Happy Birthday, John Bray

Every time a birthday rolls around within our little community of bloggers, my good friend NoName Dufus tells the same silly joke.

I can’t remember what it is, of course, because of the severe head injury I sustained doing my infamous and remarkably accurate impersonation of the Clancy Brothers drinking on St. Patrick’s Day. But just the thought of it brings a smile to my face.

And I guess that’s one of the things I most like about NoName — he makes people smile with his seemingly endless good humor.

People like me.

Whenever I’m feeling down or stressed out by life — and I’ve had way more than my share of that recently — NoName pops in with a quick joke, pun or song lyric to lift my spirits. It’s like he can read my mind, may God save his soul.

NoName — aka John Bray, aka the Canadian Crusher, aka the Punmeister — I’m fairly certain you’re not happy about getting another year older today. But you know what, my brother from another mother? I’m as happy as hell to be able call you my friend on the occasion of your birthday.

Thank you for being you, John, and not somebody awful. Somebody like Selena Gomez, for example, who’s actually a worse musician/actor/dancer than her ex-boyfriend, Justin Bieber, something neither I nor most of his fellow Canadians thought was possible. Why did you have to foist him and his pet monkey on the rest of the world, you rotten bastards?

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30 Days Minus 2of Writing, Armageddon: Is that all?

His room looked exactly as I expected — white walls and simple furniture, clean lines, neat, bright and airy. Like Scandinavia, but smaller.

Why he asked for me, I had no idea. I was just a skullhead. A man whose face unexpectedly fell off at a wedding, making me a freak of nature and sought-after motivational speaker, although I had plenty of money and rarely felt motivated to do more than watch The Price Is Right.

But there I was, standing beside Steve Jobs’ hospital bed, fighting an urge to chew my fingernails or pick at the lint on my suit coat.

He was asleep, breathing shallowly. Face pale and drawn, a white iPhone 5 clutched in one hand. Was it set to Do Not Disturb, I wondered? Can a powerful man like Steve Jobs refuse to take calls, or is he obligated to serve the audience he’s created, even on his deathbed? Fame has its benefits, but I was starting to learn that it can also come at a great price. Everybody wants a little piece of you, and once they take it, there’s nothing left.

He stirred, opened his eyes, and screamed, his face contorted with terror, his arms flailing wildly in front of his face.

An assistant leapt to his feet and put a hand on Steve’s shoulder. Gently pushed him back into the bed.

“It’s just him, Steve. Skullhead,” he explained.

“Oh for fuck’s sake! I thought I’d died and gone to hell,” Jobs said. “And I don’t even believe in hell. Although, if there is a hell, I guarantee you they use Microsoft Vista or Windows 8, and listen to their music on Zunes. I don’t know what Bill is doing over there, but it’s got nothing to do with good design.”

We all laughed at that, and I apologized for scaring him. Shook his hand.

“No worries, Mike. I should’ve expected you,” he said.

“Why did you want to talk to me?” I asked.

“I didn’t have an agenda, Mike. But it occurred to me that we have something in common, although for very different reasons. I’m famous, you’re famous. I thought it might be nice to talk, see if we connect, or can learn something from one another.”

“I don’t think I’ve got any ideas to offer you, sir,” I said.

“You’d be surprised. Remember the iPod Classic? The one that looked like a Blackberry with a rotary dial on its face?”

“Sure I do.”

“My housekeeper’s idea. She was sick of lugging her portable radio from room to room. Threatened to quit if I didn’t invent something smaller, and I sure as shit wasn’t cleaning toilets myself.”

“I had no idea.”

“Most people don’t. Ideas can come from anywhere. Tell me, what do you think about the iPhone, the iPad and the iPod?”

“Love ‘em.”

“No, what don’t you like about them? How can they be improved?”

I cleared my throat. Who was I to give Steve Jobs advice? But he looked insistent.

“I wish you had a high-capacity iPod. Sixty-four gig is a lot, but my music collection tops 165 gig. Why should I have to shuffle songs on and off it all the time? Hate that the iPad won’t play flash video. I don’t like the new interface for iTunes, either. Too complicated. And the glass face on the iPhone?”

“Yes?” he said.

“It works great. But it’s fragile. I’m afraid to drop it. They’re ridiculously expensive. I can’t just buy a new one whenever I feel like it. I’m not rich. I’m not…well, I’m not you.”

Steve turned to his assistant. “Are you getting this down? This is fucking brilliant. From the mouths of skullheads…”

“Yes sir. Using voice-to-text,” the assistant said, waving an iPhone in the air.

