I'm not a label

Surfing around the web at lunch today, I ran across this gem on Ace of Spades:

Since we were kids, we always enjoyed the humorous and sometimes poetic group-names given to different animals. It was interesting to us that one said a school of fish but a pack of wolves; it was delightful that one said a parliament of owls and an exultation of larks. A shrewdness of apes, a crash of rhinoceroses, an ostentation of peacocks-- just grand poetry.

And of course it was just flat-out cool that one said a murder of crows.

But this practice was also extended to naming groups of people. One could say a skulk of thieves (cool!), a rascal of boys (cute!), and, if one could keep a straight face, a neverthriving of jugglers (goofy!). More of these are found here; we don't know if we'll ever actually say a superfluidity of nuns, but it's nice to know that we could, if we wanted to...

... from the Home Office in Pocatello, Idaho...

Top Ten Lesser-Known Collective Nouns for Different Groups of People

10. A gesticulation of Italians

9. A corruption of Congressmen

8. A moustache of policemen

7. A tumescence of pornstars

6. A shriek of liberals

5. A waddle of Rosie O'Donnells

4. An armpit of feminists

3. An insignificance of Canadians

2. A malodor of Frenchmen (also acceptable: a quavering of Frenchmen; a surrender of Frenchmen)

...and the Number One Lesser-Known Collective Noun for a Group of People...

1. A crimewave of Kennedys

Honorable Mentions:

A doddering of seniors

A twaddle of Democrats

A condescension of reporters

A kegger of collegians

A genocide of Germans

A trust-fund of "peace" marchers

A hypervapidity of Maureen Dowd

We might add a grumble of conservatives, and a bickering of libertarians.

Posted by Buckethead Buckethead on   |   § 7

The Simpering Ninnyhammers Will Surely Be Cowed By This Display of Litero-Critical Celerity!

The American Spectator continues its long, sad slide from moderately respectable navel-gazing publication for the argyle socks set to hilarious yet pathetic and forlorn laughingstock (like a retarded dog is simultaneously funny and pathetic and forlorn) as the magazine pillories that mollycoddled malcontent mopping milquetoast for malcontented morons, fake news anchor Jon Stewart with all the blinding wit and unwieldy adjectives at its disposal.

Have at you! Arrgh!

Posted by Johno Johno on   |   § 6

The whole Terry Schiavo thingy

Patton over at Opinion8 has actually managed to draw a conclusion out of the morass that is the Terry Schialvo Cluster@#!?%. For that, I salute him. But in the end, his conclusion is that there really isn't much we can say for certain, though he pads this thought with some interesting bits about the media and other things as well. Go read it. But his piece actually pulled into slightly clearer focus my own mixed bag of thoughts on the matter.

Throughout this whole media ordeal, I have found myself wondering, "Why is it so necessary to pull the plug?" Sure, the husband has the legal right (proven at great length and, likely, cost) to make that decision for his wife. And that is the way it should be. In most cases where we talk about pulling the plug, having do not recussitate orders and the like, it is when the patient is going through, or is expected to suffer, extreme physical pain. My grandfather had pancreatic cancer, and we used hospice. They mitigated the (ungodly) pain that he went through, and when the chemo failed to control the cancer, they made his passing as peaceful as could possibly be imagined. Had heroic measures been used to keep my grandfather alive, at most he would have gained a few weeks or months of hellish suffering.

But the cases are not really similar. By all accounts, it did not seem that Terry was in any way suffering - just seemingly out of it mentally, and for the long haul. It did not require extensive medical technology, just a feeding tube and the kind of nursing care that any bedridden senior in a nursing home needs to remain amongst the living. The parents are willing to bear all the cost and effort of caring for Terry, why is he so intent on pulling the plug?

And those thoughts led to wondering about his motivation. He's still married to Terry, though he has a girlfriend, and children with her. Why didn't he get a divorce, or the marriage annulled or something? What does he have to gain by her death that he wouldn't get by leaving her behind with her parents and moving on with his life? I've seen reports that he would stand to gain from insurance or malpractice suits - which he would not if he were no longer married to her. And apparently, the dispute with the parents dated from the first settlement.

I don't know for sure that this is his motivation - though it seems plausible. But one thing is sure - that whatever his motivation - he gave a lot of assholes reason to piss in the swimming pool that is our political commons.

Posted by Buckethead Buckethead on   |   § 10

Dorkorama, Round II, Bout 2

Voting is now closed for round two, bout two of the Ministry of Minor Perfidy’s Biggest Dork competition. Johno's tale of Space Camp dorkery proved victorious, bringing the round to a 1-1 tie. We now move to the final and deciding dork fight - stay tuned.

