Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Data Rape


There are no secrets nowadays --
Our data’s spread like mayonnaise.

The moment you go on Facebook
There’s someone else will take a look.

The world will know your ev’ry tweet,
While Reddit is just indiscreet.

If you would like some privacy
Then be a cyber absentee.

Since otherwise there’s no escape
From automatic data rape!

Tuesday, May 9, 2017

Christian Governor in Indonesia Found Guilty of Blasphemy Against Islam, Goes to Jail



JAKARTA, Indonesia — An Indonesian court found the Christian governor of the country’s capital, Jakarta, guilty of blasphemy against Islam on Tuesday, sentencing him to two years in prison in a case widely seen as a test of religious tolerance and free speech.


The Governor there in Jakarta
Is finding the place a real Sparta.
Not being Islamic
Is not very comic --
And don’t ask about Magna Carta!

There are unconfirmed reports it was a Lemon Meringue Pie



It warmed the cockles of my heart this morning to read in BuzzFeed that Qantas CEO Alan Joyce received a pie in the face during a business breakfast. The perpetrator of this lovely clownish misdemeanor is an elderly Australian man, no name given as yet. All police are saying at the moment is that “There are unconfirmed reports it was a Lemon Meringue Pie.

It is altogether meet and fit that a moneybags like Joyce should be pied, after being paid thirteen million dollars salary last year. A pie in the face keeps a man humble and reminds him that he is apt to slip on a banana peel sooner or later.  

As a circus clown for over thirty years, I have made a study of the nature and function of slapstick actions such as pie throwing. There can be no doubt that physical comedy is born of man’s innate need to see the high and mighty brought down by violent and whimsical means. And a pie is the ideal instrument to reward hubris of any kind.

In America, a pie cooling on the kitchen windowsill says all there is to say about homely domesticity and the basic goodness of simple things. Something that rich people, with their maids and butlers and fripperies, know nothing about. Pushing this bourgeoisie symbol into the face of a plutocrat thus brings immense satisfaction, and at the same time is a ringing denunciation of the everlasting inequality of the status quo. It is also highly subversive. In Laurel and Hardy’s epic pie fight film, ‘Battle of the Century,’ a moment arrives when the mayor of the city, top-hatted and frock-coated, steps into the fray to positively prohibit any more pastry slinging. He is immediately set upon by all parties and is soon wallowing in sugary goo. Would that all mayors and governors and senators and presidents could be bombarded by custard and fruit-filled tarts! There’s nothing like a lather of banana cream around the face to make a fat cat sit up and pay attention to the hoi polloi.

At Ringling Brothers we were more egalitarian -- our motto in clown alley was “A pie in the kisser for rich and poor alike!” This also held true for seltzer spray, buckets of water, conks on the head with foam rubber mallets, and detonations. Still and all, it was a recognized fact that any clown who could muster an air of authority in the ring would get the biggest laugh when pummeled with a shaving cream pie or have his pants set on fire.

Slapstick is both raw and cruel -- there is nothing refined or subtle about it. It is comic triage. It uses brutality and humiliation to make its point -- if it even has a point. Slapstick for slaptick’s sake is pretty much the modus operandi of all circus and screen clowns. But it is not terrorism. Or criminal. Slapstick does no harm in the long run and seeks no felonious gain. It is a manifestation of our pre-verbal frustrations and desires. When a child has a toy snatched away suddenly, it hits out or runs around howling in a circle. That is not the action of a terrorist or crook. Just a child’s reaction to something it views as arbitrary and unjust. The slapstick of clowns is the same thing -- you kick me in the pants and I’m obliged to chase you with a blunderbuss and shoot your keister off. No hard feelings -- it’s just how things are done around here.

Those who have been pied in the recent past include the Premier of Alberta, Ralph Klein; Fashion Designer Calvin Klein; Microsoft founder Bill Gates; Publisher Rupert Murdoch; King Carl Gustaf of Sweden; New York Mayor Abraham Beame; and James Allen Rhodes, the Governor of Ohio. None of them were seriously injured, except in their pride. For the most part both the media and the public expressed outrage at such boorish behavior. But a hard minority confessed to a profound relishment -- the ones who truly understand the meaning of slapstick.

