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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!

Right Said Ed

Sundays are not for writing, especially.

Sundays are not against writing, of course. I imagine that slice of the calendar is fairly agnostic about whether writing occurs on top of it.

(Oh, people adhering to various religions or other might care, but the calendar? I doubt it.)

None of this is the point. The point is, Sundays are not especially for writing. Because Sundays are for football.

Some Sundays, anyway. Like this one. I spent a very large part of the afternoon and evening glued to the set, soaking up touchdowns, tackles and turnovers galore.

(That’s “football turnovers”, of course. I don’t know how to make the pastry. Or it would have been both.)

“But these guys will turn it around. To a point. Probably.”

Also featured prominently in this week’s action were the referees. The real referees, as opposed to the D-III linesmen and Pop Warner back judges the NFL has been trotting out with whistles so far this season. And that’s a good thing.

Well, mostly a good thing. Evidently, the pros are a little out of practice; there were as many phantom calls and oddball decisions as in the last couple of weeks. But these guys will turn it around. To a point. Probably.

The guy I was happiest to see — although I didn’t actually see him today — is Ed Hochuli. One of the more recognizable refs, he’s the one with the Popeye arms and the propensity to explain — and explain, and explain, and over-explain — any sort of controversial or questionable play or call or vendor menu item.

At the same time, our burgeoning sketch group is compiling scripts to shoot and put online. And to, uh, burgeon with. I figured the time was ripe for a sort of Ed Hochuli tribute.

So I wrote one. On a Sunday. I’ll drop it off below for your perusal. And then I’ll get back to football. I’m sure there are some highlights I missed. And maybe some juicy ref explanations. Those are the best. Happy Sunday, pigskin peeps.


On Further Review

A REFEREE in uniform jogs into view. He taps the microphone switch on his belt. He makes various explanatory hand gestures during his explanation. Ideally, he has big Popeye-style forearms.

REFEREE

After further review, the ruling on the field has been overturned. The runner lost possession of the ball before being touched down by contact.

Also, the recovering player had not gone out of bounds before touching the ball, suggested by the sideline judge throwing his hat. The judge had seen a bee and was attempting to shoo it away.

Furthermore, the penalty for a block in the back during the return was declined. The penalty for unsportsmanlike conduct, grabbing the facemask, was accepted — but on review it was found that the lineman has been sleeping with the cornerback’s wife, so that penalty is waved off.

Regarding the holding call on the offensive line, our review unveiled the following facts…

The referree holds up a huge report, like a court transcript.

REFEREE

…Point the first, that a member of the offense, number ninety-seven, did with full intent and malice of forethought, hold a linebacker illegally from his intended path…

The scene cuts to a montage of the referee, with a voiceover of (possibly absurd) further explanations, as he: points out Xs and Os with a pointer on a whiteboard, performs a scene with finger puppets, does a touchdown dance, and points out on a doll where the bad man touched somebody.

The final cut is back to the ref, now clearly exhausted, wrapping up his explanation.

REFEREE

…fifteen yards from the spot of the foul, and thirty hours of community service. So it’s first and ten from the forty-six yard line.

Unfortunately, this explanation took so long, we don’t have time to play the last three quarters. The game ends in a tie, zero-zero. Drive safe.

As the referee says “second half”, he waves his arms over his head to signal time out, then locks his arms straight out to the sides to signal the “game ends”. When he’s done talking, he jogs off, out of the shot.

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Lost and Brown’d

I’ve never been incarcerated — the occasional junior high school detention session notwithstanding. I’ve never been imprisoned, sequestered, detained or locked in.

(It’s sort of surprising, I know. You’d think someone would have thought to try it by now.)

But today I found out what it’s like to be under house arrest. Shackled to my home, unable to leave. A prisoner.

Today, I waited for UPS to deliver a package.

We complain about other service people who come to our homes — cable guys, plumbers, electricians. But most of these companies have actually squeezed a wee bit of compassion into their practices over the years. They’ll give you an approximate window of when they’ll drop by your place.

Maybe that’s because they’re coming over to charge you exorbitant amounts of money, rather than to bring you presents through the mail. If everything they did was bad, they’d be at risk of people bopping them on the head and throwing them down a set of basement stairs when they show up.

Now granted, the Comcasts and Commode Kings of the world don’t go so far as to make “appointments”. Far from it. They set a “window” — which they may or may not wind up squeezing into at the last minute — but at least it gives you parameters to work within. Those parameters may be two hours, or four, or “morning” versus “not-morning”, but you have some idea when the doorbell might ring.

Not so with UPS. At least, not today. Last night, I arrived home to find a sticky note reading “First Delivery Attempt” for this package — along with a demand for an in-person signature, like some sort of package-hostage ransom note. The communique ended with the ominous promise:

Will try again tomorrow

After that, there were a series of boxes indicating time frames — eight to noon, noon to three, half past dinnertime, that sort of thing — none of which had tasted the ink of the delivery boy’s pen. The clear message being that the package would be here, sometime between six at the ass-crack of dawn and ten at night, when the trucks go back to the garage to sleep. In between? All bets are off.