Welcome to the latest round in the Ministry of Minor Perfidy's Biggest Dork competition. Please read the following tales of supremely dorky behavior and leave your vote for biggest dork in the comments. Then tell your friends: it's so much more fun when the jeering is done in groups!

An as yet untested Buckethead came out swinging in his first bout against me for the title of Dork Supreme, and hit hard. Amidst light voting, the concensus was for his live-action gamedorkery over my tale of winter woe in the Boy Scouts. Consequently, I find myself down 0-1 and facing elimination in this best of three contest.

I am down to my last option, the final out, fourth and long, my last dry powder. If I'm going to stay in this thing, I have to bring out the big guns.
Lt. Commander: Sir, you can't mean...
Johno: Yes, Commander. I do.
Lt. Commander: You can't!
Johno: I must. We both knew this day would come; this terrible conflict must be brought to an close. Joe, I want you listen very carefully. This is the last order I will ever give you. I hope you've made your peace with that which troubles you. We're not going to have much time. Are you ready?
Lt. Commander: Sir. I'm... I'm ready sir.
Johno: Commander, it is time to exercise the nuclear option. Prepare the Space Camp Story.
Lt. Commander: ...
Lt. Commander: ...
Lt. Commander: ... yes, sir.

J. Haldeman and Wizards of the Coast present in stunning surround-o-vision the latest installment of The Forever Dork saga, In Space(Camp) No One Can Hear You Scream

When I was about twelve, I decided that I wanted to spend a week of summer vacation at Space Camp. Most of you will remember Space Camp only from the supremely silly movie of the same name. I never even saw that tripe; I wanted the real deal, a week pretending to be a Space Shuttle Astronaut and learning about rocketry, space science and other related geekery at the very teat of the National Air and Space Administration. In truth it was not NASA at all but the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama, but I didn't care. Rockets! Planets! Freeze dried ice cream!

Twelve was an awkward age for me. It was the darkest days of my dorkiness (as detailed at agonizing length in prior posts) and I was just barely on the cusp of realizing that behavior I considered perfectly rational might strike others as strange and off-putting. However, unlike at school where math, biology, and the like came easily, I didn’t really have a firm grasp yet on the niceties of social interaction. I was like a like a nine year old who’s just been told about the birds and the bees and understands in his way that A (sex) causes B (babies), without having any idea at all how A (sex) really works. Meditate for a moment on the myriad ways a nine year old could misconstrue how doin’ it actually gets done, then do please read on.

I will say this for Space Camp: they tried hard. The Huntsville facility had a really cool museum, a water tank for weightless training, a huge hangar space with a few model spacecraft and an activities area, and access to top-notch research sites in the area: The University of Alabama, rocket and component design companies, and a company that had a space with a perfectly flat floor necessary for certain weightless simulations. I got to meet, speak to, and be enlightened by astronauts, astrophysicists, rocket scientists, and other assorted people in charge of making huge things hurtle into space at stupendous velocities. Every day we were kept busy with activities and seminars; every night we trooped into the IMAX theatre to watch giant footage of moon landings and Shuttle takeoffs while patriotic music blared in quadrophonic sound.

As cool as Space Camp was in theory, it was peopled in fact by one cross-section of adolescent society: dorks. My particular group, Europa Team, was composed of about eight boys and two girls, and it wasn't long until I found myself drifting to the bottom of the pecking order, the dork of dorks. As I mentioned, I didn't really have the whole "social interaction" thing down pat yet (“wait... so the man’s hoo-ha goes in where?!?!”), so this is no surprise in retrospect. While I did get along well with one or two of my teammates, most of them didn’t seem to take to me no matter how hard I tried to be cool, funny, and friendly. I hadn't been there 24 hours before I came around a corner to find some of them adopting my slouching posture and imitating my reflexive greeting – “Where is everybody else?” ("No... wait... in the la-la?! That can't be right...)

I became determined to win my fellow dorks over; to make them like me. In an effort to be funny, I kept talking long after I should have shut up. In an effort to be outgoing I barged into conversations. I let myself be talked into making an awful mess on my cafeteria tray and leaving it on the table for the staff to find - an artifact that provoked furious screaming from the kitchen staff as we snuck out the nearest door. But despite my best efforts to be liked, matters only got worse.

