Sunday, July 31, 2011

Shark Week 2011 (Day 1)

Last year, I did a week-long tribute to sharks in celebration of Shark Week.  Day 1 can be found here.  This year, I am going to try to do the same thing, because I hate being unpredictable.  There may be less shark porn this year, but no promises.

SHARK FACT: The smallest shark is the dwarf lanternshark.  Averaging at around 7 inches, the dwarf lanternshark is the pipsqueak of the shark community.  Yes, 7 inches.  Let's quickly list off other things that are larger than a dwarf lanternshark:
  • Beanie Babies
  • Large novelty pencils
  • Mini Me
  • 7.1" rulers
  • A shit I found in the men's room last week
Dwarf lanternsharks are so small that any picture you see of them requires a disclaimer: "Enlarged to show texture."  It's possible you've eaten a dwarf lanternshark, mistaking it for a sardine on your pizza.  Also, if you know of any restaurant that serves shark on its pizzas, feel free to leave the address in the comment section below.

You may be relieved to know that dwarf lanternsharks do not pose any real threat to humans, except for occasionally getting in a person's eye who believes it's a speck of dust.

When I first read the name "dwarf lanternshark," this was the image in my head.
For more shark trivia, please come back tomorrow.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

The RWBB Follow-up


[Published recently in The Grand Valley Lanthorn.  I re-added the FAKE editorial notes.  The editorial notes are not real.  I need to be very clear that my editor did NOT write the notes.  (This was the reason the notes weren't published.)]

Earlier this month, I was attacked in the head by a bird.

I’ll give you a minute to stop laughing and collect yourself.

Yes, red-winged blackbirds have taken over West Campus Drive and no one is safe.

People may be shocked to know that Grand Valley State University has become overrun by Jaws of the air, and it seems psycho to me that no horror movie has been made about dangerous birds.  [Ed. note: Please do more research before submitting columns, Chris.]

This is nothing new to me, though, and I have made peace with the fact that these birds have taken residence on my usual jogging route.  I can no longer sculpt my finely-toned legs.  [The Grand Valley Lanthorn is not responsible for inaccurate statements made by Chris Slattery.]

Unfortunately, while I am aware of these angry birds, most people around campus are not.  I have only managed to warn a few lucky college-age passersby that they were about to enter a collegiate [Not the proper use of that word] version of “When Animals Attack.”

Since the beginning of the summer, though, someone has placed a well-intentioned sign near the 48th Ave. intersection.  While I appreciate the effort to warn pedestrians of the dangerous birds, the word choice doesn’t emphasize the potential for kamikaze strikes.

“Be Aware, Nesting Red Winged Black Birds” is what the sign says, and is—in its own way—completely accurate.  However, referencing a “nesting” bird does not terrify people as much as, say, an “evil” or “psychotic” bird.  A sign like this is reminiscent of a sign on Jurassic Park (the second half of the movie) that identifies the creature that is about to assault/attempt-to-maim you, even though it is already too late.

Besides, “aware” doesn’t really mean anything.  People are “aware” of high cholesterol; they are “aware” of their own mortality; and they are “aware” that every Bon Jovi song sounds the same.  What they should not be “aware” of is a flock of nesting red-winged blackbirds—they should be “alert,” or “armed.” 

I say this because “nesting” does not mean building a nest.  Instead, it means that the birds are raising and protecting their offspring.  And apparently, red-winged blackbirds not only guard their nest, but a county-wide vicinity around the nest, which in this instance includes the majority of West Campus Drive and a decent segment of the bordering golf courses.

Perhaps the strangest piece of information is that these bird refrain from attacking when you keep eye contact.  Evidently, the only game that red-winged blackbirds enjoy more than head-tag is a good old-fashioned staring contest.  They also enjoy thumb wars.  [They have no thumbs.]

Of course, while this tactic has worked for me on several occasions, I am in no way suggesting that this works for everyone and do not accept responsibility for anyone who takes this advice for granted.  I’m sure the Lanthorn feels the same way.  [We do.]

