the lavatory. Thanks for flying.

That’s my kind of friendly skies. I don’t care how safe it isn’t. All aboard.

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Woofin’ It

Sometimes I think life must be pretty frustrating for my dog.

Oh, she has it pretty good around here. A warm blanket in every room, tasty animal parts to chew on, three square kibbles a day… come to think of it, the dog’s better off than I am. I can’t even remember the last time I chewed on a tasty animal part. Sometimes I sneak one of the mutt’s Snausages, just out of jealousy.

(Look like Combos. Taste like horse breath. Frankly, it’s a little unsettling.

And probably not the best idea for a marketing campaign.)

Still, I imagine it gets frustrating for our pampered little pooch now and then. Most of her needs are attended to — but if they aren’t, she has only one recourse.

Woof.

“Of course, we have no way of knowing an ’emergency woof’ from a ‘gee, I bet that retriever’s ass next door smells mighty good right now woof’.”

That’s it. No matter what she wants, she’s limited to a one-trick attention-getter. Oh, she can stare at you first, with an expectant, hopeful furrow in that fuzzy brow of hers. But all that says to me is:

Hey. I’m about to need something. If you’re interested in my needs, you should probably wrap up what you’re doing now, so you’ll be properly available and attentive when the time comes.

Right. If I were a butler, I might consider that sort of thing. Maybe if I moonlighted as a Wimbledon ball boy. Or was married to a nymphomaniac with ADD. These are situations where prepping frantically to meet an anticipated ‘need’ might be appropriate.

But just because Fido feels a piddle coming on? Canine, please. Don’t let the doggie door smack you in the ass on the way out.

Still, there are times when the mutt has an emergency, and we’d like her to alert us. If she feels a particularly pressing Purina poop brewing, for instance. If, say, the TiVo was on fire. Or if little Timmy fell into a well. Another well.

(Seriously, couldn’t those people just buy bottled water or something and board up those freaking wells? Lassie spent half her time fetching the kid out of those things. It’s just damned lucky the family didn’t have an outhouse, or a septic tank.

I’m beginning to think little Timmy was mildly retarded. Something to keep an eye on in the reruns.)

Of course, we have no way of knowing an ’emergency woof’ from a ‘gee, I bet that retriever’s ass next door smells mighty good right now woof’. That has to be frustrating for our little canine communicator. Sometimes, she’ll fix us with a desperate earnest stare, and lean in close as though she’s explaining something very delicate and important. And what we hear is:

Woof.

That’s when we play the guessing game with her. Naturally, the dog doesn’t respond to English conversation, outside of a handful of simple commands and any word that rhymes with ‘treat’. We can ask her mostly anything, and whether we get it wrong or get it right or tell her, ‘A sphincter says woof?‘, all we’ll ever get out of her is:

Woof.

It’s like asking chimpanzees to play Wheel of Fortune. Any genuine progress is purely a matter of luck, and even if the ‘Food and Drink‘ answer happens to be ‘banana’, they’ll never put two and two together. At least the dog doesn’t fling poo during our conversations. Mostly.

The dog does enjoy one advantage with her limited language capabilities, though. If she can’t make us understand, she can never be certain we’ve said ‘no’ to whatever she’s yipping about. If you didn’t know German, could you safely say ‘nein‘ to any proposal? Nein doch! Of course you couldn’t.

So what if the dog is really saying:

This bark means if you say the word ‘no’, I’m going to poop on your pillow while you’re at work tomorrow.

I don’t speak dog. How would I know? And am I willing to risk terrier turds on my Tempur-Pedic to find out? Hardly.

So maybe the dog isn’t as frustrated as I thought. With one cryptic guttural yowl, she can ‘say’ anything. We can’t refute her, say she never warned us, or indeed decipher anything about what she’s getting at. With her one-woof-fits-all approach to life, she has access to anything she wants.

Unlike me. I’m the fully-enunciating literate articulate one who can explain exactly what I want, and I never get it. Don’t walk in the flower bed, I tell her. Stop chewing up my good shoes, I say. And for the love of Alpo, stop pooping on my pillow!

Does she listen? No. Does she learn? Never. Does she look frustrated?

Not one damned bit.

From now on, I’m taking a page out of the mutt’s book. When I want something, I’ll woof. If I get it, I’ll woof again. If I don’t get it, I’ll woof again. If I get something of equal or greater value in cash, cash equivalents, store credit, or gift cards?

Woof.

Hey, I’m no idiot. It all comes down the age-old saying: ‘If you can’t beat ’em, woof ’em.’ When the dog barks, I’ll bark back until we’re both hoarse and exhausted and she forgets about what the hell she wanted in the first place. It’s genius.

And if that doesn’t work, I’ll poop on her pillow. Either way, it should be a lot less work than I’m doing now. And that’s something to ‘woof!‘ about.

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