My contribution to the team's model space station - yet another dorky team event I failed to prevail in (see the Boy Scouts, below) - was a space telescope, on the theory that out in space, there's no atmosphere in the way. While perfectly true, compared to some of the other ideas such as the complicated and plausible long-term air/water recycling system contributed by a teammate, it dawned on me that my big idea was in fact fairly small. When the time came for our team to present our space station to the other Space Campers, I attempted to dress my telescope up with a dramatic delivery (“an onboard radio telescope will let us look out at the stars”) accompanied by a sweeping hand wave to express the wonder and vastness of space, only to register vaguely bemused looks from certain of the audience and irritation from the better part of my team.

I grew desperate. One night they brought in McDonald's for dinner for us to eat outside on the campus grounds, and in another attempt to raise my stock among my dork peers, I knelt down and ate a few discarded pickle slices off the pavement.

While the pickle bit garnered a few laughs and briefly raised my hopes for acceptance, what happened next probably explains why I remained a virgin until I was old enough to get drunk (legally) and forget my past. A few members of my team cooked up a plot to convince me that one of the girls on the team - a girl with whom I didn't seem to get along terribly well - had developed a crush on me. Over the course of two days they egged me on, telling me that she liked me.

Who was I to question their wisdom? She was a female and therefore of an alien and unknown species whose mind and motivations were utterly unknown to me. Moreover, she was pretty cute and I was impressionable. I mulled it over in my preadolescent mind. I slept on it. I fretted. I sweated. Finally, I came to a decision. Measures must be taken! I began to screw up my courage. I was going to do it.

That night, there was a presentation on something or other, maybe the composition of gas planets. The conspirators had (of course) managed to get me sitting next to her and had taken residence in the seats directly behind. I made up my mind: the time had come for action. I remember sitting there with a buzzing in my ears as my heart pounded in my chest. I remember getting all hot across the eyes and having trouble breathing normally, but after that things get fuzzy. I remember I turned to her, gulped and said...

What did I say? I can’t quite remember. I said something that was either “I like you too” or “I don't know if I like you back,” but the actual content of my utterance doesn't matter; her reaction was all that counts. As the conspirators looked on, she regarded me as if I'd just dug a fat booger from my nose and smeared it on her cheek, and said in a voice dripping with pained confusion and disdain, “I don't know what you're talking about.”

The culmination of everyone’s week at Space Camp was a simulated Shuttle mission into earth orbit and back. A captain, a co-pilot, a navigator, and a couple specialists would ride in a Shuttle simulator that actually tilted and shook, and would manipulate the levers and lights that would determine whether they lived or died. For the rest of us there would be various Mission Control assignments. Everything was laid out for us in a script.

When it came time for the team to choose up roles, I ardently hoped I would score a coveted spot in the Shuttle simulator. What I got was the part of Science Officer. The Science Officer‘s job was to wear a headset and sit at the end of the Mission Control row in front of an imitation computer display with a couple blinking lights. While the rest of the team launched the shuttle and got it into orbit, it was my duty to sit quietly and wait for two lines in the script, (I think they were, "Experiment 1 is go" and "Experiment 2 is go") and then say those two lines into the microphone. I might have had to push a “start experiment” button as well. Then I sat quietly again while the rest of the team landed the shuttle.

As I left the red earth of Alabama behind, I didn’t reflect much on my stay at Space Camp. It had felt a lot like school, and therefore there was little to consider. I had taken my first trip out of Ohio, made my first extended stay among strangers, and had stuck my hoo-ha in where I thought it ought to go: a job well done. Right?

It was only some years later when I found some old pictures in my parents’ closet that it all came flooding back and I realized how far I had abased myself in the futile hopes of winning the esteem of a group of other dorks. Space dorks.

Pictures survive of me posing proudly in my official NASA blue astronaut jumpsuit (some taken later when I had clearly grown too large for said jumpsuit). There is a picture of me as Science Officer in a Space Camp T-Shirt and serious face, wielding headset and script and waiting to say “Experiment 1 is go.” There are a few pictures of teammates: a couple are smiling; others openly glower at the camera. There has also survived one Polaroid of me strapped into the “Moonwalk Harness” trying to bounce across the floor with the same aplomb as my better-coordinated teammates. Yes, gentle reader, those are prescription aviator lenses, and yes, they are tinted. And yes, my shorts have ridden so far up you can almost make out each of my testicles.

[wik]The unbearable likeness of being

I don’t have a summer camp story. Certainly not a summer camp story that is even remotely in the ballpark of Johno’s humiliating experiences at that black hole of dorkdom, Space Camp. While I went to summer camp every year (sometimes more than once) with the Boy Scouts, my experiences there were largely non-scarring. To keep with the general theme, I will offer two experiences. One happened in the summer, at a park, the other involving the Boy Scouts, which run summer camps. Both of these incidents happened in my fifteenth year on this Earth.