I am not saying that GVSU needs to eradicate all red-winged blackbirds, a bird whose only crime is protecting the future of its species.  Instead, there should be clearer warnings that state that this behavior gives birds a bad name.  [That was a weak Bon Jovi reference.  Please revise.]

Friday, June 17, 2011

Do All the Birds Have Daddy Issues?

I don't know what the fuck is up with birds.

It's their flying and shit; I don't trust that.

Okay, let me start from the beginning, mostly because I'm not Quentin Tarantino and I'm not in the mood to bootleg the man's tracks today:

It all started with my brother's graduation.  I was thrilled to finally watch my own brother walk across the stage and receive his empty diploma (our high school handed out actual diplomas later in the month for some twisted reason).  It was quite the celebration--my dad came in from Missouri and my aunt drove down from Canada to witness this event.  The whole family was together again for this brief while, in celebration of this historic point in my brother's life.

Hey, I got a shit-load of money for my graduation, so it's pretty much the same thing.

My dad drove me back to my apartment in Grand Rapids a few days later, and I was excited that I could finally get some one-on-one time with the man I hadn't seen in two years.  When he dropped me off, he reiterated the fact that he would be back in a few days, which was information that we had clearly gone over, yet I had forgotten.  Having already cleared my schedule for the week, I was a little upset.  Sure, my week was free, as I had pushed everything to later on, but now what was I supposed to do?  I couldn't in good conscience invite my papa to a college party.  Parties are already an awkward situation for me, without the addition of bringing along a chaperone.

Of course, I love my father and wanted to spend time with him, and was therefore excited by the prospect of our eventual "hang time," but it was a conflicted excitement.

But first, I had to wait.

I made up my mind to go for a run, because I was bored out of my mind and remembered that I had not exercised in a week.  Although, with my demeanor and work-out schedule, 'jog' might constitute a more suitable word than 'run'.  Even more so would be 'flailing with momentum.'  Don't judge, we all have our methods.  Mine just happens to be more flaming than others...

It was a decent time for running; the sun was going down and the mosquitoes weren't out yet.  There also weren't a lot of people out to make fun of the fact that I only own socks that go up half my calf.  Instead of investing in a treadmill or taking the time to go to the gym, I prefer to run outside, on a path of my choosing.  I run with my iPod on because, while I enjoy spending my time in nature, I don't want to hear nature sounds.  The outside world is not exactly aurally stimulating, if you know what I mean.

I had barely left the parking lot when the trouble started.

The first bout of "what the fuck" occurred when the claws/beak made contact with the back of my head.  At the time, the feet appeared like talons and the beaks was wide enough to swallow me whole.  It is clear to me now that a bird the size of my hand rarely possesses the jaw flexibility to ingest an entire human, but I was not prepared to test my hypothesis at the time.

In a typical 'fight-or-flight' situation, I have found that I am surprisingly a fighter, hurling whatever objects within reach I can.  However, when the only item in your grasp is an iPod Shuffle, 'flight' immediately becomes the better option.

The second bout of "what the fuck" occurred when the bird decided that one kamikaze divebomb was not sufficient enough to chase off a confused and terrified jogger, and remained fluttering behind me, not two feet above my head.

Realizing that this bird was not going to retreat from his one-sided game of tag, I broke into a dead sprint, in hopes of suggesting that I was getting the fuck out of whatever territory I had apparently invaded.  Yet the stubborn bird continued to tail me, flapping violently, and I quickly came to the conclusion that whatever species of bird this was, it must be the cheetah of the sky.

If I learned anything that day, it was that running sideways is not in my repertoire of skills, and in one quick maneuver, I simultaneously tripped and dove for the concrete below me.  Lord knows what I was thinking, but I suspect that it was a combination of "It can't get to me if I'm four feet lower" and "Oh shit, my clumsy legs!"

I slammed my body into the pavement on my left side, and my iPod skittered across the dotted yellow median.  By some miracle, the usually busy street was void of any traffic, which ensured that: a) I was not about to get run over by a car, and b) there would be no witnesses of this embarrassing experience that I would be forced to "make disappear."