“Yeah, that could use a little improvement, too,” I said. “At least half of what I say looks like drunk texting. And Siri’s gotta be deaf. She never gets it right.”

Steve nodded sympathetically, and then motioned to me.

“I’ve got a tip for you, too,” he said, whispering.

I leaned in, and turned my ear toward his mouth.

“Don’t rush out to get the iPhone 8 when it goes on sale. Wait for the 9. It’s going to knock your shorts off.”

“The 9? But you just released the 5. You’ve already got the 9 ready?”

“Sure. I designed all the way through the iPhone 23. They’re all locked in a vault in my basement waiting to be released. Wish I could tell you more, but marketing won’t let me. You know how marketing people are.”

He seemed tired then. Closed his eyes. His breathing got shallow, and then stopped.

“Is that all?” I shouted, shaking the rail of his bed. “You call me out here to tell me to wait for iPhone 9 and then die?! The greatest designer on earth, and that’s all!?”

Steve opened his eyes.

“Oh, sorry. Didn’t mean to panic you. I’m not gone yet, Mike. Whenever my pain gets bad, I take a break to think about Jennifer Laurence in Silver Linings Playbook. Great performance. Edgy, sexy. She’s hot. Helps me through it.”

We laughed, and then talked for a few more hours about this and that, like old friends. Before I left, Steve decided to ignore his marketing department and show me the prototype of his most-advanced iPhones, iPads and iPods.

They don’t have cases. They don’t exist at all, not in the normal sense. They appear in the air when you snap your fingers, and float there like magic until you’re done.

I can’t wait to get one.

———————————————

Welcome to the 28th and final day of Nicky and Mike’s writing competition. It’s been fun. Well, not fun, but tedious. Just kidding. I love Nicky and Mike. Or Nicky’s shoes, anyway. If you’d like to see today’s other entries, visit Nicky and Mike at We Work For Cheese.

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30 Days Minus 2 of Writing, Day 21: Last Train

I was sitting at my breakfast table reading the back of the cereal box when — poof! — Beelzebub appeared in a brilliant flash of light, grinning like he’d just seen Elvis at the mall.

“What the fuck!” I shouted, spilling milk down my robe and almost dropping my bowl of Coco Puffs. You get used to seeing some strange things when you’re a faceless skullhead like me, but the Devil — well, it’s a bit much first thing in the morning.

“Good morning, Michael,” he said, his voice all Cuban cigars and Scotch whiskey. He stuck out his hand like a businessman, and I shook it hesitantly, admiring his immaculate manicure in spite of myself. The nails were long, tapered to claw-like points, and painted the color of raw egg yolks. I had to admit they looked good juxtaposed against his scarlet skin.

“Why are you here? Is my number up?” I asked, nervously.

“No,” he said, laughing. “You’re confusing me with Death. A lot of people do that. But I turned that job down a long time ago. Hoodies are hard on the horns, and I gotta think the scythe gets heavy as heck after a few millennia.”

“Why are you here, then?” I persisted.

“Not much for chit-chat, are you?”

“Not with Satan. Not while I’m still in my bathrobe.” I pulled the collar of my robe closer around my neck, and tightened the belt around my waist. No reason to give the Devil a free peep show.

He smiled, not surprisingly, devilishly.

“Okay, no bullshit. Straight to the chase. You’re probably aware that hell’s taken a beating lately, what with the school shootings, and the mess in Congress, and this whole Pistorius Blade Runner scandal.”

“The news is a little gloomy.”

“Gloomy?! It’s downright depressing, daring kitten-in-tree rescues excepted.” The Horned One cleared his throat nervously, leaned forward and stared me straight in the eye. “Look, bottom line: With everything going on in the world, my marketing department tells me Hell needs an image boost. A makeover. Something that makes wicked seem sweet. And with a face likes yours, you’re just the skullhead for the job.”

“Me?”

“You. Decent fellow, face of the damned. Ideal.” The Prince of Darkness leaned back in his chair, folded his hands behind his head and smiled. “I can make it worth your while.”

“I’m not sure I want to do PR for hell. I’m a writer, not Karl Rove. I live in the suburbs.”

“Before you say no, remember that I can offer you things.” He waved a scaly arm in the air over his head grandiosely.

“Power!”

“Riches!”

“Every woman you’ve ever…..”

“Can you give me my face back?” I interrupted.

Beelzebub didn’t answer. Instead, he pointed at the wall to my left. A steam train crashed through it and skidded to a halt in my kitchen, sparks flying from the wheels. It was hot. Spitting coal ash and steam.