Lack of Merit Badge

Being without a driver’s license is typically a license for dorkitude. Unable to use a manly mode of transportation, the young dork is forced to rely on other means. In my case, this was a used schwinn ten-speed, painted a lovely pastel turquoise. The name of the manufacturer alone sould give you an idea of how goofy my bike was. Added to the manifold goofiness of the name, there was the fact that over that summer, I had undergone a painful growth spurt – over four inches of additional height. My bike, unfortunately, was not capable of matching my growth. Cranking up the seat to its maximum height made the bike barely usable, but it was uncomfortable and embarrassing to ride.

As I mentioned, I was a boy scout. I was pressing hard for my Eagle, and to get it I needed merit badges. For this merit badge, the counselor was the owner of the local hardware store, located at the heart of the historic public square and about two miles from my home. On that particular mid-August day, going from outside into a steambath would have felt like stepping into a meat locker on any normal day. I packed up my materials, ready for the counselor’s signature, and set forth on my trusty steed.

I got to within a block of the hardware store when I realized that, like the dork that I was, I had forgotten to grab my backpack. All the paperwork was neatly packed and resting on the table at home. I turned around and headed back home. Furiously calculating ETAs and average speeds on my casio calculator watch, I figured that if I really hurried, I could get home, get my stuff, and get back downtown and only be a couple minutes late.

Pedaling furiously through the steamy summer, I reached my un-air conditioned home. Not stopping for water, I threw on my backpack and leaped back on my bike. As I approached the public square, I had by this time ridden almost six miles in hundred-plus temperatures, under the broiling sun, with no water. I was less than a block away from the hardware store, approaching the last intersection when nature, dorkish hubris and monomania and the limitations of human physiology all collided. I passed out just as I went off the sidewalk and into the street.

I woke up sometime later, my hands were bloody. My chin hurt, my head hurt and my chubby legs hurt. Blood was everywhere. I found a bloodless section of the back of my hand and felt my chin. It came back bloody. I kindly stranger stood over me, asking, “Are you all right? We called an ambulance. Do you know where your parents are?”

To these sensible questions, in my dazed state I could only say, “I need to get my Merit Badge.”

The kindly stranger, nonplussed by my apparent non sequitur, could only ask, “What merit badge?”

Full consciousness rushed back as I realized just how stupid a thing to say that was. But I was a Boy Scout, and I couldn’t lie.

“Safety Merit Badge.”

Share the road, assholes!

A little while later, I got my learner’s permit, and commenced the arduous process of learning to drive. My parents were patient and able teachers. (Well, mom was patient.) And I took to driving like a lead brick takes to water. My very first time behind the wheel, I nearly drove my grandfather’s ’76 Toyota Celica off a dirt road in southern Ohio. But by the time I was almost sixteen, six months of constant practice had made me a very good driver, considering that I was a spastic dork with only six months experience driving. I wheedled and pleaded to get every minute of possible driving time. Late in the spring, my family had a picnic at Salt Fork State park. It was a lovely affair, with family fellowship, excellent food, beautiful scenery and my cousins insisting that we play touch football just to watch me squirm when they made me be on the ‘skins’ team.

It was mid-afternoon as we packed up our things and prepared to depart. My mom, my favorite aunt, my grandmother, my cousin Chris and I piled into our brand new Suburu DL station wagon. I was at the wheel, and my aunt Susie was in the passenger seat, the rest crammed into the back with the debris from our picnic. As we set forth, I decided that it was past time to test the handling on the new car, and what better place to do it than the maze of twisty passages, all alike, that make up the roads of the park. As I urged the laboring four-cylinder engine to ever greater speed, my family began to be concerned. When I started taking corners at speeds which the wizened Japanese engineers had never intended the car to go, they became upset. Ignoring their cries, I kept hurtling around the corners and over the hills, imagining that I was Mario Andretti in finely engineered racing car, not a dork in a rice wagon.

As I topped a low rise, I saw a pair of bicyclists unwisely riding on the side of the road. I had miscalculated the degree to which the road would turn after the hill, and as I desperately attempted to both stay on the road and avoid splattering the cyclists on the windshield. They say that God favors drunks, fools and the United States of America. I was certainly the second, could be included in the third, and by the time it was over, I wished I had been drinking, because at least then I would have had an excuse for poor driving.

I managed to avoid the fitness freaks and stay on the road. I got a huge adrenaline straight to the heart, and I saw the world with that peculiar clarity and brilliance that oft accompanies near death experiences. I might have spent a moment savoring that eldritch feeling but for the screaming of my passengers. “You almost killed those people!” “You almost went off the road!” “Slow down!”