Pumped with adrenaline, but noticing that the bird was no longer in my cranial vicinity, I booked it back to my apartment.  Immediately, I researched my attacker and nursed my wounds, which began to hurt after I calmed down.  Using Kleenex after Kleenex on my gashed hip, I found that the only bird that seemed to fit the bill for the small amount of description I could recall (all black with red-and-yellow striped wings) was a red-winged blackbird, a moniker I would have come up with anyways in retelling the story later: "It was like this red-winged... black... bird!"  I even dedused the sex of it, as the females are not black, do not have red wings, and--I'd venture to guess--would hardly be considered birds.

The article also mentioned the fact that red-winged blackbirds have been known to swoop down upon humans who approach their nesting grounds during mating season.

No shit.

What was surprising was that I was not the only person affected by these deadly birds.  Many of my friends had similar stories in which their golf games were disrupted by similar Hitchcock-y instances.  We all commented on the fact that, regardless of running or golfing, a tennis racket could greatly improve our overall experience of the sport, while not directly related to performance.

The hatred in my psyche was fierce; I knew I wanted to go back, as soon as I stopped bleeding, and kill this bird.

It was a bit out-of-character for me, a usual nature lover who believed that all of God's creatures serves a specific purpose in life (except for mosquitoes, which are actually Satan's creatures).  But when I found that these birds are so abundant that they are considered "pests," I lost any sympathy for the winged assholes of the sky.  In fact, farmers have been known to put pesticides out to poison these birds, and at that point, I was ready to give my life savings to whatever agricultural charities I knew.

Is Farm Aid still around?

Injured and depressed, I realized that I still had three more days until my dad returned.

Two days after the incident, I found myself walking down the same road on my way home from work.  I felt more prepared, as I was wearing a hat this time, which doubled not only as some sort of head protection, but could--if used properly--swat a bird out of the air.

As I walked slowly down the side of the road, much busier during the mid-day rush, I listened carefully for the flutter of wings or a squawk that sounded aggrivated.  I scanned the skies, my eyes searching for any black dots that could eventually swoop down and attack me again.  Every bird I saw, from robins, to a sinister-shaped leaf, was a potential foe.  This was a war zone, and I was behind enemy lines.  ...Only they had numerous air forces with agility and animalistic aggression, and I had a bum hip and a hat.

I was relieved when a student on a bike rode past me.  If this really was the battlefield that I had pictured in my mind, this biker would be my expendable first wave.  If he made it through, I could breathe a sigh of bird-less relief.

In hindsight, I should have stopped him or at least yelled out "watch out for birds," but I didn't.  Instead, I watched helplessly as the poor sucker suddenly swerved and swatted above him.  It was remarkable--I hadn't even seen the bird begin its assault.  It just magically appeared at the back of this biker's neck.

Fortunately, a bike is faster than on-foot and the guy got away relatively quick (although likely scarred from his close encounter of the aviary kind).  My disposable pawn had done his job, but I still had to get home.

I was dead-set on killing this fucker, or at least injuring it and making it die a slow and painful death.  It was as if this bird had kidnapped my daughter and I was Liam Neeson, prepared to do whatever it took to get my fictional offspring back.

When in reality, this bird was the one protecting its own babies, so determined that it was ready to fight creatures 20 times its own size.

I was across the street from the bird, using the same path that I had used for escape two day previous, certain that my respectable distance would send the message that, while I wanted to bash the father bird into a thousand little feathers, his chicks were at least safe.  "I am not a monster!" I wanted to yell.

My intentions did not translate, however.  Just as I was beginning to think that I could make a clean getaway, I heard the ominous fluttering right above me.  I grabbed the brim of my hat, and made for a swing.

But something stopped me.

I don't know what made me think of my dad at that point, but something did.  The bird was a father, and he was doing everything in his pathetic little existence to ensure that his kids were safe.

I thought of the baby birds, and their little heads peeking out over the nest, waiting for their daddy to return home with a worm, or a small chunk of some innocent runner's hair.  They will have missed him, and he them, even though there was never any doubt in their pea-sized minds that he would return.

And I thought of my father, and how his absence was affecting me.  Not just for the week, but for the time he spent in Missouri.  While my father was alive, he wasn't around.  I wanted to blame somebody for it, but I couldn't.  It was never his fault that he couldn't stay here with us after the divorce.  It was nobody's fault.

