(First, the science. Secondhand SCIENCE, specifically. This week, we dig into XOR, which isn’t quite as UFO-alien-probey as it sounds. Promise.)
Have you heard about Magicland?
Why, it’s just the 16th most popular family-owned theme park in northwestern Ohio, and the pride and joy of park owner Frank Skinkerelli — sadly, recently deceased in an unfortunate Tilt-a-Whirl incident. It’s now the angst and bewilderment of Frank’s son, Jake Skinkerelli — recent business school graduate, carny mark and corn dog enthusiast.
Magicland is also an upcoming webseries written, produced and directed by Jenn Dlugos and myself, and acted, filmed, designed and scored by a wonderful team of talented folks you can visit at the Magicland page at Drinkstorm Studios.
Hungry for more? (Or maybe a corn dog?) Then have a gander at our brand-new Magicland webseries trailer, and keep an eye out for the first episodes on the website soon. It’s Skinkerrific!
Permalink | No Comments(Don’t call it a comeback! Because… well, it isn’t a comeback. It’s just Secondhand SCIENCE, as usual.
This week, we’re touching gloves and punching above the belt with the knockout mouse, which is not at all like Mike Tyson, and apparently also not like cats. Ding-ding-ding!)
It’s budget planning time for the higher-ups in my office, and they’ve asked all us desk monkeys for our “wish lists” for the next fiscal year.
I thought that sounded great. So I sent my Amazon wish list to the CEO. It was mostly filled with Bloom County books and seasons of Futurama.
My wish list is filled, that is. Not the CEO. I assume.
I got a note back from his secretary saying I’d misunderstood — they’re asking about our wish list for things relevant to the job.
Of course. I apologized, made some adjustments and sent the link to my amended wish list. It’s now made up of Dilbert anthologies and an Office Space DVD.
“She didn’t care. Lady probably eats at Chotchkie’s.”
She said I still wasn’t getting it. I asked if she realized that was the Collector’s Edition of Office Space. With director commentary.
She didn’t care. Lady probably eats at Chotchkie’s.
The next day, someone from HR came to my desk to explain what they’re after. Apparently, “wish list” in this context only applies to wishes for items that can be used at the office and would make my work more productive. No problem.
Me: An Ali Baba rock.
HRer: A what?
Me: A big rock I can put over the cubicle entrance, that only moves if I say “Open, sesame!” Like Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves.
HRer: How would that improve productivity?
Me: Nobody could come in and bother me, for one. Also, I wouldn’t have to retaliate against Carl every morning for rebooting my machine.
HRer: IT does that. It’s a security thing.
Me: Oh.
HRer: What have you been doing to Carl?
Me: Nothing?
HRer: Are you the one who put bees in his filing cabinet?
Me: Maybe Carl’s a closet beekeepist, I don’t know. Can we get back to my rock?
In the end, HR rejected my Ali Baba rock on three counts:
1. They thought I only wanted it so I could make Easter resurrection jokes every time I left my cubicle, even though that was only 80% of the reason, max.
2. They said everybody would know the “open, sesame!” password and get in, anyway. I offered to reset it to something like “boogerjuggler” that was harder to guess, but they didn’t go for it.
3. Apparently, Ali Baba rocks don’t actually exist. Not in any of the vendor catalogs the company uses, at least. Though I’m pretty sure Sharper Image has one. They have to.
Also, HR made me send Carl a gift basket to apologize. I found one with twelve kinds of assorted honey. From bees. Because to hell with Carl.
Finally, my boss got involved. She insisted this is a good opportunity, so I should think of something that makes work easier, can be bought for the office and actually exists outside the world of fairy tales. And also isn’t alcohol, which negated my next twelve ideas. It was tricky, but I finally found it:
A pony.
It makes perfect sense. Ponies trot faster than I walk, so trips to the break room will be much faster. When people do come to ask me something, they’ll get distracted by it and I won’t have to pay attention to them. And I can keep gum and snacks and possibly Dilbert anthologies in saddlebags strapped over it, so I won’t have to go to the vending machines or surf Amazon any more.
Of course, my boss protested that the office can’t take care of a pony. But it couldn’t be simpler:
Throw some hay under my desk. The pony can sleep there at night, and we’ll share it when I’m taking secret lunchtime naps.
