Okay, I need some of these.
[iparklikeanidiot.com via del.icio.us]
I Park Like An Idiot
Griffin Scott
Welcome into the world Griffin Scott F., the new baby son of my friends Kim and Dusty. Weighing in at 8lbs. 11 oz. he was born after 30 hours of labor! Yipes! I haven’t had the pleasure of meeting him yet, but his father tells me he was born with a full head of dark hair.
Changes…
I made a few minor changes to the ol’ blog tonight. First, I added my logo to my RSS Feed… let me know if that breaks anything. Second, I added a blogroll, just because I read a number of great blogs, and I figured they deserve some exposure. If you feel left out of the blogroll, just ask… I think I got everyone, but I’m only human, and it’s late.
Uncle Dave!
My sister just enformed me that she starting a brood. In nine months, I will be Uncle Dave! Kristyna and I are considering spawning ourselves, but I don’t know if I could handle work, school and fatherhood. Although, as they say, if everyone waited until they were 100% ready to be parents, no one would ever breed.
Attention, K-Mart Shoppers
Energy Spatula posted about her worst job experience, and in the spirit of sharing, I thought I would pass along mine…
The first “real job” I ever had was at Wendy’s, which all in all, could have been a lot worse. There were times when it was actually fun, since nearly everyone else was a goofy teenager and most of the managers were desperately trying to reclaim their goofy teenage years. But after a while, leaving work every night smelling like grease does get to you, even when you’re 16, and so I decided to leave for greener pastures.
I’d secured a job at K-Mart, in the shoe department of all places. Now, this was before the days of financial ruin for K-Mart, pre-Wal-Mart, but K-Mart was still a second-tier retailer in the seedier part of town. Our store was near the mall, but it wasn’t part of it. And this was also in the day of the infamous “Blue Light Special”.
I cannot possibly impart to you the horrors that are the shoe department of a grungy K-Mart. You have no idea. The best thing that one could say about it was that at least, unlike a regular shoe store, we didn’t have to wait on customers.
Still, on occasion, someone would ask us to measure their shoe size. We had those metal feet measuring devices, I have no idea what they were called, but you know the ones. Usually it was to measure some squirming kid’s foot, because their mother didn’t know the size, kids growing as fast as they do.
Sometimes it was an octogenarian who simply couldn’t remember. But on an unsettling number of occasions, it was a perv who obviously either enjoyed having someone have to touch their feet, or inflicting life altering embarrassment for a teenage wage slave. It never really bothered me, but there were a couple of females in the department I felt really sorry for.
Most of the time, the job consisted of stocking and straightening. You would walk up and down the isles of knock-off Nikes, and counterfeit Converse and see what you were running low on. None of the shoes were brand-names, but they were all designed to look slightly similar to brand names. This lead to questions from customers all the time, such as, “You got dem nicky shoes?”
“Um, no.”
“What about dem?” (Pointing to a generic pair of blue running shoes.)
“Well, those aren’t Nikes, but they are sneakers.”
I have no idea who actually made the shoes, but they all came in boxes from Comdisco, with a whole lot of Chinese writing. Except the work boots. Those had big American flags on the side and said, “Made in America,” right above all the Chinese writing.
You’d unpack the shoes, stack the shoe boxes-at least the boxes of those shoes that came in boxes. Most of them came in plastic baggies, which you would throw into a bin. When you’d walk the rows of footwear out on the floor and encountered a hole, you’d go back to the stock room, grab a pair or three of the appropriate model, and fill the whole. Ad nauseum. You’d be amazed at what a mess people can make of a shoe department. Straightening out the department was the majority of a nights work.
You’d also be surprised at how often people used the shelves as a garbage bin. We’d find all kinds of crap on the shelves where shoes were supposed to be. Other products people decided they didn’t want, but didn’t feel like returning to the department where they belonged, empty packages of toys that likely found their way into a pocket or purse, food containers from the cafeteria.
And once, the most disgusting thing: a used baby diaper.
The most common thing we’d find among the shoes, however, was shoes. Used shoes. Nappy, smelly, disgusting shoes. Shoes that should have been replaced several months before, now snug in a new shoe box, or nestled among the new imitation Chinese sneakers. It seems, since the department was unmanned, that people felt they could just slip off the old gross shoes, into a shiny new pair and walk out. They were, in general, right. We hardly ever caught shoplifters. Mostly because we were overworked an understaffed. And because they employed high school kids like me who just didn’t give a shit.
We had a two-way mirror on the second floor of the stock room where security would sometimes sit and watch for “shrinkage”. But most of the time it was empty. I used to sit at the mirror sometimes on my break, eating my lunch. I’d see people steal all kinds of stuff, and I never reported any of it. I had a boss who was a real, well, bitch. She never cut a single employee any slack, so in my addled teenage mind, I figured I was on my break. If I wasn’t punched in on the clock, I wasn’t reporting shit.
Running the “Blue Light Special” was actually the best part of the job. The “Blue Light” would rotate from department to department, so everyone got a taste of the action. Being the shoe department, our specials usually consisted of bright pink flip-flops, or tubs full of jellies. But man, you would get on the loud-speaker and announce, “Attention K-Mart Shoppers!” and you felt like a god.
All over the store old ladies would stop, perk their ears and then submit to your siren call. Standing there by that flashing blue light, handset in hand, you could have commanded them to follow you into battle, if they had a chance of saving 35% on not-quite-brand-name footwear.