In 2017 slapstick in the circus is pretty much gone. If you want to see someone get a pie in the face you’ll have to scan the news for more business breakfasts.  Clowns today play pretty flutes and lead the crowd in pattycake chants. Slaps and blows and falls are frowned on by parenting experts, and a good old-fashioned explosion that sends clown bodies flying every which way is deemed politically incorrect. But at the same time violence blossoms on the silver screen and on TV as never before. And violence has never been what real slapstick is about. With real slapstick you get a pie in the face, do a double-take, wipe it off, and then go about your business. In other words -- you always recover. But nobody recovers from a bullet in the head or gruesome knifing on television.

Slapstick is, at bottom, life-affirming. It certainly involves some pain and humiliation -- but that’s part of life, isn’t it? So unless Alan Joyce has diabetes, I don’t see the harm in letting him have a taste of pie in an overzealous manner. And you’re right . . . if it was me on the receiving end of an unexpected pie I would be crying up the decay of civilized discourse and demanding my pound of flesh right now. But just so you know, back in 1999 I asked a statistician friend who taught at the University of Minnesota to help me figure out how many pies I had gotten in the face during my clown career -- we came up with the sum of 9,877. Give or take a few meringues.

Without Faith

“WIthout faith among men, God can do no miracle among them.”
Quentin L. Cook

If miracles you would behold
You must find the men who are bold
In faith in the Christ,
And have sacrificed
All to protect His dear fold.

Why Everything We Know About Salt is Probably Wrong




New studies of Russian cosmonauts, held in isolation to simulate space travel, show that eating more salt made them less thirsty but somehow hungrier. Subsequent experiments found that mice burned more calories when they got more salt, eating 25 percent more just to maintain their weight.
from the NYTimes


The more salt the better is now the new phrase
of doctors and nurses, who suddenly praise
dat ol' debil sodium like it was gold --
and never again will they caution and scold!
For cosmonauts proved that with plenty of salt
you will lose weight by hydraulic default!
So pass me the shaker and anchovy sauce -- 
for brine has been taken down off of the cross! 


Monday, May 8, 2017

The Prodigal Son -- Updated




The Prodigal Son
having spent all his loot
came back to his father
and got a new suit

The son who stayed home
still got the estate
but after the taxes
he lived in a crate.


Restaurant Review: Magleby's in Provo

At 3360 North University in Provo, Magleby's offers a clean and quiet setting for good eats. Each table has a demure vase of fresh dwarf carnations. Ya gotta like a place that goes to that much trouble. I took my daughter Sarah and her kids there for brunch to thank her for widening my one and only pair of summer shorts and doing some other sewing chores I'm too ham-fisted to manage myself.



She and I both ordered the biscuits and gravy, which comes with home fries and eggs and a strip of their brown sugar coated bacon. The kids split a plate of chicken strips with french fries. I had a fountain drink and the others had water. Oh, and a piece of their celebrated chocolate cake. Total came to $20.54.




Service was fast and cheerful. The portions were handsome. And the food was good. No Olive Garden pretension. No obnoxious background music. The booths are wide enough for me to sit in comfortably. A good place to eat. Four Burps, hands down. And next time I'm getting a side of their bacon.








Obama Warned Trump About Hiring Flynn



Mr. Obama, who had fired Mr. Flynn as the head of the Defense Intelligence Agency, told Mr. Trump that he would have profound concerns about Michael T. Flynn becoming a top national security aide, said the administration officials, who were briefed on the Oval Office conversation. Mr. Trump later ignored the advice, naming Mr. Flynn to be his national security adviser.
from the NYTimes

Loose cannons are all very well
Out in the battlefield hell.
But in the White House
They certainly louse
Up the place with lots of bombshell.

Thailand Memories: Bangkok Gridlock



After finishing my TESOL course at TEFL International I was anxious to get to work as an English teacher.  My first job was in Bangkok. Having heard all the moans & groans about apartment prices in Bangkok I thought I would be a smart cookie and head out to the suburbs for my pied a terre.  I located an apartment in Nonthaburi for 3-thousand baht per month.  It consisted of a large tiled room, with a bedstead holding one of those impossibly rigid Thai mattresses, the ones stuffed with sand, and a bathroom.  The sink and mirror were located out on the balcony, where Greater Racket-tailed Drongos used to perch on the ledge to watch me shave.   It even came with air conditioning – a massive, elderly unit that at one time must have graced the lobby of the Marriott Hotel, as it sent out a turbo-charged blast of arctic air that put ice on the walls within ten minutes of being turned on.  When functioning, it produced a roar like an F-5 tornado.  I only used for ten minutes at night before going to bed. The apartment building was populated by a sprinkling of local factory workers and Thai college students, and an abundance of bar girls.  The bar girls were crammed 6 to a room, all sleeping on the floor on rattan mats.  I remember them as pretty good cooks when they'd wake up around noon.  They'd giggle and whisper to each other whenever I walked by one of their open doors, and would invite me in for some curry & rice.  Nothing loath, I often accepted – their food, that is.  It was hard to believe these gals were bar girls – out of makeup and rested, they appeared to be about 15 years old, but once they got back into their nightly working attire I was reminded of a bad Halloween costume.

