Sunday, December 18, 2016

As Trump era nears, is the media ready for the challenge?

Journalism, more and more, is concentrated in New York City, Washington and California . . . 

from the Washington Post

The newspapers of the Midwest
their writers have had to divest.
They get all their scoops
from various groups
tied up to a Special Int'rest. 



Elderhood

A pickpocket is Time to me;
sneaking up so gradually.
Taking hearing, sight, and smell;
making stairs a living hell.

Yes, I've lived past sixty-three
and I've seen some history.
I've become a bard, a rhymer,
sitting in my soft recliner.

When I start my long recital,
it's not treated like it's vital;
my kids have their fish to fry
and don't care if I speechify.

And so I mark the passing term,
slowing down to food for worm.
Sage advice I have but little:
Don't open cans marked 'Peanut Brittle'.


Here’s why they will most likely return your gifts

“One out of every three gift recipients in the U.S. returned at least one gift item during the 2013 holiday season with the total dollars of returned gifts estimated at $262.4 billion (not including fraudulent returns),” Cohn writes. “This figure does not include unwanted gifts that are not returned but kept in a closet, regifted, sold, donated or thrown away.”
from the Washington Post 


When giving me a gift, don't try
to please me with a silk necktie. 
I never wear 'em, 'cept to church
(then hang 'em on the backyard birch).

A book on diet will be tossed
outside into the cold, cold frost;
yes, I know I'm overweight -- 
but you're a drunk, so cease to prate.

You think I'll like that cheap tick-tock?
It only shows you know your schlock.
Your box of candy is so stale
it's only fit for garbage pail.

No sweater, socks, or fountain pen
will ever make you my dear friend.
And gadgets for my laptop? Nix!
I'd rather have a muffin mix.

And if you try a fruitcake, mate,
you better wear a thick breastplate
because I'll throw it back so fast
you'll think it was a cannon blast.

A thoughtful gift would be so rare
that it would make me stop and stare.
Yet shopping for me isn't hard -- 
cuz all I want's a damn gift card!  






No-religion 'Nativity' display gets OK for Iowa Capitol

The centerpiece of the secular display will be a Bill of Rights "nativity," foundation officials said. The cutout depicts founding fathers Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson and George Washington, along with the Statue of Liberty, gazing in adoration at a "baby" Bill of Rights.

from the Des Moines Register 


An atheist in bland Des Moines
wanted goodwill to purloin;
he got very fresh
when it came to a creche,
so he 'roasted' one like tenderloin. 


Local governments eager to see returns from Amazon.com deal

An estimated $200 million in state sales tax and another $100 million in local sales taxes go uncollected each year from online purchases made by Utahns.

from the Deseret News

No sales tax was ever designed
to give biznessmen peace of mind.
Their customers gripe
at government's swipe,
and say they are being robbed blind.


Peace in this World

"It is only through following the Savior that any of us can find peace and serenity in the trials that will come to all of us."   Henry B. Eyring
Follow the Light of the World for repose;
He allays ev'ry pain from our commonplace woes.
The trials I've encountered, though filled with my foes,
 are sweetened by Christ into sunlit meadows. 


Saturday, December 17, 2016

Too Many Favorite Shows? Take Them In at High Speed

With Netflix and podcasts and so many other media offering uncountable hours of addictive programming, how is a listener or viewer supposed to keep up? For some, the answer is speed watching or speed listening — taking in the content at accelerated speeds, sometimes two times as fast as normal.

from the New York Times 

There was a young woman from Wheatley
who wanted to watch programs fleetly.
At double the pace
she forfeited grace,
her mind overloading completely. 





Restaurant Review: China Garden. Provo, Utah.

In my 63 years of living I have yet to walk into a Chinese restaurant where they are glad to see me. Usually they treat me like Dracula drifting into a blood bank; 'You here to suck us dry, or what?' After giving it careful and prejudiced thought, I have come to the conclusion that most proprietors feel an awful injustice has been done to them; they were meant to be Mandarin satraps or Confucian scholars, not grubbing for money over a greasy hot wok twelve hours a day. So they take it out on their customers.

When I asked for the tangerine beef, which is on their online menu, the lady hovering over me grimaced as if I had stepped on her bunion, then said "Don't have; never have it."

I had been looking forward to this particular dish. I researched it on Google and went without any breakfast this morning so I would have a good appetite to enjoy it. And then the lady tells me I can't have it. They don't have it. It's been a phantom, a willow-the-wisp, a fool's errand, all along. So I settled for the beef Szechwan.

  The beef was tender and the sauce was spicy. I got a bowl of hot and sour soup and a fountain drink with it. I paid $9.80. But it wasn't tangerine beef. So I'm only giving this place 2 Burps.

My fortune cookie slip read: "Because of your melodic nature, the moonlight never misses an appointment."  I'm putting that one in my hope chest.

However, to be fair, they do have the largest men's room I have ever seen in a restaurant outside of a big franchise:

That counts for a lot to a fat guy like me.

Having made a thorough study of the works of Sax Rohmer, I believe I may speak with some authority when it comes to the many and varied types of torture to be found in a Chinese restaurant. I have already described one, namely the perfidious Tangerine Switcheroo. Here are a few others to look out for:

Chopsticks of Death. Many of these places give you a set of balsa wood chopsticks that are not quite split in half, so you have to pull them apart like a wishbone. Only, sometimes they don't come apart very easily and so you really yank on them -- then they explode into a shower of splinters, blinding you and quite possibly bringing on cardiac arrest.