My grandmother, (who was everything a nice grandmother should be) saw my distress, and seeing the abuse being hurled at me leapt to my defense:

“Well, he has good reflexes.”

It only takes five words to transform abuse to laughter. And lord knows they weren’t laughing with, or even near me. They were laughing at me. My life flashed before my eyes. It was bad enough that I was being yelled at, and that I had nearly killed two innocent velocipedists. Now, my grandmother’s misguided attempt to help would sear this incident into the collective family memory forever.

And they kept laughing for the next forty-five minutes that it took to get to my grandmother’s house. Occasionally, it would simmer down to scattered giggles; then someone would say, “Good reflexes!” and it would start all over again. After a half hour, even my grandmother was howling along with them. When I pulled into the driveway and stopped, Chris fell out of the car, still laughing uncontrollably. Susie and Mom ran with him into the farmhouse to tell everyone else.

From that day to this, not one visit to my family fails to see at least one person making a crack about my having ‘good reflexes. One moment of dorky exuberance, two decades of abuse.

Posted by Johno Johno on   |   § 22

Maybe I'll Just Homeschool the Spawn

Michael Schaub of bookslut notes that the Texas State Board of Ed. is drawing up new textbook requirements for Texas schoolchirrens. Why do I care? Because textbook companies can't afford to produce fifty versions of a textbook, so they gear their content to the biggest markets. Between the fuzzy death of California's political correctness jihadis and the sphincter-clenching rectitute of the newly emboldened conservative Christians in Texas, you can bet that textbooks are going to become less and less useful for the purposes of actual, you know, teaching.

But I hear they make good kindling.

Posted by Johno Johno on   |   § 7

How Cute! It Thinks It's People!

Marine biologists have discovered two tiny species of octopi that can walk on two legs to impersonate a drifting piece of coconut or algae to catch food.

I'm a huge fan of octopi, not only because they're gross and can change colors, but because they are very intelligent in a way totally alien to humans. You know what would be great? Octopus pets. Communicating with ocotopi. Finding out whether they worship Dread Cthulu or whether that tentacle thing is just a wacky coincidence. I look forward to a day when we can communicate with our eight-legged brothers and we finally unite together as one ten-legged superbeing (hell, let's invite the dogs and dolphins too, why not?) to fight against our mutual enemy: giant fighting space robots. To talk with the octopi, walk with the octopi, fight the robot wars with the octopi. That would be really, really cool.

(You knew I had to bring robots into it somehow.)

Hat tip to boingboing.

[wik] GeekLethal helpfully reminds me of a post I wrote about a year ago on a lonely octopus feeling the eight arms of love for the first time. Also included: sample octo-porn dialogue, also helpfully provided by GeekLethal. Tentacle-porn jokes are you, the reader's alone to invent.

[alsø wik] One word: siphon. Haw!

[alsø alsø wik] I'm so immature.

Posted by Johno Johno on   |   § 3

Dorkorama, Round II

Voting is now closed in this round of the Ministry of Minor Perfidy's Biggest Dork competition. Round 2 between Johno and Buckethead is now open for reading and mockery here.

GeekLethal has been bested in the first round of our no-holds-barred, slap and flail, triple cage dork match. Under normal circumstances, one would expect that the next round would involve a duel to the geeky end between Ross and myself. We would bare our nerdy souls to the harsh judgment of our gentle readers, and the winner (loser) would advance to final combat with Johno to determine who amongst the perfidious ministers can wear the crown of infamy, dorkmaster, lord high king of the geeks.

But Ross is unavailable to participate in our little tournament. Due to a perverse confluence of debilitating gastrointestinal disorders, an unfortunate encounter with a less than hygienic dinner date, and his own monomaniacal work ethic Ross is flatulent, itchy, exhausted and on the verge of a complete mental, moral, and spiritual breakdown. Forcing him to participate our dorkfest would certainly push him over the edge and leave him wondering which is worse: moving back to Canada or base jumping off the Washington Monument with an hanky for a parachute.

So, we move directly to final combat. Buckethead v. Johno for alpha geek of the Ministry pack.

Front Toward Enemy

While a perusal of my posts to this blog over the last couple years should convince anyone of my dork credentials, this fight requires more meaty stuff than just writing a twenty page essay on space warfare, or repeated ravings about giant space robots.