I spent my late teens without a masculine presence in my life, because I wouldn't necessarily call my mother "butch."

He could be there if I needed someone to talk to, over the phone, or required advice, but it was difficult knowing that he couldn't be here, for fishing trips and blowing shit up (y'know... guy stuff).

"What kind of monster would I be," I thought to myself, "to deprive these hatchlings of all of that stuff?"  I was pissed for all the wrong reasons and almost let that anger get the best of me.

Who am I?  I'm not the kind of person who kills animals in cold blood!  I listen to Fleet Foxes, for Christ sake!

So I put my hat back on, using the age-old adage "The best defense is defense, because why would anything else constitute defense?"  And I ran.  I ran so far away.  (The fact that I've been talking about bird and then used A Flock of Seagulls reference is purely coincidental.)

Back at my apartment, I found that I had another text from my dad.  It said that it would be a few more days before he could make it up.  He was going to spend a little more time with my brother, to help him with his post-graduation decisions.  At that point, I was happy with that.  At least I knew he hadn't been beaten to death with a hat.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Why I Hate "Ocean's Twelve"

Ocean's Twelve proved that making a sequel to a large ensemble feature film is difficult.  But they really, really fucked up.
Welcome to Hell.
In 2001, Ocean's Eleven premiered to critical and commercial success.  With an all-star cast and a quirky heist storyline, there wasn't much that could go wrong.

They made a sequel.

So many things went wrong.

What Went Wrong
So many things.

Okay, maybe that's not as specific as it could be, so let me break down some of the most glaring issues I have with the movie.

The Whole Film Is A Hoax
At the end of the movie, we learn that Danny Ocean and his crew have been playing the Night Fox the whole time -- they stole the Coronation Egg at the beginning, without anyone else knowing, leaving a replica for the Night Fox to steal.  Do you know what this means?

It means that, for the majority of the film, we are watching a dozen people pretending to steal something that they've already stolen.  This process apparently requires pretending to get arrested, incarcerated, and sodomized wile locked up abroad (that's what happens, right?). Really, the movie could have taken 15 minutes and the outcome would have been the same:

NIGHT FOX: To prove who is the best thief, we shall go after the same object, the Coronation Egg.
DANNY OCEAN: Too late, already did it.
ROLL CREDITS

Obviously, we were all deceived in Ocean's Eleven with the ol' camera-in-a-different-vault routine, but to base an entire plot around tricking the audience isn't the best way to win over the people.

Aliens aren't allergic to water; they're just allergic to bullshit ideas, like aliens being allergic to water.
Do you know what this means?  It means that the filmmakers equate the audience to the Night Fox (AKA Baron Francois Toulour).  We have roughly the same amount of information that he does.

...except whatever the hell this is.

And Toulour gets a bunch of screen time, so really the movie could have been called Toulour's One, only with a slightly different marketing strategy.
Starring Vincent Cassel, with a supporting cast of nobodies like George Clooney, Matt Damon, and Brad Pitt.


The Julia Roberts Effect
Have you ever wondered if the fictional characters in movies are aware of the celebrities in reality?  Ocean's Twelve did, and then answered the question with something we're calling The Julia Roberts Effect.

See, in the movie, real-life Julia Roberts plays Tess, Danny's wife/token chick of the group.  Halfway through the film (which is already 45 minutes longer than it needs to be), fake-life Tess pretends to be real-life Julia Roberts, albeit in the fictional world of the movie.  This opens up an insane amount of questions regarding the fiction vs. reality plane, such as:
  • If there is a Julia Roberts in the fictional world, why is there no George Clooney or Brad Pitt?
  • If there are, why has no one mentioned this doppelganger-ism before?  Couldn't they have used this to their advantage?  Practically every single member of the Ocean crew looks like someone really famous.
"Benedict?  It's Brad Pitt, the movie star.  Just wondering if I could gain access to your vault."
  • If fictional celebrities/business moguls (like Terry Benedict and William Banks) exist along with real-life celebrities, wouldn't it technically be an alternate reality where the world could be drastically different?  World War II could have been avoided, Martin Luthor King wouldn't have been assassinated, and stupid movies like Ocean's Twelve would never have been made.
The roots of the pop culture infused within the movie are deep: Danny and Rusty get drunk and watch Italian-dubbed episodes of Happy Days.  Rusty counsels Topher Grace through a career crisis.  Linus recites lyrics from Led Zeppelin's song "Kashmir" in an attempt to be cryptic.