Ponies eat carrots. We have bananas in the break room, which are basically the same size and color, so that’s taken care of. Also, most of the Splenda packets by the coffee machine are dried up into little cube shapes already, when it’s time for a special treat.
Everybody will help groom it. Who walks to a staff meeting and passes a pony without brushing its mane? Nobody. Maybe the Grinch. Or Hitler. That’s it. Nobody else.
If you can train a horse to pull a wagon, then surely you can potty train an office pony to use the toilet. And even if it’s not perfect, the state of the bathroom still isn’t getting any worse. Our office is a block from a burrito shop. Some days it’s like Jackson Pollock pooped a painting in there.
My case is pretty ironclad, I’d say. I haven’t heard back yet, but I’m confident that come next quarter, I’ll have my very own productivity-boosting, gum-vending, banana-munching toilet-pooping office pony to work with. It’s practically a done deal.
And Carl asked for more RAM for his computer. Jesus, Carl. Get in the game, already.
Permalink | No Comments(There are only three certainties in life. Two of them are death, and Secondhand SCIENCE. I forget the third; it might be Donald Trump’s hairpiece. I’ll get back to you on that.
In the meantime, put off death and check the other thing for something far less sure: the latest post, about the uncertainty principle. It’s the most prison-film talk you’ll get in your science reading this week, I’m pretty certain of that.
Hey, maybe that was the third thing. Neat.)
Last weekend, the missus and I took off for a long weekend to celebrate.
(Celebrate what, exactly? Who the hell knows?
At our age, every week is the anniversary of something important or other, probably. Maybe it was twenty years since our first time sharing potato skins. I don’t know. Who am I, Cupid O’Remembercrap?)
Anyway, we went off to celebrate, part of which was a reservation to have dinner together inside a lighthouse.
“I expect next year I’ll be gifting her a poem scrimshawed onto whalebone or something.”
Because this is New England. That’s the sort of shit you do, if you live here long enough. I expect next year I’ll be gifting her a poem scrimshawed onto whalebone or something. Assuming the sea — or Pablo Sandoval — hasn’t swallowed me whole by then. Yar.
Now, this lighthouse thing is sort of a special deal. It’s an old “range light” in Newburyport, Mass., which sits in town near the marina — so it’s not perhaps as “lighthousy” as one might immediately imagine. If you have a picture in your head of some grump swaddled in overcoats and muttonchop sideburns trudging out a barren peninsula to Ye Olde Beacone Lighte, that’s not exactly what this is. There’s a Thai restaurant in the next building over, and a bar next door you can climb down and visit, if you have to pee.
“Lonely lighthouse”, this ain’t, is what I’m saying.
Technically, it’s no longer a lighthouse at all. A few years ago, they took the light and lens out of the fourth-floorish chamber, and replaced it with a single table, cushioned benches, two dozen battery-powered candles and a pile of menus from local restaurants. A party of two — or four, if you really enjoy each others’ laps — can rent the space for an evening, and have a fresh-delivered meal overlooking the bay, just in time for sunset. It’s pretty spectacular.
(Unless you’re afraid of heights. Or bays. Or sunsets. Then less spectacular, one would imagine. But still memorable.)
Because it’s necessarily “exclusive” — in the sense that no more than four people can exist in the space at one time without running out of breathing air — this is the kind of place that you’d usually like to keep a lid on. Don’t spread the word too far. Keep the riff-raff away, that sort of thing.
But what the hell. We’ve already been there, so what do I care? Knock yourself out. Honestly, it’s a ball.
(It was even named as one of the “Top 35 Things to Do” by Yankee Magazine, apparently. Which is the most non-specific and arbitrary list I believe I’ve ever heard of. Why 35, precisely? And why “things to do”? Was “stuff” already taken by Mumbling Teen Weekly?:
“Do you like stuff, and junk? Well, here’s 47 1/3 stuffs you might like, and junk.”
This is in no way meant to impugn the lighthouse. Yankee Magazine sounds like an idiot, is all.)