In the end, it was my “manager” that pushed me over the edge. All in all, I was quite a responsible employee, but I’d gone through a round of illness. She must have thought I’d just been calling in to go party or something, because she’d written me up for “missed shifts” twice, and the “third time is a charm”.
Anyway, I actually was sick, and so I called in again. She didn’t believe me. She told me I could either come in and work my scheduled shift, or find a different job. So I came in. And I was ill. Man, I felt bad. I was sweating and dizzy, and just about anyone could see I wasn’t well. What did she say? “See, I knew you were feeling well enough to work.”
About halfway through my shift, I puked. I was in the back room, and I had been unpacking shoes, so I grabbed a shoe box, and puked all over a pair of new steel toed boots. I closed the lid, walked downstairs and set the box in front of her on the desk. She said, “What’s this?”
“I quit.”
My Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon
Since Prof. Yin posted his Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon, I figured I would post mine…
My friend Carla was a producer for Pretty Dead Girl…
…which starred Christian Campbell, who is Neve Campbell’s older brother (and also in Reefer Madness with her) …
…Neve Campbell was in Wild Things with Kevin Bacon!
Bad Jokes
After looking over the comments on the joke thread at Defective Yeti, here are a few of my favorites:
- Q: What did the perverted frog say?
A: Rubbit.
Q: What do you call a Polish astronomer?
A: Copernicus.
Q. Why can’t the Buddha vacuum in the corner?
A. Because he has no attatchments.
Buddha walks into a pizza joint and says, “Make me one with everything.”
The cashier says, “That’ll be $9.50.”
Buddha hands him a ten. Waits. Waits. He says, “Where’s my change?”
The cashier replies, “Change must come from within.”
Two hunters are out in the woods when one of them collapses. He doesn’t seem to be breathing and his eyes are glazed. The other guy takes out his phone and calls the emergency services.
He gasps, “My friend is dead! What can I do?”
The operator says, “Calm down, I can help. First, let’s make sure he’s dead.”
There is a silence, then a gunshot.
Back on the phone, the guy says, “OK, now what?”
A traveller in America from Mexico needs some socks, but he speaks no English. So he finds a department store and walks up to a salesperson. The salesperson says, “May I help you?”
He replies, “No hablo ingles.”
The salesperson says, “Oh, okay, I’ll hold up things and you tell me if that’s what you want.”
They pick up a shirt.
“No.”
They hold up some pants.
“No.”
They hold up a tie.
“No, no.”
Finally, they hold up some socks.
“?Eso, si que es!”
“Well, if you knew how to spell it… “
Me. Me. Meme.
Age: 30 Somthing.
Band listening to right now: None.
Career in future: Law … talkin’ … guy.
Dad’s name: David.
Easiest person to talk to: Kristyna.
Favorite song at the moment: Ocean Breathes Salty (Modest Mouse).
Gummy Bears or Gummy Worms: Bears – Soaked in Rum.
Hometown: Lay-Flat, Indiana.
Instruments Violin=, once upon a time. Bass.
Kids: Not Yet.
Longest car ride ever: Indiana to California.
Mom’s name: Anne.
Number of siblings: Two.
Phobia[s]: Heights.
Quote (Favorite): Those who abandon their dreams will discourage yours.
Reason to smile: It will all be over soon.
Song you sang last: Ocean Breathes Salty
Time you wake up: Too early.
Unknown fact about me: Wouldn’t you like to know.
Vegetable you hate: Brussel sprouts.
Worst habit: Workaholic.
X-rays you’ve had: Dental, chest, c-spine, c/t scans
Yummy food: Sushi!
Zodiac sign: Aries.
[Courtesy Amy]
Let’s do the numbers!
There are 168 hours in a week. In any given week, I generally spend 40 hours a week at work. That’s not always the case, sometimes it’s more, especially lately, but I’m supposed to work a 40 hour week. I’m going to be generous, and say that I get 8 hours of sleep per night. This is a compete fallacy, I usually get 6 if I’m lucky, but lets suppose I’m getting the U.S. RDA of sleep. I also have to get ready for work in the morning and ready for bed at night. It does take me at least a half hour to get ready in the morning, less at night, but I’m going to give myself an hour a day for hygiene: 7 hours per week. I also have to get to work and class and home. I have a pretty short commute, all said. But it’s still probably amounts (total) to about an hour each day between work-class-home, so that’s 5 hours per week. I’m in class 12 hours each week. Gotta be there, all my professors take attendance. Not that I could skip and keep up anyway. If we use the “standard” ratio of three hours studying for each one in class, oh hell, who am I kidding; let’s go with two hours studying for each one in class: 24 hours per week. That leaves me with exactly 24 hours left in each week. 24 hours. One day. In that day I have to run any errands I need to spend time with my wife, see my friends, run any errands I need to get done, play with my cats and finally, engage in hobbies (yeah, right). Is it any wonder I feel like I’m always rushing?
Move over CrapCast, here’s DirecTV!
Our condo just signed a bulk cable agreement… or rather, a bulk satellite agreement! Ever since we moved into the condo about six months ago, we’ve been saddled with CrapCast. The picture has been lousey, the digital cable box is slow, oh so slow, and the cable frequently goes out. This is such a stark contrast to the service we used to have with Direct TV at our old place that I was going to cry, since the board was leaning towards a bulk agreement with CrapCast. Fortunately, they saw the dangerous path of the dark side before it was too late, and soon we will be enjoying the sharp picture, the awesome channel selection, and most importantly, the DirecTive once again!!!