The Mockery of Spice. It's not marked as 'spicy' on the menu, and yet when you shovel the first bite into your mouth you can immediately feel your tongue turning into hot asphalt. It's no use arguing about it with the waitress; she'll only bring you a plate of something else, if you insist, that is so bland your taste buds will catch the red eye to Miami for the next samba festival.

Water, water, everywhere . . .  During the start of your meal, before the soy sauce and MSG kick in, your waitress will stop by every 47 seconds to refill your water glass. But once you begin craving a long cool drink of water, all the help has evaporated. You are left to pant out your life on the floor, with an arid tongue so swollen it could pass for a sea cucumber.

The Belly Squeeze. All the table and chairs are bolted to the floor, so if you are a little on the heavy side, and try to slide into your seat, you find that  your gut is being sawn away by the table's edge. Frantic movement just increases the ripping action, and you're disemboweled in a matter of minutes.


En Strengen av Perler: Memoirs of Another Mangy Lover, or Alice of the Circus.



In 1962 Groucho Marx convulsed the country with his confessions of illicit passion in a book called Memoirs of a Mangy Lover. As a randy nine-year-old I obtained a paperback edition before you could say "prepubescent" and immersed myself in his slightly raunchy anecdotes. Needless to say, I was chapfallen when his book failed to deliver the dirty goods. It was merely a string of whimsical stories held together by the common theme of romantic collapse and calamity -- something I did not wish to study in depth at the time.

But today, older, wiser, and bereft of any meaningful connections with the distaff side of society, I, too, am ready to settle back and brew up some of my own memoirs of mangy love affairs gone awry.

Specifically, the tale of Alice of the Circus.

I have previously mentioned that in 1973 I worked as one of the advance clowns for Ringling Brothers. Among other things, this entailed spending 3 months in New York City touting The Greatest Show on Earth.

I enjoyed my settled routine in the Big Apple while it lasted, casting aside the nervous tics and ferret-like demeanor that comes all too often to those who lead a peripatetic existence. I went to church each Sunday and gradually put names to faces among the LDS congregants.

One member in particular had a face I desired to put a name to. Alice. She had jet black hair, effervescent brown eyes, pouty and luscious carmine lips, and a body that would not quit. I sat next to her every Sabbath, and gradually we began holding hands while singing hymns such as "Come, Come, Ye Saints" and "If You Could Hie to Kolob".

She was a nursing student at Colombia University, and lived at the Young Women's Hebrew Association building on Nagle Avenue in Manhattan.

When the circus hit town I invited her down to Madison Square Garden to watch it whenever she wanted. I had an in with the operator of the private elevator on the east side of the Garden. It was supposed to be strictly for the bigwigs, but the guy who ran it was crazy for yellow bread pudding the Greek joint on the corner served; I would bring him a cold hunk every few days -- and for that he let Alice and I ride up to the mezzanine as if we were royalty.

Alice was enchanted with the show. She became fast friends with the Hungarian teeter board act, giving the older women in the troupe back rubs when their spines threatened to blow out from catching the menfolk on their shoulders.

On her birthday Mark Anthony in clown alley made her a petite foam rubber birthday cake that turned inside out into a yellow duck.

After the last show I would escort her back to the YWHA. We stopped at a coffee shop along the way that featured something called 'sinkers' -- donuts of a particularly heavy composition that were ideal for dunking in coffee. In fact, the shop featured an 8 by 10 photo of Red Skelton doing his famous "How to Dunk a Donut" routine, using one of their donuts.

Male company was not allowed upstairs at the YWHA, and so we dallied in the lobby, making goo-goo eyes at each other and locking lips when we had the place to ourselves. We were in sync; simpatico; crazy about each other.

Then the time came for me to move on with my advance clown duties, first to Philadelphia and then to Chicago.

And we argued. She wanted me to call her every day. I said I'd write her every day. (A stamp cost eight cents, while a daily long distance call ran into a lot of nickles and dimes.) Then she called me a bad name. She said I was cheap.

I left her standing alone at the Orange Julius bar, took the subway back to my room, packed my bag, and was off to Philly that night.

And once I reached Philadelphia . . . I began calling her every day, to apologize.

She accepted my apologies gracefully, and even let me fly her out so we could attend a performance of H.M.S. Pinafore together.

All was well between us again. She went back to school in New York and I carried on with my publicity work.

Until Denver, when I realized that my bank book was hemorrhaging badly thanks to Ma Bell.

My last call to her was short, sharp, and stereotyped. I told her it was over; she cried; I told her she hadn't done anything wrong; it was all my fault; and she told me to stick my red rubber nose where the sun don't shine.

Alice was my first serious circus fling. After her, I decided that women and clowns don't mix. Clowns are social misfits whose yearning for affection is white hot and spills out in their wild attempts to win an audience's laughter and applause. As long as they are getting that, no woman can ever move into their hearts as anything but a temporary boarder. Real love and domesticity came to me only after I had quit the road (temporarily, as it turned out) and found an apple-cheeked schoolmarm in the wilds of North Dakota . . .



Inversions prompt EPA to bump Utah pollution status to 'serious'

In Utah the air is so clean
it turns the esophagus green.
Each breath that you take
puts your fitness at stake.
(Keep driving your car like a teen!)