“I can make you happy. Let’s take a ride. We’ll work out the details later,” he said.

“My face. I’d like my face back. It fell off at a wedding, and I miss it. People aren’t the same with me. And the milk dribbles out of my mouth.” I tapped my teeth. “No cheeks. It’s a mess.”

“Are you nuts?! If you had a face, you’d be just like everybody else. What good would you do me then? Hell might as well go to Hell in a…a…uhm….”

“A hand basket?”

“Exactly!” he shouted, slamming his fist on the table.

“Well, the only temptation that tempts me right now is getting my face back,” I said firmly.

The Devil shook his head. “Look, this train’s got a schedule to keep. It’s leaving. I’ll send another one in an hour, and then every hour on the hour. If you change your mind, hop on and we’ll go over the paperwork when you get to the Blackest Pit. It’s the last stop before Washington, D.C. About 45 minutes out. But I warn you, the last train is at midnight.”

And with that, the train rolled out and he was gone.

———————————

Please visit Nicky and Mike at We Work For Cheese for other entries in today’s meme.

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30 Days Minus 2 of Writing, Day 6: Haven

Haven.

That’s the title of one of the Twilight books, right?

I’m sure it is. Maybe.

I’ve never read the Twilight books or seen the movies, mostly because I’m not a 15-year-old girl. My knowledge of them is largely limited to movie ads.

From what I gather, the story revolves around an extremely tired-looking 18-year-old high school student named Bella who overcomes a tragic lack of acting talent to fall in love with a 104-year-old vampire named Edward. Edward reminds me of the legendary actor James Dean, if Dean was a very pale girly-man.

So far, so good — although for the record, I’m officially opposed to May-December romances between barely legal teens and undead centenarians. They may seem romantic in a book or onscreen, but when you actually see 86-year-old Hugh Hefner standing at the altar in his pajamas next to his 26-year-old bride dressed as a pink mermaid, it’s creepy.

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Edward Cullen looks like legendary actor James Dean, if Dean was very pale and effeminate.

 

Twilight’s plot gets very confusing very quickly, and makes my head hurt so badly I’m surprised my face hasn’t fallen off.

There are two types of vampires, for example: The regular ones who drink human blood, and Edward’s clan, which survives on animal blood. Neither type incinerates in sunlight, like real vampires do. Instead they sparkle — as in glitter, or fireworks.

Sparkle!

It’s like Count Dracula took tap-dancing classes and set up a disco in his dungeon.

*Jazz hands!*

Both groups hate one another, and are in turn hated by the werewolves, which look like regular wolves except they’re the size of elephants and kill vampires by biting off their heads.

That’s just plain silly, because everybody from Tallahassee to Transylvania knows real vampires could simply turn into bats and fly away from the werewolves. Or control their thoughts to make them snore like sleeping puppies.

Also, you can’t kill the undead by biting them. If that were the case, Dracula could be taken down in seconds by any grumpy 2-year-old. You have to pound wooden stakes through their hearts. Vampires would always win a fight against wolves, even if the wolves carried 9mm Berettas, which they wouldn’t because wolves don’t have trigger fingers.

The romance gets equally convoluted.

Bella loves Edward, Edward loves Bella. But then Edward apparently gets very busy at work or takes an extended vacation to visit undead relatives in Romania, because Isabella has time to befriend a heavily foreheaded werewolf named Jacob. He looks like the love child of rock musician Chris Isaak and Science Officer Spock in the new Star Trek films. And perhaps because his acting is as bad as hers — imagine an emotionless Vulcan staring blankly at the setting sun trying to conjure up tears because his hamster died — they fall in love.

I guess they practice safe sex, though, because Isabella suddenly gets pregnant with Edward’s half-vampire, half-human baby instead of a puppy. The halfling violates the ancient vampire rules, which came as a complete surprise to me because I thought one of the major advantages to being undead is that there aren’t any rules.

Anyway, being pregnant creates a lot strife between the vampire clans. And it stresses Bella out so much that she shows actual emotion, although not enough to win an Academy Award, or even an award for helping theater owners sell more popcorn. Oh, and I think she becomes a vampire because her eyes change color.

I won’t give away the ending, not because I don’t want to spoil it for you, but because I don’t know it, not having read the books or seen the movies.

But I’m sure it sparkles.

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Post-Apocalyptic Survival Tips Include Canned Tamales, Will Smith

If you’re reading this post, you survived the Mayan Apocalypse.

Congratulations, and Happy New Baktun, the Mayan’s 14th age.