Of course, I can’t go anywhere on the planet without feeling self-conscious and uncomfortable — but I had my work cut out for me here. For most of the time, it was just me and my wife, and I’ve already too many enough dumb and awkward things around her to worry about one more. I could have come to dinner dolled up like “Captain” Danny Noonan from Caddyshack, and it wouldn’t have cracked my personal “Top 35 Idiot Moves My Wife Will Never Let Me Forget”.
Also, I would have been fabulous. And nautically fabulous, too, which is one of the best kinds.
Anyway, nothing we did up there made me uncomfortable. So by the entree course, I settled on feeling guilty about our host, who spent his evening taking our orders, running them to the restaurant, and schlepping the trays of takeout up a tiny spiral staircase and a ladder, through a three-foot hatch in the floor and up to us. They’ve “got it down to a science”, according to him, after a few years of dinner hosting — but damn, it seems like a lot of work. And stairs. And eventually, the poor guy’s going to catch a sleeve on the ladder and dump poached halibut all over his own head. If he hasn’t already.
In all, I think he made five trips, including the first where he led us up and set the table while we slid out a hatchway onto the outside porch. Or light-veranda or cat-fish-walk, or whatever the hell it’s called by old seamen on their “Top 35 Nautical Terms for Junk” lists. Any one of those trips would have been a nice workout for the week. But he made them all, and — judging by the logbooks previous visitors had filled out — somebody’s making those five or six trips, five or six nights a week on average.
Say what you like about lighthouse keepers. But they must have some pretty amazing glutes. Forget cracking walnuts; after a summer feeding people up there, you could probably solve a Rubik’s cube with your ass muscles.
(We didn’t ask our host for that trick. After five trips, it seemed a bit rude.)
At any rate, if you’ve always wanted to dine in a lighthouse, but thought you didn’t have the muttonchops for it, then maybe this is up your alley. And if not… well, there’s still that Thai place in the building next door. You won’t rock-hard up your glutes, maybe — but the satay chicken’s probably not bad. Definitely put it on your Top 35 Substances to Put in My Mouth list.
Permalink | No Comments(Science days are here again. Secondhand SCIENCE days, that is!
Check out the latest semi-scientific silliness, all about the lysosome. It’s not here to say please. Trust me.)
It’s possible I’m going soft in my old age.
(That’s emotionally soft, by the way. I don’t have any hard evidence (yet) that I’m going mentally soft. And there’s no way to refute the physical evidence, so we’re not even going there.
No, I said we’re not. Let it go.)
What I prefer to believe, though, is that I’m approximately as soft — or as hard, or firm, or steely, or weepy (or sneezy, or Doc, for that matter) — as I always was, and that the world is progressively hardening all around me. Or at least, the American bits of the world, where things seem to get a little grittier, a little angrier, and a little louder every day.
I have evidence for this, in an area that’s emerging as one of our nation’s most brutal and ruthless arenas, filling daily with more bile and greed and wanton ego.
Yes, that’s right: cooking shows.
As just one example, consider Alton Brown. Not so many years ago, he hosted a program called Good Eats. It ran for 14 seasons, and in addition to disseminating cooking tips and recipes, was also basically a variety show full of skits and entertainment. There were recurring characters — the grouchy neighbor, a prissy sister, a dungeon master, for crissakes. Blackboards saw liberal use for demonstrations. Heroes and villains and experts of dubious merit came and went — Lever Man, Waffle Man, Sergeant Pepper — next to actual authorities on nutrition and food history. It was, if not quite “delightful”, exactly — we’ll get back to that — certainly clever, informative, entertaining and heartfelt. I love Good Eats.
I even came up with a set (or three) of Alton Brown facts, in the style of Chuck Norris facts. I was basically suggesting that Alton Brown is the Chuck Norris of cooking shows.
And then Alton Brown began hosting Iron Chef America, a cooking contest pitting (typically) balloon-egoed pro chefs against each other, serving dishes to (mostly) haughty near-celebrity judges while a (cartoonishly) smug “chairman” looks on. There’s food in this “cooking show”, yeah — but it’s really more about clash and pressure and bravado than anything else.
“But how you get ball-grabbingly macho over, ‘my meatloaf can kick your meatloaf’s ass’ is beyond me.”
(That last bit is frankly a mystery. I appreciate a good chef as much as the next guy. But how you get ball-grabbingly macho over, “my meatloaf can kick your meatloaf’s ass” is beyond me.