So I begged out of work for the day, and settled in for a good brisk wait from the UPS crew.

(I might mention at this point that I’ve tussled with the tan-shorted terrors before. If the title from my piece a while back, Who Can Brown Screw for You?, doesn’t give away my thoughts on the matter, then something may be seriously wrong. With your ‘obvious detector’.)

A day at home waiting out a package may not seem so bad. To be fair, it’s not exactly digging ditches or breaking rocks on a chain gang. You’re in the comfort of your own abode, with access to television, the internet, snacks and books and anything else that floats your particular boat enough to keep handy in your home. Still, it does come with a few ‘complications‘.

First, there’s the start time. I tend to work a shifted schedule at the office — in a little late, out a little late — so I don’t set an especially early alarm. Not for work, anyway.

“If you think I’m scary pre-shower, you should see me in the middle of one.”

But for UPS? Yes.

These people can show up any time. Their big turd-colored vans start stalking the neighborhoods at what — seven thirty in the morning? Seven? Six? It’d be one thing if we had an intercom, but we’re on the first floor. Which means that if the doorbell rings while I’m sleeping, I have to shake myself awake, find and don a socially-nonrepulsive shirt and pants, open the apartment door and make it to the building’s security door a few feet further, all before the bell-ringer gets bored and decides to leave. And all this without the contact lenses that I desperately need to see more than fourteen inches past my nose.

I couldn’t risk it. I set the alarm, and for early in the morning. Thus guaranteeing that the UPS truck wouldn’t sully my street at any time before noon, at the earliest. Naturally.

Then there’s the issue of getting ready. I actually had to run in for a late-afternoon meeting — an unavoidable schedule hiccup. So I had to look my usual barely-presentable self at some point during the day. That meant a shower — which implied some amount of time when I’d be naked, wet and soapy, and thus unavailable for greeting visitors outside the confines of the condo.

Well. Visitors who weren’t interested in immediately clawing our their eyes in anguish, anyway. If you think I’m scary pre-shower, you should see me in the middle of one.

Only no. No, you shouldn’t.

So not only did I take the fastest shower on record this morning — I’m not altogether sure the shampoo actually touched my hair before I was rinsing, by the way — I also prepared for said shower in the most strategic way possible. I brought all the clothes I’d need for an emergency door run — but no more! — to the bathroom with me. Shirt, yes. Shorts, yes. Socks and underwear and underneath tee — all optional. All left in the bedroom, where I’d normally encounter such decisions.

Also, I undressed at the last possible moment. I ran to the front windows, clothes on but loosened, and scanned the street for Big Brown. Confident that no delivery was eminent, I turned and made a dash for the bathroom. Garments flew by the wayside as I ran; three seconds later, I was naked, wet and pawing at the Pert Plus. Like a Minuteman, I was in and out before you could sidewalk-park a truck, much less ring the bell and leave.

Thus guaranteeing that the package wouldn’t come during, or soon after, the shower.

Of course, it doesn’t end there. When you’re held “package hostage”, any possible interruption in your ability to leap to the front door must be squelched immediately. The dog’s walks were to the sidewalk out front, and immediately back in. The trip to the basement, to start a load of laundry? Postponed indefinitely. And the last time I pooped with such diabolical urgency, there was a plate of atomic wings and raw jalapenos involved.

All in all, my coverage was superb. At no time, from before eight in the morning until three thirty in the afternoon, when I left for my meeting, was I more than fourteen seconds from the building’s entrance and my precious and highly anticipated package.

Which of course, thus guaranteed that my package wouldn’t come at any time between before eight in the morning and three thirty in the afternoon. When I left for my meeting. Which I did.

And returned home around five to find the inevitable sticker on the door, proclaiming “Second Delivery Attempt” — at three forty-five, of course — and vowing to return, one last time, tomorrow.

What time tomorrow? Oh ho ho, Mister Bond. You didn’t expect us to make it that easy, now, did you?

So tomorrow we dance again, the brown behemoth bully and I. This time, I’ve got no meetings — and an alarm set, pee pads down for the dog (and maybe me), and no delusions of Friday laundry happening. No, tomorrow I’ll be close by the door, ready to pounce at the first sign of package. Or plumber. Or passing pedestrian. On this day, UPS shall not deny me my package.

So of course, they’re gonna break it. I’ll be lucky to get the thing in three pieces.

Because there’s no getting out of the UPS jail, son. Ain’t no such thing as package prison parole. Mercy.

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Eek!Cards #106: I Feel Bad for Me, Son

someecards.com - I got ninety-nine problems. And you're at least seventy-three of them.

(The ‘Eek!Cards’ explan.)


For the Facebook phans out there, have a gander at my latest Zolton adventure over at ZuG.com — Zolton’s Facebook Follies: Quick Fixes.

It’s held together with bubble gum and duct tape. Literally.

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