When I was in high school, like many other geeks I played RPGs. We played Paranoia, Traveller, Twilight 2000, Cthulhu, but Advanced Dungeons and Dragons, 2nd edition was out meat and potatoes. Pretty much every Friday, we would gather together in the basement of future rocket scientist Jeff’s house and begin the dark rituals of high dorkdom. Armed with fifty-pound bags of reference materials, notebooks filled with deranged scribblings, bags of varicolored dice and laboriously yet ineptly painted lead miniatures we trooped into the dankness and imagined ourselves as grumpy dwarves, pure hearted paladins, crafty rangers and in one case, a sanctimonious fundamentalist cleric. (That last one was from the heart, not really acting.)

But after spending several person-years using our minds to imagine ourselves in fantastical and vaguely ridiculous situations palled, and we felt an irresistible desire to put ourselves actually, physically in farcical and most definitively ridiculous situations. Each of us repaired to our individual lairs. We prevailed upon parents who had long since lost any hope of having normal children to make trips to the hardware store and invest hard earned money to outfitt us as medieval warriors. We all had different ideas on how best to kit out as a warrior. The constraints were poor materials and a total lack of woodworking, metalcrafting, or in fact any other skill. In a couple weeks, we had all equipped ourselves with a stunning variety of poorly made and inelegant weapons and armor. We met at Cory’s house, because Cory’s parents had five acres of land. This wooded lot would be our tournament field, our Agincourt, our Waterloo.

I had chosen for my armament a long sword and Norman kite shield. The shield was a crudely shaped flat piece of plywood, painted green and with an expertly painted heraldic logo of, uh a shield green on a field, uh green. The sword was a four foot dowel. The ‘blade’ was wrapped in duct tape and the hand guard was a shorter piece of dowel lashed, with duct tape, to the sword. For armor, I had a thick sweatshirt and a woolen watch cap. Thus accoutered, I was ready for battle; my portly figure rendered manly by the weapons I bore. Or so I thought. My friends mostly had chosen swords. A couple had axes, and one had a bo staff. Only I had made a shield. But with the common sense native to all geeky teenagers, we were convinced that no harm would come to us. We knew about these weapons, we had read about them.

Amazingly, the first three sessions went without incident. Aside from a few minor bruises, and shame at our ineptitude, we were unscathed. Over the course of these battles, we had of course (as our dork natures required) developed extensive rules to govern our activity. We had rule systems to determine how battles should be scored, and how even to integrate the use of magic spells. (The latter mostly involved water balloons.) We also set up a complicated triple elimination tournament based on individual and team scores. Teams ranged from two to four per battle, and we’d have at least three battles per weekend. Team scores were dependent on both individual duels and reaching victory conditions in the overall scenario.

So, on the fourth weekend, battle was joined once again. I was on the verge of being eliminated from the tournament, though happily I would not be the first if I didn’t make the cut. My primary objective was to survive longer than Bill. Bill was the fundamentalist cleric I mentioned earlier, and at this point was about a year away from being shunned for degenerating into a complete asshole. Though he remained part of the group, tensions between Bill and I had been on the increase. I had to beat him.

The battle started off well. My team located the enemy flag, and eliminated one of their fighters in the process. The enemy lacked reliable intelligence on the location of our flag, and were outnumbered four to three. For me however, the situation was grim as Bill was the one who got credit for the kill. (Even though the weasel had backstabbed someone Jafo had already engaged.) He was one step closer to moving on in the tournament.

Thus motivated by desperation, I decided to act decisively. The enemy had taken up defensive positions on a small ridge. Heavy undergrowth protected their flanks, and any effort on our part to swing around to take their flag from the rear would give them plenty of time to redeploy, or even to move their flag. I turned to Jeff, and told him to cast a paralysis spell on the enemy. Then, I said, we would rush them. The plan meeting their approval, my teammates and I went into action. Jeff threw two water balloons at the enemy. One missed, and the other splashed Cory. Now Cory could not move until he counted to thirty as fast as he could. But we had engaged too soon. Cory was already at twenty five by the time we scrambled up the ridge.

Like a retarded and clumsy shadow of the Viking berserkers of old, I rushed up the ridge. I blocked a blow from Tim’s short sword with my shield. This is going to work! My mind completely free of any thought that I was fighting my functionally unarmored friends, I swung my sword in a massive overhand blow. Future eye surgeon Bob raised his sword to parry. My sword hit his hand, and I heard something very like a wet crack. Instantly, my berserker rage was replaced by geekly self doubt and confusion. I managed to get out an, “oh shit!” before losing my balance, falling down the incline, in the process stabbing Jafo with my sword. Simultaneously Jeff was hors de combat according to our rules and knocked out of breath. Skidding down on my back, I knocked over our wizard, future rocket scientist Jeff. Cory, having reached his count of thirty, nimbly sprang down and administered the coup de grace to Jeff and me. In one spastic maneuver, I had removed myself and two of my teammates from the fight, reducing our combat capable fighting strength by exactly 75%.