Bruce Willis even stars as him-fucking-self.  What else has Bruce Willis starred in?  12 Monkeys, along with Brad Pitt.  Does 12 Monkeys not exist now that Brad Pitt is out of the picture?

Who are these people and why are they in a Coen Bros. movie?

The line between what's real and what's not in Ocean's Twelve-land has completely disappeared, and in it's own topsy-turvy way, the movie wants to confuse the hell out of you.

This Scene
This. Fucking. Scene.

It's hard to say "WTF?" and "Seriously?" at the same time.

This Proves Nothing
The whole point of the "game" between Ocean and the Night Fox is to show who is a better thief.  Stealing the Coronation Egg would be a good way to judge that, if the fight was fair for both sides.
As stated before, Ocean & Co. steal the Egg even before Toulour suggests it as a target, giving them a 1200% advantage.  While the Ocean crew boosts the item at the most convenient moment, Toulour actually does a shitload of work on his end, including scaling a building without any rope and maneuvering through a field of 50-or-so randomly-moving lasers (despite how farfetched the whole process is).

It's like taking candy from a baby, except the klepto-baby hasn't even been given the opportunity to steal anything from the candy store yet.

In fact, that analogy would have made a better movie than Ocean's Twelve.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

A Very Pickled Christmas

Christmas is all about tradition in my family, like I assume it is in many families across the globe.  Some families attend church in celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ; some watch a marathon of Christmas-y movies; some begin to return all of the maroon and purple sweaters they received from "well-meaning" elderly relatives.

Our family had the Christmas pickle.  When I was young, after a Christmas Eve full of hearty foods to driving around and looking at the beautiful displays of Christmas lights in all the non-Jewish parts of the neighborhood, I would retire to my bed, donned in my Santa hat, preparing to wake up at 5 o'clock (at the latest).  My parents were big fans of this.

After unloading my stocking full of candies and mini-shampoos ("Thanks, Santa!"), my younger brother and I would rush down the stairs and practically throw ourselves at the Christmas tree, because hidden somewhere among the pine needles and assorted colored balls was a glass pickle that Santa had covertly placed.

Our tree.  There's a ninja pickle in the somewhere.

Whoever found the pickle first would receive the first present of Christmas, cleverly titled "The Pickle Present."  The Pickle Present was always something awesome:


And while the task may seem daunting, like finding a vegetative needle in a festive haystack, I proved surprisingly adept at locating the shiny, artificial cucumber within the conifer's prickly camouflage.  So much so that after the fifth-or-so consecutive year of finding the pickle first, I began to play it stupid, allowing my brother to come out the winner, in the spirit of Christ's magic pickle.

It wasn't much of a loss; I would use The Pickle Present just as much, only without any personal label of ownership.  This would also allow me to give my brother less for his birthday without any guilt on my conscience.

Sadly, this year is the first year since the introduction of the tradition that our family is not partaking.  This is unfortunate because the gifts were always a pleasant surprise--never anything on my Christmas list, but just as necessary... to completing my N64 game catalog.

I understand the reasoning behind it, though.  It appears that Santa has had an increasingly difficult time in finding a gift that would appease both my brother and me, depending on who could find the pickle first (me, unless I'm feeling generous).  So finally, Santa threw in the towel this year, seeing no common thread between an 18-year-old high school student whose current sole purpose is to buy his own car, and a 21-year-old writing major who would be happy getting a new box of Legos.

Personally, there was only one possibility I could think of, but Selena Gomez is hard to get a hold of these days.

"Thanks, Santa!  It's what I've always wanted!"

So, with this tradition coming to a close, I think it's getting to the point where I need to start my own traditions.  By the time I have children of my own, I can hopefully find a plastic food item to entice them into a holly-jolly version of I Spy.

