RANDOM: Walking Dead prediction

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I literally just put up a post 20 seconds ago so I probably ought to let this ride until tomorrow, but what the hell: I predict that the assholes behind the Walking Dead TV show will stretch us out for three full episodes until we find out who Negan killed at the end of last season.  I already don’t give a fuck who it is so by that point no one should care.

One episode will be about Morgan and Carol at the Kingdom, one will follow Heath and Tara around, and we might even get a third episode about whatever Jesus has been up to.

They’re gonna keep screwing with us a while longer.  You watch.

In which I let you decide

9j156.gifSo, am I liveblogging the debate tomorrow night?  Am I even going to watch the debate tomorrow night?  Trump turns my stomach in a way no political candidate ever has (and I remember the Bush years very well, thank you) and I’m genuinely not sure I’m going to be able to make it through ninety minutes of his stupid, lying face.  But I don’t miss debates.  I don’t think I’ve missed watching a Presidential debate in my adult life, actually.  And if I’m watching, I may as well liveblog the thing.  Twitter, of course, is a given; I may as well fight with trolls while I’m at it.

So: liveblog?  Or cover my eyes with my fingers and stay far away from social media?

Not tonight

Rough day, and I’m kind of in weird headspace at the moment.  So no bloggery this evening.

In which I get rid of my childhood, and my teenage years, and my adulthood, and my middle age, and then almost die

unnamed.jpgI’ve been collecting comic books since I was nine, and with the exception of a couple of years when I was living in Chicago without a car and no real access to a comic shop I’ve never really stopped.  It’s probably safe to say that at 40 I’m spending more money on comics than I ever have, actually, due to a combination of disposable income, comics being generally really good right now, and the effect of inflation on the prices of the books themselves.

Hogwarts is having what amounts to a building-wide garage sale next weekend.  I just donated about 3500 comics– somewhere around half of my collection, pictured there to the right.  This is, I’m pretty sure, the first time I’ve divested myself of any substantial portion of my collection.  I spent most of this morning going through those boxes and pulling out anything that I thought might damage tiny little private-school brains, or at least anything that the wealthy parents of those tiny little private-school brains might think would damage them.

I really like comic books, but they’re really heavy and they take up a ton of room.  I figure I’ve bought myself another decade before I have to purge the collection again.  I did warn the nice lady who came by to pick them up to not expect to make a mint from them and that selling them for a dime or a quarter apiece might be a good idea just to ensure they move; we’ll see what happens.  I may go to the sale just to see what happens or I may not; I feel like both seeing my comics get sold off to other people or seeing them sit there alone and unacknowledged might be depressing, so I probably won’t go.

But hey.  There’s a lot of space cleared out in the office now.  That’s good, right?

In other news, knowing a stranger was coming to my house to help me load up the boxes, I tried to attack the patch of vines near my front door that has overgrown our steps and walkway.  We’ve neglected it lately because the mosquitoes are so bad, and it’s gone from “unattractive” to “genuinely sort of embarrassing” lately, but I figured that we’ve had some cool mornings recently and I can go outside in general without feeling like I’m under attack and so it would probably be safe to take the, oh, fifteen minutes it would take to trim the things back, rake them up, and toss the remnants into a garbage can.

Ha.

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In general I’m not frightened of bugs.  I avoid bees and wasps, of course, because they’re assholes, but I’ve never been stung.  Spiders squick me a bit from time to time, I admit it, but I try not to let it affect my behavior.  So when I tell you I had to run away from the patch of greenery in front of my house, flailing my arms around and swatting at my body like– hell, like a guy fucking covered in a swarm of mutant mosquitoes, I suppose, the situation kind of defeats simile– you need to understand that it is not a typical reaction to bugs.  And the fucking things chased me.  They followed me to the foot of the driveway and then stood guard outside my goddamned garage door and I had to fight through another cloud of them to get back inside.

That patch of vines can go to hell, is what I’m saying.  It can take over the whole front of the house for all I care.  I come in through the damn garage anyway.

On priorities

flat,1000x1000,075,f.jpgLet’s have a word, parents and grandparents.

It doesn’t really matter if your (maybe) four-year-old grandson is any good at Skee-Ball or Big Rig.  You hear me?  It doesn’t fucking matter at all.  Yes, I know if he’s more accurate he’ll get more tickets and be able to get more stuff from the redemption counter afterwards.  So is he, believe it or not.  And it doesn’t matter.  

He’s not going to care afterwards.  He’s not improving his motor functions when you stand behind him and browbeat him for fifteen minutes about keeping his elbow locked or his arm straight when he’s throwing a ball for Skee-Ball.  His timing isn’t going to be any better if the two of you stand behind him and shout NOW! (notably, not in unison) when you think he ought to be dropping a coin to hit a lever in Big Rig.  And if you, a grown-ass man old enough to have Seen some Shit in your life, who presumably raised some kids to adulthood already, elbow your four-year-old out of the way on this meaningless fucking game so that you can “do it right for him,” there is something seriously wrong with you.  

I mean, hell, you’ve made me hate you in less than half an hour, and I’m not the target of your constant hectoring and your bullshit over every single damn thing I do.  No wonder the kid’s “misbehaving” (by refusing to give up his last ball on his Skee-ball game as the timer slowly clicks the throw away anyway, because he doesn’t want you to do it for him); it’s not “kids these days,” as you griped to the other mysteriously old couple in my gameroom just now.  It’s that you’re both assholes and your grandson rightly doesn’t seem to like you very much, because he’s not having any fun.  

You have managed to take a kid to an arcade and make it not fun.  That’s unbelievable.  It would be an accomplishment to be proud of were it not so sad.

I mean, seriously: why the hell did you bring him here anyway?

This is a short way of saying “it’s bedtime”

We had a corporate visit from a half-dozen or so Lord High Muckety-Mucks today.  I spent the last two days cleaning the living hell out of the store, and while the visit literally could not have gone any better without them showering all of us with candy and bonus checks I am tired as a motherfucker right now and my knees and hips are screaming at me every time I sit down for more than a couple of minutes and then try to stand back up.

So naturally I’m watching videos about installing vinyl flooring, because that’s totally what I need to be doing right now.

On musicals

alexander-hamilton-portrait-john-trumbull.jpgBriefly, I hope: it hit me on the way home from work tonight that I never actually said anything about how we found Wicked.  We sort of got our tickets by accident; I thought the show was in town for a much longer run and randomly remarked to my wife that I wouldn’t mind going, and before I knew it we had tickets to the show’s last night, which was last Friday.  It was here for something like a two-week run.

I was quite pleased with it.  Showing up in a green shirt with a black tie was a happy coincidence, but I didn’t mind that I’d accidentally marked myself as a fan, because by the end of the show I was.  I’d have preferred slightly better seats; the Morris Civic Auditorium doesn’t really have any bad seats, per se, and we were in the front row of our balcony, but leg room was getting to me a bit and I spent the entire intermission standing up and walking around because otherwise I’d have had to have a leg amputated by the end of the show and I suspect the ushers would have frowned on that.  But it was a great performance; every time I see anything on stage by even semi-professionals I’m amazed at what people are able to do with sets and lighting and such and when it’s actual Broadway professionals doing the work it’s simply outstanding.  I’m really glad we went.

And then I got home and over the last couple of days I’ve been giving the Hamilton soundtrack another whirl after being unable to get through it the first couple of times I tried; again, listening in the car has transformed how I approach a piece of music.  I’m not going to say much, because I want to listen a few more times and then write a longer piece, but I suspect I’m becoming a Hamiltonian.  Like, I listened to it in the car, and I get it now, and yeah, y’all were right.  But more on that later.

Meanwhile, I’m finding that I’m really looking forward to the Rocky Horror Picture Show revival… thingamajig.  I’ve seen the film a million times but have (somehow) never seen it on stage, and the idea of Laverne Cox playing Dr. Frank-N-Furter is fascinating.  So there’s a post coming for that probably eventually as well.

 

Adventures in customer service

3QR8OQZ.jpgI seriously don’t remember if I’ve mentioned this around here– I probably have– and you may have heard about it already, but: some Southeast Asian shipping company recently went bankrupt.  At this moment, or at least at a reasonably recent moment and the last moment where I have current news about it, at least one of their barges is stranded somewhere between Vietnam and the West Coast, its contents in legal limbo due to the bankruptcy.

On that barge is several tons of furniture.  Among that several tons of furniture is furniture that I, personally, have already sold to several different people.  And over the course of the last week or so I’ve had to make contact with all those people and have a conversation where I tell them that I have, literally, no idea when we might receive the furniture they purchased, if ever, and that I’m very very sorry and please be willing to be patient while the lawyers work all this out.

I said at work the other day that it was difficult to conceive of a situation that was more clearly not my fault.  My boss, who sort of specializes in this sort of one-up, looked me in the eye and immediately replied that four or five years ago we lost a cargo ship to fucking pirates.  I shit thee not.

I have three different customers who were affected by this issue.  One of them shrugged and said they’d get back to me in a few weeks and see if we had better information.  One of them cancelled their order more or less immediately, but without any real rancor.  One of them hit the roof, ranting and raving that they were going to come in and cancel immediately and by God I had better be willing to sell them the floor model.  Yes, both of those things, in more or less the same sentence.

I can’t sell them the floor model.  Chief among these reasons were they were not the first people to be affected by this; we have a customer who purchased these pieces in June and has been awaiting them for a while, and they’d get first dibs– if we sold floor models at all, which typically we don’t.

Anyway.  These people– I’ll call them the Nelsons– came in Saturday.  I spent forty-five minutes not selling furniture to other people while I talked them down off the ledge and made sure they understood what was going on and presented several other “let’s not cancel this right now” options, including the popular “let’s just be patient for a bit and see what happens” gambit.

Along with the specific pieces that they can’t have, the Nelsons ordered an end table.  The end table has arrived and was in our warehouse.  They initially regarded this with suspicion; if the end table was there, how come the other things weren’t?  This was initially regarded as evidence of some sort of lie on my part.  But eventually I managed to convince them to take their end table, go home, and give me a couple of weeks to see what else might happen.

Pull around back; the end table is in the warehouse somewhere; I’ll find it and bring it to you since our warehouse guy has gone home for the day.  Note that the warehouse is way more stuffed than usual because the immense amount of Hot Furn ™ that we sold over the Labor Day sale has started to come in.

Twenty-five minutes later, having enlisted the help of three other employees and our truck driver, I had to tell these poor bastards that I couldn’t find their fucking end table anygoddamnwhere.  This, after 45 minutes of patient please-come-down-from-the-ledge talk.

“I will bring the motherfucker to you tomorrow myself,” I said, except not quite.  Because at this point the bullshit was my bullshit, and as far as I could tell it was my fault that I couldn’t find the fucking end table, and I was fairly convinced that had our warehouse guy been there he’d have had it in under five minutes.   He’s one of those guys.  He knows where every loose bolt and piece of mouse shit is in that warehouse, and if you move something, he’ll know.

Mr. Nelson actually appeared fairly touched by this gesture, insisting that they’d come back and I didn’t have to.  I stayed firm.  Fuck it.

“Where do you guys live?”

“Niles.”

Well.  Shit.  Niles is in Michigan, for those of you who don’t know, and it’s a bit of a hike.  Not a hugely unreasonable one, but a bit of a hike.  Well, I was the dumbass who made a promise before looking at their address.  I’m still bringing them the damn thing tomorrow once Warehouse Guy finds it.

And then it was the next day, and Warehouse Guy couldn’t find the end table, and the manager couldn’t find the end table, and it was eventually determined that no one had any idea how or when the damn thing got received in the first place, and I howled like a monkey and threw shit at the walls until the manager agreed that I could– wait for it– sell them one of the floor models.  Because we had three, and we really didn’t need three of these round end tables on the floor, so fuck it, but call them and tell them that’s what they’re getting so they don’t throw a shit fit when it arrives and it’s not in a box.

I was not looking forward to that conversation, but at least it went well; I spoke to Mr. Nelson again, and he appeared to gloss over the “floor model” part.  Of the two, he was the less adamant that they should be sold the floor model anyway.

So.  Flash forward several hours later, and I am in a fucking trailer park behind a Wal-Mart in rural fucking Michigan trying to find a street address that is not there.  Wal-Marts are terribly depressing places; most of you have been in one and can probably attest to this.  I am here to tell you that if Wal-Mart is depressing, the trailer park behind that Wal-Mart, a trailer park that is surrounded by a wooden palisade like a fucking eighteenth-century fort, is ever so much more depressing than that Wal-Mart could ever possibly be.

Especially when you’re looking for 1234 Strawberry Street, and your GPS in your phone is insisting that yeah,  you’re there, only you can’t find Strawberry Street on a sign anywhere– there’s Cherry Street and Mango Street and I don’t know, fucking Alpaca Street or some shit, only none of them are streets so much as gravel paths, and the local feral children have all immediately grokked that you don’t belong there and they’re literally following your car, and also you’re looking for 1234 and none of the trailers have addresses with more than two digits and holy shit this is not worth it for a $600 sale.  

So.  Yeah.  When I get to work tomorrow, I’m gonna figure out whose ass I need to whup, and then I’m gonna find that person– which may involve leaving work, because they may not work for us anymore– and I’m gonna whup somebody’s ass.  Because somebody got told that these folks live at 1234 Strobberie Street, and put 1234 Strawberry Street into the fucking computer, which doesn’t exist, and while I figured it out eventually I’m pretty sure at least one of those kids I had to run over to get out of the trailer park is dead now and that’s just inconvenient for everyone involved.

The moral of the story: homophones suck.

The end.