And of course, there was the matter of Bob’s hand. His fingers had already swollen up like Polish sausages. So, we had to troop back to the house, and explain to Cory’s parents what had happened. Cory’s mom was a teacher at the high school, and was at least somewhat prepared for teenage idiocy. Cory’s dad was a bit grumpy even on good days. He threatened to feed me to his dogs. If I’d hit Cory, he probably would have. But he never really liked Bob anyway, so I escaped that indignity. But then I had to personally apologize to Bob’s mom, who was herself a doctor. She had heavily invested emotionally in Bob’s future as a surgeon, and only a clean x-ray saved me from her undying wrath.

In less than a minute, I had: nearly ended a friend’s career before it had even begun to begin, humiliated myself, brought the tournament and any future combat to a ignominious end, humiliated myself, embarrassed two of my teammates, humiliated myself, and gave Bill fuel to feed his supercilious arrogance for most of the next year. Oh, and I humiliated myself.

[wik] A fresh and well rested Buckethead enters the fray attacking my strong point: gaming dorkery. I should have expected as much, knowing as I do a few cherce tidbits about his past. Before I continue, I have to ask one question of my esteemed colleague: dude, just how old were you when this sad display happened? AD&D 2nd Edition came out in 1989, at which time I was turning 15. That would have made you… eligible to vote?

I’m afraid that I simply can’t compete with Minister Buckethead on the gaming front, having spent the most potent of that ammo on Geeklethal in prior rounds. My remaining gaming stories are fairly run-of-the-mill stuff, slap-fights over whether Paladins can stab someone in the back, whether characters really have to buy clothing for underneath full plate mail (yes, dammit!), and other such incidents that are not so much dorky as just small and pathetic. Indeed, I may be a poor judge of what is actually dorky in the first place. Voters in the last round deemed my Concert of the Squirts not dorky (I strenuously beg to differ), yet deemed a story I thought more an amusing throwaway than actually dorky - my Mexican AD&D Adventure - supremely dorky.

The rules of this contest stipulate that a response must address the themes of the first story. Well, I never joined the ranks of the Duct Tape Warriors, so I will shift axes slightly to give you a tale of being dorky in groups, sometimes outside, as I recount how I out-dorked the other dorks of the Boy Scouts of America

Idiot-arod

The Boy Scouts got me young. First I was a Cub Scout, and we held Den Meetings in my mom’s basement. Then I graduated to Webelos (short for “We’ll Be Loyal Scouts (in Baden-Powell’s Secret Army)),” and made candlesticks in Mr. Souther’s garage. Along with puberty I advanced into the tan uniform and gaily colored neckerchief of the big leagues. For a couple of years, I was one of the official flag raisers at our high school football games (this was when I was in about 6th or 7th grade), and got to raise the flag while the band played the national anthem, finally saluting the sight of Old Glory waving in the Ohio night with my best and most military three-fingered Scout Salute.

I imbibed everything. I found and read old camping manuals in which the women stayed around camp in their dungarees and jaunty scarves and minded the fire while the lads went off swimming and fishing. I read the entire Scout Manual and all the related publications, and made sure after every shower to give myself “a brisk rubdown until the skin tingles” just like one of them recommended. Every summer I went to summer camp, and every autumn I built a little car for the Pinewood Derby. I was into the Boy Scouts big time.

One winter, the regional Scout-council-whatever held a Scout Iditarod, a sort of Very Special Winter Olympics for all the troops in the region to take place at a local Scout campground. Each troop would construct its own dogsled and pull their dogsled around the campground in a circuit race, performing stupid tasks at each station (snowball target practice, light a fire in the snow with two matches, tie a series of knots). My buddy Seth and I got right on everything important (coming up with a logo, banner and name) and helped conceive the sled. Some dads built.

Seth and I spent a few afternoons working on our team concept, and after due consideration we felt we’d really cooked up a cool winter-themed name. We helped his mom sew us up a neat pennant with a mascot and had the sled painted bright red with our troop number and the name we’d chosen blazoned boldly in black. This was one of the first times in my life I’d taken charge of something, and both Seth and I were proud of the job we’d done. We counted down the days until the Iditarod, waiting with anticipation to unveil our creation to the rest of the teams, who would doubtless be thunderstruck with amazement at our creativity and talent.

Our troop arrived at the Iditarod and surveyed the field. There were a good couple dozen troops, probably about 30 or so, present from around Northeastern Ohio, so there was a fairly good cross-section of other Scouts against whom to measure our merits. Other troops had taken names for their team like the Timber Wolves, Huskies, Polar Bears, and Ice Pirates (there was that movie) with flags featuring slavering mascots with talons, fangs, teeth and knives. There were color schemes and airbrushing, and sleds with actual skis for runners. Suddenly our red sled with the plywood runners seemed diminished, and the name we had chosen became far less cool as we realized that we may have erred somewhat in dubbing our team “Penguin Patrol.”

Needless to say, with plywood runners and my sack of jello ass helping to pull the monstrosity through the snow as the other Scout troops jeered – the older, bigger boys of our own troop having lost their taste for this competition at the first sign of my fine handiwork – Penguin Patrol came in somewhere south of dead last, having managed thanks to me to out-dork every Scouting dork for fifty miles around.

Posted by Buckethead Buckethead on   |   § 7

A New Domino Theory for a New Age

As originally voiced by Eisenhower, Nixon, and a variety of pointy-headed policy people, the Domino Theory explained that if South Vietnam fell to the commuhnists the rest of southeast Asia would similarly succumb, each country toppling in turn.

The phrase is still fairly common, most recently used to describe American operations in the Middle East. I don't have a link to a specific instance of its use in that context, but am confident someone somewhere said it. You know it and I know it, so get off me about it.

But if the Department of Defense has its way, the Domino Theory will take on a newer, cooler, and menacing-er meaning.

The DoD now confirms its plans in developing suborbital, recoverable, and armed UAVs. The concept is to have a suborbital vehicle zip around the planet at mach 5 carrying a 1,000lb payload. That's a big boom, to you and me. The vehicle can be controlled in flight, adjusting to changing circumstances if need be, or recalled if the mission is cancelled (although it's best not to assume as much). The Pentagon's wet dream is to have them fielded by 2010, with the capability to deploy the weapon and squash anybody anywhere on the planet within 30 minutes. 

So say you're an evil-doer, an evil-doer with a penchant for a thin-crust with extra cheese and half onions. And say the NSA caught wind of your terroristic appetites, and had your phone tapped, and knew you were home when you called for your pie. They could have a bona-fide Amurrican space robot fly around the world and blow you up faster than the Domino's around the corner from you can deliver a pizza to your door.

Posted by GeekLethal GeekLethal on   |   § 6

Coollest Movie Characters

I don't have the link for the article, but I ran across someone's list of the top ten coolest movie characters.

  1. Rick Blaine - Casablanca - Humphrey Bogart
  2. James Bond - Goldfinger - Gert Frobe
  3. Luke - Cool Hand Luke - Paul Newman
  4. Rhett Butler - Gone With the Wind - Clark Gable
  5. John Robie - To Catch A Thief - Cary Grant
  6. Jules Winnfield - Pulp Fiction - Samuel L. Jackson
  7. Rocky Sullivan - Angels With Dirty Faces - James Cagney
  8. Capt. Virgil - The Great Escape - Steve McQueen
  9. Johnny Strabler - The Wild One - Marlon Brando
  10. Morpheus - The Matrix - Lawrence Fishburne

The article included some honorable mentions. In no particular order: Jack Nicholson in Chinatown, James Coburn in The Magnificent Seven, Sam Shepard in The Right Stuff, Kevin Spacey in L.A. Confidential, Al Pacino in The Godfather, Harrison Ford in Raiders of the Lost Ark, Jeff Bridges in The Big Lebowski, Clint Eastwood in The Good, Bad and the Ugly, Kevin Costner in Bull Durham, Denzel Washington in Training Day, Mel Gibson in Road Warrior.

I can't really argue with the names on the list - though I might quibble with the order. Some other roles that I might add would include:

  • Darth Vader - Star Wars - James Earl Jones
  • Gen. 'Buck' Turgidson - Dr. Strangelove - George C. Scott
  • 'Il Duce' - Boondock Saints - Billy Connolly
  • Ferris Buehler - Ferris Buehler's Day Off - Matthew Broderick
  • Bluto - Animal House - John Belushi
  • Tyler Durden - Fight Club - Bradd Pitt
  • Doc Holiday - Tombstone - Val Kilmer

Some of these actors have more than one potential role. I'd actually nominate Mel Gibson for his role as Porter in Payback before Road Warrior. Arguably, Buck Turgidson isn't a 'cool' character, but I love him for being so over the top. I would definitely put Doc Holiday, Darth Vader and Indiana Jones in the top ten, and drop at least Rocky Sullivan and Johnny Strabler - and maybe Rhett Butler.

hat tip: mom.

Posted by Buckethead Buckethead on   |   § 22