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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!

Cafeterial Obligations

Hey hey!

So, the word on the street is that Deli Juices may be getting the band back together for another run.

(To be fair, we’re not literally a band. Which is probably a good thing. We’d be all off-key polkas and theremins, probably. And without a ‘groove thang’ between us to shake.)

In preparation for our imminent sketch team reconvenement, there’s new material to write. Which means there’s more first-draft material to plop down here, call it a post, and go back to watching basketball. You down with that? Good. Let’s rock.

Imagine, if you will, a sleepy suburban living room. PETE sits on a couch, flipping TV channels. ALICE enters, looking worried, along with THOMAS, upbeat and grinning.

PETE: (without taking his eyes off the screen) Who was at the door, hon?

ALICE: Um, Pete…sweetie? We need to talk.

PETE: Sure, I- who’s this?

ALICE: This is Tommy Goodwin.

THOMAS: Actually, I go by Thomas these days. It’s great to meet you…?

PETE: Pete.

THOMAS: Pete! Of course! Alice has told me so much about you!

PETE: Um, when?

THOMAS: Just now. In the hallway. Hey, I’m sure we’ll be best buds when all this is sorted out.

PETE: All what? Alice?

ALICE: Honey, Tommy — sorry, Thomas — and I were in school together years ago. Years and YEARS ago, Tommy.

THOMAS: Yeah, we were quite the couple. Sharing lunches, swapping gum, tying each others’ shoelaces. It was hot.

ALICE: We were eight years old!

THOMAS: May be. But we held hands on a fifth-grade level.

PETE: I’m sorry. What does any of this have to do with-

ALICE: Well, sweetie… you know those silly promises kids make sometimes?

PETE: Yeah? So?

ALICE: Well, one day in the cafeteria, Tommy said we should get married. Of course, I said no, but he just wouldn’t let it go.

THOMAS: I’m quite persistent. It’s my fourth-best quality!

ALICE: Anyway, I didn’t want to hurt his feelings, so finally I said-

THOMAS: She said, and I quote: “If neither of us is married when we’re thirty, we’ll get married then.”

PETE: And?

THOMAS: I just hit the big 3-0, baby. And neither of us is married, so…

PETE: You’ve got to be kidding.

THOMAS: Sorry, sport. Rules is rules.

PETE: Look, we’re engaged. Here, in the real world. The wedding is next week!

THOMAS: Well, you should have pulled the trigger when you had the chance. But no hard feelings, kid. You’re totally invited to the reception.

PETE: Is this guy completely insane?

ALICE: I don’t know. I remember some of his fingerpaintings were a little off-kilter, but — I just don’t know!

PETE: All right, look. This is nuts. First of all, a verbal promise means nothing. Especially from an eight-year-old.

ALICE: Well…

THOMAS: See, that’s what I thought at the time. So I had this contract drawn up.

[Thomas produces a cafeteria tray liner, scribbled on in crayon.]

THOMAS: See, we signed it here and here. Initialed here, witnessed by the lunch lady here, and notarized by the assistant principal.

PETE: Why on earth would an assistant principal do that?

THOMAS: My family’s big in the cafeteria food supply business. It was a “tit-for-tots” kind of thing.

PETE: I see. Wow. That does seem pretty airtight. Hey, wait a minute. This only kicks in when you’re both thirty, right?

THOMAS: That’s right. I just turned, and she’s six months ahead of me.

PETE: Alice. You told me you were twenty-seven.

ALICE: Well… I mean… a girl’s got to have her secrets, right?

PETE: First this, and now your age? What else have you lied about? Our whole relationship is a sham! I’m leaving! Goodbye!

[Pete exits.]

THOMAS: That is low, Alice. If that’s the person you’ve become, I don’t think I can be with you, either. I’m sorry.

[Thomas rips the paper in half and exits. Alice looks after the men, then shrugs and pulls out a phone and dials.]

ALICE: Hi, is this Billy Anderson? Yeah, okay, “William”, whatever. This is Alice Kemp. From junior high school. Yeah. You remember that pinkie swear we made in eighth grade? Well, get your butt over here, hot stuff. You’re up!

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Eek!Cards #236: Love Is Just a Steadily-Decreasing Number, Apparently

someecards.com - Happy Anniversary, dear. I'll still love you when all our 69s turn into 11s. Probably.

(The ‘Eek!Cards’ explan.)


While we’re in the mood!

Word on the street, sadly, is that ZuG.com will go kaputski at the end of the month. This is no fun. But like a good… uh, fourth mate who’s not allowed off the poop deck, maybe, I’m going down with the ship.