I mean, yay, you cooked a thing. Bully for you. If you’re expecting a cookie for it, then get your ass back in the kitchen and bake one. That’s your gig, right?)
In his narrating role, Brown got snippier and cockier himself. Maybe to match the tone of the show. Maybe as another character to play, that just happened to share his name. Or maybe he felt his meatloaf was the Iron-iest of them all, and was pissed he didn’t get to prove it. But Iron Chef America played up conflict over cuisine — far more than the original Japanese show — and Alton Brown became a cog in that machine.
And so went a lot of new cooking shows around that time. Chopped began in 2009, for instance, pitting four smack-talking chefs against one another in front of a panel of judges, most of which would make the Queen of Hearts seem pleasant.
(Some of these judges went on to become Iron Chef (America)s!, which proves that they can apparently sneer and sous vide with comparable skill.)
By 2013, all the charm had seemingly been squeezed out of food TV, like icing from a piping bag. Alton Brown signed up for Cutthroat Kitchen, in which the contestants and the host now all actively mock, despise and sabotage one another, and incidentally, once in a while some food might get prepared. By a guy who’s only allowed to cook with an E-Z Bake oven and has to use his underpants to strain pasta. Because Alton Brown told him so, and nyah-ed at him the whole time. Because Alton Brown now evidently believes he’s the Chuck Norris of cooking shows.
Good Eats, we hardly knew ye.
I’ve been a big fan of cooking shows — even some of the competition shows — over the years. I look at people expertly preparing food in the same way I do a lumberjack or a human cannonball or Lindsey Lohan: certainly I could never do what they do, and I would grievously hurt myself trying. But it’s fascinating to watch, and to learn about, and to put bets on who’s losing a finger first.
That doesn’t mean I want to see them bitching at each other about who whips their souffles correctly. If that’s a thing chefs do. I don’t even souffle, apparently.
But that’s the landscape of food-ertainment these days — or so I thought. Because among all the Fight Club Sandwich and Mad Mixer: Beyond Frappedome nonsense being shoved (deliciously) down our throats, I recently found a BBC/PBS show called The Great British Baking Show. It’s not perfect. It can be uneven. Sometimes it’s a little slow.
But it’s also delightful.
I’d forgotten it was possible for people on a cooking show — much less a contest — to be nice to each other. But they are. In just one recent episode, the motherly sort of woman helps the nervous young girl. The builder — who is possibly also Wallace from Wallace and Gromit, I’m just saying — loans out the pencil tucked behind his ear. The crusty old Scottish guy recites Robert Burns, for crissakes — Robert honna’e-ta-Gae Burns! There’s no one on the show that’s anything but lovely.
And on top of that, all they do is bake pies and crumpets and petit-fours or petit-choux or pettycoat junctions — look, I don’t really know what they’re doing, exactly. They could be defusing bombs, for all I know, by wrapping them in dough and baking to golden brown. What I do know is they’re lovely and delightful and entertaining, and it is too still possible to do all those things and make food into a camera.
Do you hear me, Alton Brown and every-foody-body else? It is, still, too.
Permalink | 3 Comments(Hey, there! If you’re interested in fun stuff that’s sort-of science, but not always science, then you might enjoy my latest nonsense over at Secondhand SCIENCE, which is all about noble gases. Somehow, I didn’t make any fart jokes. Not even one! Who knew?
And if actual much-more-real science is your bag, then check out the “Daily Discoveries” over at Sciencescape. All the posts are fascinating, thought-provoking and chock full of the latest in cutting-edge research. And some of them are even mine!)
Recently, I had the great pleasure of being a small part of a short play festival here in the Boston area. The Theatre@First crew staged a set of works with the theme “Fractured Fairy Tales”, and were kind enough to include a bit of silliness that Jenn Dlugos and I wrote concerning a certain pair of Bavarian children lost in the Black Forest.
Or, we decided, in the Boston Common. Because “write what you know”, liebchen, ja?
I got to watch the show a couple of times during their run, and they’re all fantastic. And while the live production is over, there’s a YouTube playlist with many of the plays available for your personal viewing pleasure. That includes our Hansel and Gretel entry, which is also uber-conveniently located just below. Gutentag!
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