I initially gloated over my housing coup, thinking how much money I would save because I was willing to commute to work.  That was before I discovered that the Bangkok Public Transportation System was designed by lunatics, built by sadists, and held together by betel nut and rubber bands.  My first morning's commute to my school started at 7am – that allowed me an hour and a half to arrive on time.  On paper, it looked simple.  Walk out to the mouth of my soi, wait for the Number  27 bus, get off on Silom Road, catch one of those truncated buses that used to be painted bright green, and gracefully descend outside the very doorsteps of my school.
I started out towards the mouth of the soi, only to be met by a pack of howling canines.  Luckily, as the weather looked dicey, I was carrying an umbrella, so I scattered the mongrels with several deft swipes of my bumpershoot.  (Nowadays I carry a bottle of water – dousing doubtful dogs as they approach always sends them flying.)  I made a mental note to engage a motorcycle taxi to take me out to the main street from now on.  I arrived at the mouth of my soi in time to see the Number 27 bus receding in the distance.  No matter, I assured myself – another one would be along soon.
An hour later I was fuming as I uneasily rolled on the balls of my tired feet.  I couldn't be late for school, so I flagged down a taxi and wound up paying 150 baht to get to work on time.
The next morning I got a motorcycle taxi out to the main road in plenty of time for the bus.  Piece of cake, really.  I hopped on, paid my fare, and sat back smugly to enjoy the rich tapestry of life that presents itself to one gazing out the window while riding an unairconditioned bus in Bangkok.  I highly recommend it to both amateur and professional photographers.  The only weevil in the rice was that we never reached Silom Road – we stopped at the Victory Monument – which, I was to find out, acts as a kind of maelstrom for all buses, mini vans, motorcycle taxis, and everything else on wheels that charges a fare.  If you stay on any bus in Bangkok long enough you will eventually find it drawn to the Victory Monument – even if it was supposed to go to Chiang Mai!  In a panic, I flagged down a taxi and made it to school on time by the skin of my teeth.
My bus map and my neighbors assured me it was the Number 27 bus I wanted to catch.  So I tried it several more days, with the same result.  I was learning that hard lesson of commuter life – trust no map or printed schedule, for they are fairy tales at best, devil-spawned traps for the unwary at worst.

I went to Plan B.  This involved taking a taxi to the Municipal Boat Pier in Nonthaburi, taking the express boat down to the Taksin Bridge, and then getting on the skytrain for several stops, and then walking about a half mile to the school.  This was more time-consuming and expensive, and I occasionally got soaked when filthy waves would overflow the delicate craft as it charged down the river, dodging rice barges and fishing trawlers.  At the end of the month, toting up my commuter bill, I realized I could have gotten a swanky place in Bangkok, probably right next door to my school, for less than I was spending on commuting.  Plus I could sleep past 5am. 
I eventually did trade my homey Nonthaburi abode for something closer to work – at which time, as is according to Torkildson's Law – my teaching contract was not renewed and I had to seek another school.  Which I found rather quickly . . . out in Nonthaburi.  But now I was locked into a one year lease on my apartment in Bangkok.
My advice to aspiring ESL teachers here in Thailand when it comes to accommodations?
BUY A TENT.

Sunday, May 7, 2017

Trump's Whimsical Wall



The whimsical wall made of twilight and dreams
is mortared with hummingbird song and moonbeams.
The bricks are of sponge cake, the spotlights of stars
That twinkle sedately behind candy bars.
The rag dolls that guarded this make believe fence
Have licorice sticks as their sturdy defence.
And dragons fly high overhead just in case
Some dangerous nino would dare make a face.
A moat full of pudding surrounded the roots,
And all of the gates are of sweet Juicy Fruits.
Around the great wall ride the fairies and imps
On hop frogs and pink little dear little shrimps.  
Although an illusion, it seems very real
To many lawmakers or vapid schlemiel.
And all the king’s horses and all the king’s guys
Will never find money to make that wall rise.