Well, not really. But I’ll be flinging nonsense their way until the bitter end. Stay tuned for my final Facebook article over there next week, and in the meantime have a peep at this penultimate piece: Zolton’s Facebook Pranks on Pasta Companies. Eat it up, yum.

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Ice Not for Whom the Bell Tolls

It’s always sad when you lose a loved one. The void that’s left, the feeling of helplessness, all the things you wished you’d said or done before the end. But one day, they’re just gone, suddenly, and you can only try to pick yourself up and move on.

I know. My ice maker just died.

Now, before you go writing this off as trivial and slapping #firstworldbeveragechiller tags all over it, hear me out. This ice maker was pretty important to me. I used it almost every day, it never failed me — until it completely failed me — and it’s quite probable that I was the one who killed it. Accidentally, but still.

So there’s a lot of guilt here, among other things, which I’d very much like to drown in a stiff drink. But I’d prefer that drink on the rocks, which is out of the question because MY ICE MAKER JUST DIED.

The universe, she is a cruel and unyielding bitch.

How did I murder my beloved cube-dispensing friend? As these things usually happen, by trying to help it.

“It’s only when we detect slight subtle changes in the product that we think to check. Like, when the water comes out like green tea, or the crushed ice smells like feet.”

The ice no-longer-maker is on the door of the kitchen freezer. Every few months, an indicator lights up inside the freezer to tell us that the water filter for the unit is probably bad, and we should immediately swap in a new filter.

Naturally, we never see this indicator. Presumably not for several weeks, anyway. It’s only when we detect slight subtle changes in the product that we think to check. Like, when the water comes out like green tea, or the crushed ice smells like feet.

At that point, it’s my job to replace the filter cartridge. I do this by asking my wife where we keep the filter cartridges, and if she’ll go get me one, and where in the freezer do I have to stick it into again? Oh, and can you make me a quick gin and tonic because I’m exhausted with all the work I’m doing over here.

Neat, please. No rocks. For the love of god.

Thus equipped, I lie on the kitchen floor and fight with the old filter, which screws into this mysterious cylindrical hole inside the front of the freezer. It’s only accessible with the door open and is a royal bitch to get in or out, which means risking third-degree frostbite from my scalp to my nipples every goddamned time the water tastes funny. It’s like being a Brita salesman for Eskimos, or something.

After much struggling and wildly creative cursing, the old filter finally does release. And after a quick blanket warmup and check for facial gangrene, I dive back in to wrestle the new filter into the hole. It’s a less-than-delicate procedure, and not nearly as sexual as you may be picturing.

(Unless you like it rough, at minus-twenty degrees and with a jackhammer, in which case all bets are off.

And wash your hands before you touch me. Gah.)

This is the procedure, and I’ve done it many times. Afterward, the manual says to run three liters of fresh water through the system to ensure safety, so I dutifully pour one glass, dump it in the sink, and declare the filter “fixed”. So it has always been, and the water and ice has flowed freely since.

Only this time, only the water flowed. Not the ice. I re-assumed the position and jiggled the filter, which now seemed much less enthusiastic about either going in farther or coming back out. I twisted it. Nothing. Shook it. Nada. Cursed it and kicked it and threatened it with pliers. Bupkis.

That was over a week ago. And we haven’t seen a single cube since. Our ice maker, I fear, has met an icy maker of its own.

So what, you might ask. Suck it up, quityerbitching and use a bunch of ghetto ice trays like the rest of us. And you have a fair point, I guess.

Only I can’t go back. I won’t. The missus and I dealt with ice cube trays for our first umpteen years together — and you know what we found? We are completely at odds on tray management strategy. Way apart. I’m talking miles here. Troy and Sparta. Sherman and Atlanta. A complete Cold War shutdown, and I’m so serious I don’t even care about the awful pun intended.

So, yeah. The ice maker is pretty darned important.

I won’t go quite so far into hyperbole as to say it saved our marriage. I’m not the sort of person who simmers on the “little things” until they erupt in a flash of “MY MOTHER WAS RIGHT ABOUT YOU AND I NEVER LIKED THOSE PANTS AND WHY DO YOU ALWAYS SMELL LIKE DORITOS?!” meltdown.

Of course not. Instead, I write about them. Much better.

The point is, the ice maker has kept the peace in our blissful household for over three years. And now, as we lay it to rest — freon to freon, dust to dust — I shudder to think what ice-related horrors lay in store.

Or maybe those shivers are just the frostbite. Either way, all my drinks will be “neat” for the foreseeable future. Rest in peace, my icy friend. We hardly knew ye.

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