Now you need to start scrounging around for bottled water and canned food.

I recommend Hormel canned tamales for post-apocalyptic meals.

I recommend Hormel canned tamales for post-apocalyptic meals.

Any water will do, although I recommend imported sparkly water like Perrier or San Pellegrino because it’s classy. If you can also get your hands on a SodaStream machine, fantastic. The Cola’s good and just pennies on the dollar compared to pre-made soda. The Swiss marketed the hell out of the SodaStream this holiday season, so I’d search for packages about the size of a Swiss breadbox under Christmas trees in burned-out middle-class neighborhoods.

As for canned goods, ConAgra’s Ranch Style Beans are flavorful and filling, and Libby’s corned beef tastes like buttered meat. But Hormel beef tamales — the ones soaked in greasy red-chile sauce and wrapped in paper — are out-of-this-world tasty after you’ve been hiking all day in the shattered ruins of civilization. Eat them right out of the can after warming them up over a fire fueled by books, which you won’t have time to read anyway.

Don’t worry about clogging your heart with fatty foods. This is no time to go granola on your diet. You’re in full-on survival mode. Eat all the meat and sugar you want, and chase it with cigars and whiskey if it makes you feel good.

Your next task is to start looking for a mate to help you re-populate the world. Or at least to keep you warm at night and help you fend off looters and zombies.

Nobody can help you survive the ruination of civilization like Denzel Washington.

Nobody can help you survive the ruination of civilization and re-populate the Earth like Denzel Washington. He’s got it going on.

If you’re a woman, look for Will Smith or Denzel Washington. They have previous post-apocalyptic experience, wield a shotgun ably, and are as charming as hell. There’s no reason I can think of why you should suffer through the end times with somebody who doesn’t have a nice smile and a great bedside manner.

For men, I can’t recommend anybody in particular. You’ll know you’ve found the right woman if she’s wearing a samurai sword, carrying a pocketful of early pregnancy tests, wearing a torn cotton shirt, and her chest glistens when it heaves. And it will be heaving, trust me. As long as you’re not shooting blanks from your groital region, this self-sufficient baby-making factory is ready for you. Especially if you happen to look like Denzel or Will.

Fuel’s going to be a big problem in the New Age.

You’ll probably be driving an amor-plated Chevy Silverado or Ford F-350 with a machine-gun mounted in the bed Rat-Patrol style, so you’re going to need a lot of gas — more than you can siphon from the tanks of the useless Toyota Priuses and other battery-powered kids’ toys cluttering up the roads. There will be gas stations everywhere and no waiting lines, but the problem is that there won’t be any electricity to pump it out of the underground tanks.

Locate a generator to run a pump as soon as possible.

That won’t be a problem if you’re in a state like Idaho, Arizona, Montana, Wyoming, Texas or Utah. Poke around in backyards, where you’ll find a generator near every concrete survival bunker that didn’t take a direct hit from a fiery comet.

Don’t worry about battling debunked owners for the generator. They will have gotten drunk on homemade sour mash and shot one another dead arguing about whether the Founding Fathers would’ve approved of the 15th and 19th Constitutional Amendments, which gave blacks and women the right to vote. Strict Constitutionalists have strong feelings about the intentions of Founding Fathers, who apparently wrote the Constitution right after they finished the Bible and didn’t think much of anybody who wasn’t an old white man.

If you’re living in a more progressive state, it will be easy to find an abandoned Starbucks or a decent deli, but correspondingly hard to find a bunker. Head instead toward the wreckage of your nearest Home Depot or Lowe’s for a generator. You’ll also find a handy stash of survival tools while you’re there. Things like rope, clamps, hooks, hoists and chains, which you can use to build a fort and might also find helpful when you and your new partner get serious about working on being fruitful and multiplying.

You'll probably never see Will Smith at a Wal-Mart until the world's been pelted with fiery comets and he sets up an encampment there.

You’ll never see Will Smith at a Wal-Mart until the world’s been destroyed by fiery comets and he sets up a survival camp there.

You’ll eventually meet other survivors of the Mayan Apocalypse. When you do, I’d suggest banding together to build an RV encampment in the parking lot of a relatively intact Super Wal-Mart. In fact, there may already be one there waiting for you.

You’ll meet some weird people there — many of them toothless and wearing belly shirts even though they’re 100 pounds overweight — but there should be enough food, clothes and dry goods inside to keep your new society going for the next 395 years, which is when the next Mayan Apocalypse and 15th Baktun starts.

Until then, good luck and Godspeed.

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