Let's just hope that the practice of turning our family's prided traditions into relish doesn't become a habit.  I just know the mini-shampoos are the next to go.


UPDATE: So, I posted this Christmas Eve and by the next morning, and by the next morning I found this:


So, we got the pickle present after all.  My brother received the wonderful dice game, LCR.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Why Apples to Apples is a bullshit game

Wow, I get it!  Everyone loves Apples to Apples!

Only... I don't get it.  I don't get it at all.


Apples to Apples is not a fun game, yet all of my friends call me a killjoy for saying so, only to throw up their arms in bored frustration three hours later.

God forbid anyone says that I'm right for once...

For those of you unfamiliar with the game (i.e. those of you who graduated from high school before Y2K), Apples to Apples is a card game played with thousands of cards.

Literally.  Thousands.

These cards are divided into two colors, red and green (like apples, get it?!).  These two colors serve different functions:

Each green card contains one adjective.  These adjectives are often very vague and could apply to anything.

Each red card contains one noun or proper noun.  These are often disturbingly specific and could only apply to one thing.

One person draws a green card, shows it to the group, and the rest of the players must put down a red card they believe corresponds best with the given green card.  The green card-layer doesn't see who put down which red card and then decides (and this next part is very crucial) BASED ON THEIR OWN OPINION which red card works best.

Four scenarios can occur here:

1) The green card describes the red card perfectly, like two halves of a whole.

2) The green card is the complete opposite of the red card, and the juxtaposition is too hilarious to go unappreciated.

3) Something in the middle of those two.

4) Someone plays the Helen Keller card.

The game is supposed to pit friends against friends to see who really knows each other's sense of humor/association the best.  It's like some kind of misguided Rorschach test, only instead of ink blots, it uses words.  And instead of lasting five minutes, it lasts an entire evening.  And instead of trained psychiatric professionals, it's your drunk friend attempting to convince everyone that The 1970's is "totally Cultivated as shit, man!"


The real problem with Apples to Apples is the amount of time that it takes to make a decision.  Before placing down a red card, each of the five (or some other strangely specific number) people playing has to deliberate on each of their cards, intent on catering just the right noun to their roommate's friend's cousin from across the state (or some other strangely specific person)'s green card.

The fact of the matter is that you can never fully reach into your aquaintance's psyche, and unless you and your friend share a blatantly obvious inside joke about Aggressive Cow-Pies, your chances of winning the round are about even with the rest of the group.


On top of that, the green card-layer then weeds through the random red cards in a painfully slow manner, explaining why they are not choosing each specific card.


Alright, just pick one...


Yep, keep the game moving, chief...


Are you fucking kidding me?

What bothers me about the scenario is not the time wasted (although I could be doing more productive things with all of this guessing time, like performing my own lobotomy), but that every single person playing the game remains under the impression that there is any strategy involved.

For the record: there's not.  There's about as much strategy going on in a game of Apples to Apples as there is in a game of Rochambeau.  Either way, by the end of the game, I feel like I've lost all feeling in my balls.

(This may have something to do with posture.)


To win the game, you must have seven of your red cards chosen.  With each red card chosen, you get the corresponding green card.  Collect seven green cards, and that should be the end of the game.  But it never is.

Invariably, some asshole in the group (one of the people who lost) will chime in, saying "I mean, if no one can think of anything else to do, we can just keep playing to ten."  Somehow, everyone's conscience is wiped clean of any possible alternatives, anything that could possibly be more fun than combining Lovely with The Far Left (like folding laundry).

Then, after someone reaches the ten card goal, the same douchebag always suggests (because he is still losing), "Hey, let's just play without keeping score."

The game can go one for hours after this because no one wants to break the cycle by announcing their fatigue.  Who would want to?  It's Apples to Apples, after all, and everyone loves Apples To Apples.

But not this guy.  I prefer Risk.  It's a much better way to kill six hours.

Friday, August 20, 2010

A brand new episode of Glee!

Due to the high production costs of last season, Fox has cut Glee's budget in half, prompting some noticable changes in the next season.  Here's a sneak-peek at a script of an upcoming episode: